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Blog Rogera Farnwortha

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Steam Railcars/Railmotors of the UK again. ...

The new companies which came into existence with the grouping in 1923 addressed once again the best way to serve lightly populated rural communities. The options available to them centred on various forms of light railcars. Two forms of propulsion were available, the internal combustion engine and the steam engine. Electricity, in many cases required too large an investment for the likely traffic on the intermediate routes in rural areas.

Steam railcars/railmotors surprisingly given early experiences, had a second opportunity to serve in the era of the big four!

http://rogerfarnworth.com/2024/06/26/steam-railmotors-part-6-after-the-grouping/
 
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The Wenlock Branch again. ....

This article follows on from five other articles which covered the Wellington to Severn Junction Railway in the Telford area and this line from Buildwas to Presthope.

We begin this next article at Presthope Railway Station and travel towards Craven Arms, as far as the village of Longville in the Dale. …….

http://rogerfarnworth.com/2024/06/27/the-wenlock-branch-from-presthope-to-craven-arms/
 
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Horwich Locomotive Works again. ....

Railway World magazine in early 1965 carried a two part article about Horwich Locomotive Works.

I always take note of articles about the Works when I find them, as my paternal grandfather worked there in the early years of the 20th century, before the great depression when eventually he moved his family to Stapleford in the Derby/Nottingham area and where he took a job at the Loco Works in Derby as a blacksmith.

http://rogerfarnworth.com/2024/07/15/horwich-locomotive-works-again/
 
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The Whitland & Cardigan Railway......

The Whitland & Cardigan Railway was a 27.5 miles (44.3 km) long branch line, "built in two stages, at first as the Whitland and Taf Vale Railway from the South Wales Main Line at Whitland to the quarries at Glogue. It opened in 1873, at first only for goods and minerals and later for passengers. The line to Cardigan opened in 1886; reflected in the company name change.

This is a first article about the line and follows the first length of the line out from Cardigan.

http://rogerfarnworth.com/2024/07/1...hitland-cardigan-railway-cardigan-to-boncath/
 
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The Railway and Travel Monthly, July 1918 – A Snapshot including Advertising.

In the midst of a small batch of older railway magazines, was a partial copy of the July 1918 copy of "The Railway and Travel Monthly."

The price for the magazine: 1 shilling

Edited by: G.A. Sekon.

http://rogerfarnworth.com/2024/07/1...y-july-1918-a-snapshot-including-advertising/

I find these old magazines quite interesting particularly for the contemporary view they provide on what, for us, is railway history.
 
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The Whitland & Cardigan Railway again. ...

This is the second in a short series of articles about the line.

My interest in this branch line stems from reading an article by M.R. Connop Price; Before the Railways: The Early Steamers of Cardiganshire; in the Railway & Canal Historical Society Journal in July 2022. And from staying North of Cardigan in 2023 and walking part of the route of the old line.

We restart our journey from Cardigan to Whitland at Boncath Railway Station.

http://rogerfarnworth.com/2024/07/2...land-cardigan-railway-boncath-to-llanglydwen/
 
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Advertising in The Railway Magazine, November 1938, in the UK. ......

Following on from the short article about The Railway and Travel Monthly of July 1918 which can be found on a parallel thread, this is a short reflection on the advertising which appeared in the November 1938 edition of The Railway Magazine, twenty years after the 1918 magazine, and only a few months before the outbreak of the Second World War.

http://rogerfarnworth.com/2024/07/20/advertising-in-the-railway-magazine-of-november-1938/
 
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Advertising in The Railway Magazine, November 1929. ...

This article features advertising from the November 1929 edition of The Railway Magazine.

http://rogerfarnworth.com/2024/07/30/advertising-in-the-november-1929-railway-magazine/

It will probably be of interest to compare the various adverts in the linked article with those in The Railway Magazine of November 1938. An article about the 1938 magazine is earlier in this thread.
 
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Petrol Railmotors in The Railway Magazine, September 1922. ...

The Railway Magazine of September 1922 carried two short articles about new Petrol Railmotors. ...

https://wordpress.com/post/rogerfarnworth.com/53706

The first short article was about an experimental vehicle used by the NER.

On certain portions of the NER network, the company realised that "there was room for a service conducted on lines as nearly as possible identical with those of motor buses on the roads. With the view of ascertaining, without much initial expenditure, whether the scheme is likely to prove financially successful, they have converted one of their 'Leyland' road motor 'buses, formerly running on the road services in the vicinity of Durham, so as to make it suitable for running on the railway."

The second short piece in The Railway Magazine of September 1922 related to a Railmotor constructed by the Drewry Car Company Limited (Works No. 1252), to the instructions of Colonel H.F. Stephens, who, along with other roles, was Engineer and General Manager of the Weston, Clevedon and Portishead Light Railway.

The railmotor was powered by a 4-cylinder Baguley 35 hp petrol engine with a 3-speed gearbox and its oil consumption, on easy gradients, [was] 16 miles to the gallon. It had a maximum speed of 25 mph. It was 19ft long and driven by a chain drive from either end. It had 2ft diameter wheels.
 
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A series of interesting items from the Railway Magazine of January 1934. ...

https://wordpress.com/post/rogerfarnworth.com/53679

Water Pick-Up Troughs

Some superb diagrams showing the operation of water troughs were included on page 4 of the January 1934 edition of The Railway Magazine.

The GWR Capital Programme

The Railway Magazine noted, "A special programme of extensions and improvements, involving a cost of over £8,000,000, was put in hand by the GWR under the Development (Loan Guarantees and Grants) Act, 1929, in anticipation of its future requirements, for the purpose of assisting in the relief of unemployment. ... The Railway Gazette, issued on [8th December 1933] a profusely illustrated Special Supplement dealing comprehensively with these works. A notable feature of this supplement is the wealth of drawings, including a double-page map of the G.W.R. system, with inset detail plans of the new works."

The Campbeltown & Machrihanish Light Railway

The Campbeltown and Machrihanish Light Railway was one of only four 2 ft 3 in (686 mm) narrow gauge railways in the UK. The other three were/are in Wales: the Corris Railway, the short-lived Plynlimon and Hafan Tramway and the Talyllyn Railway.

The Welsh Highland Railway

The Railway Magazine reported that the "Joint Committee representing the local authorities with investments in the Welsh Highland Railway has decided to ask the debenture-holders to close down the line. Carnarvonshire County Council has £15,000 in the venture, Portmadoc Urban District Council £5,000, and the Gwyrfai, Glaslyn and Deudraeth Rural District Councils £3,000 each. At a recent meeting of the Portmadoc Council, Mr. Oswald Thomas said it was important that if the railway were closed, the rails should not be taken up, particularly between Portmadoc and Croesor Bridge, as it was hoped before long to see quarries in the district working again. Captain Richard Jones said it might be arranged for the Portmadoc Council to take over that part of the railway."

West Monkseaton Railway Station Waiting Shelter

The Railway Magazine picked a rather modest platform building at West Monkseaton for praise.

Check Rails and Ramps

By 1934, it was common practice "to provide safety devices at viaducts and other important bridges to reduce to a minimum the risk of vehicles, which may have become derailed, falling over the edge. Special guard rails, fixed either inside or outside the running rails and usually at a slightly higher level, are laid across the viaduct, with some splayed arrangement at both ends to direct derailed vehicles from the edge toward the rails. An ingenious elaboration of this is shown in the accompanying illustration. It consists of converging rails with a steel ramp between them rising to rail level. Any derailed wheels would run up this and should automatically become re-railed at the top."