Features

  • Railway relics

    Railway relics

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    Steve Ryszka presents another selection of railway architecture images showing erstwhile railway company names, crests and signs, which still provide a reminder of the halcyon days of railways. View more images in the January 2019 issue of The RM – on sale now!

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  • Shirebrook diesel depot

    Shirebrook diesel depot

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    Robin Stewart-Smith remembers the busy Nottinghamshire motive power depot which, in its heyday, provided locos for many coal trains emanating from local collieries. SHIREBROOK Diesel Depot officially opened in June 1965 as a new-build ‘running shed’ resulting from the BR’s Modernisation Plans. It was ideally placed to service the diesel locomotive fleet that worked the…

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  • The ‘Lanky’ devotee who saved… Southern engines

    The ‘Lanky’ devotee who saved… Southern engines

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    Worth Valley founding father Richard Greenwood has followed steam for a lifetime, both at the lineside and in the thick of preservation. He tells his remarkable life story to Howard Johnston. As he strolls quietly through Haworth yard at his beloved Keighley & Worth Valley Railway (KWVR), Richard Greenwood has good reason to be satisfied…

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  • Locospotting pioneer

    Locospotting pioneer

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    Every self-respecting LNER enthusiast is aware of the RCTS ‘green books’ – the monumental series of volumes describing the company’s entire locomotive fleet. What is not so well known is that the man who made the books possible, series editor Eric Fry, is still with us. On the eve of his 90th birthday, he tells…

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  • Thames-Valley transformation

    Thames-Valley transformation

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    In the second of a three-part feature looking at train performance in the Thames Valley through the steam, diesel and electric eras, Keith Farr turns his attention to both diesel locomotives and multiple units. We were seeing off an aunt going home from Paddington to Swindon in 1959. “There posh!” she commented, referring not to…

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  • ‘INN’ and OUT, UP and DOWN, ROUND and ROUND

    ‘INN’ and OUT, UP and DOWN, ROUND and ROUND

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    For this month’s Practice & Performance, John Heaton FCILT uses some of his holiday time to sample Austrian ‘Railjet’ services in the Tyrol, as well as tourist steam services in one of Europe’s most beautiful countries. The Siemens ‘Taurus’ Bo-Bo electric locomotive certainly looked sleek as it stood at the head of its ‘Railjet’ service…

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  • GHOST STORY: Late turn on ‘The Lanky’

    GHOST STORY: Late turn on ‘The Lanky’

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    This year our annual ghost story has been written by Robert Lumb November 1952 The station waiting room was cold during the summer months, but now in the late-November evening the cold was penetrating even when wearing the heaviest of coats. A fire was burning in the hearth with a weak flame at the head…

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  • Nodding Along: The ‘Pacer’ Story – Part 3

    Nodding Along: The ‘Pacer’ Story – Part 3

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    Gary Boyd-Hope concludes his profile of the ‘Pacers’ and their antecedents with a look at the Walter Alexander-built Class 143s and 144s, and talks to people within the industry about the important role the type has played in keeping Britain’s passengers moving. AFTER the introduction of the BRE-Leyland Class 141s in September 1983, and the…

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  • An Edwardian gem

    An Edwardian gem

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    The restoration of NER petrol Autocar to working order has taken many readers by surprise, some apparently unaware such a vehicle even existed. Chris Milner visited Stephen Middleton, who bought the derelict shell of the 1903 vehicle, and has overseen a dedicated team of experts during its lengthy restoration. WHEN you first set eyes on…

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  • Early electrification: Addicted to steam?

    Early electrification: Addicted to steam?

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    Early LNER non-steam traction to the birth of ‘British Railways’ Bob Gwynne takes a fascinating look into the history of pioneering electric and diesel traction and its use by the London & North Eastern Railway (and other companies) up to the formation of British Railways in 1948. When people talk of the London & North…

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