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West Somerset Railway General Discussion

الموضوع في 'Heritage Railways & Centres in the UK' بواسطة gwr4090, بتاريخ ‏15 نوفمبر 2007.

  1. Robin Moira White

    Robin Moira White Resident of Nat Pres

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    Thank you for your kind words. I have known and loved the West Somerset Railway for approaching 40 years now, and is great to be able to share that.

    I just wander round with my phone and take a few snaps. The hard work was done by Ian Coleby (now WSR Vice-Chairman). His magnificent 'The Minehead Branch 1848 - 1971' is the definitive line history, running to over 300 pages packed full of photographs, drawings and the like. A bargain at £24.99 from all good Railway bookshops.....:)

    Robin
     
    Last edited: ‏21 فبراير 2017
  2. Jamessquared

    Jamessquared Nat Pres stalwart

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    Certainly the accident report from 1940 suggests that it wasn't there: "At the west end of Norton Fitzwarren station the line becomes double; the Down Relief joins the Down Main by a connection over which speed is restricted to 40 m.p.h., the latter line being protected by facing catchpoints with a lead and crossing, the open end of the lead is 85 feet from the toe of the switches". That suggests that the goods line wasn't there in 1940, but instead the down relief ended with an open lead acting as a trap to protect the mainline.

    Tom
     
  3. Martin Perry

    Martin Perry Nat Pres stalwart Staff Member Moderator Friend

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    The accident report contains no maps - seems to have been done in a hurry ... not surprising given the circumstances.
     
  4. Jamessquared

    Jamessquared Nat Pres stalwart

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    Quite - if you look at the pre-war ones, you get beautifully detailed charts and plans showing the exact disposition of the lines and where vehicles came to rest. Whereas Norton Fitzwarren looks to have been hammered out pretty quickly by typewriter on no doubt poor quality paper!

    Tom
     
  5. GWR Man.

    GWR Man. Well-Known Member

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    Having another look in Ian C bible about the WSR the photo Robin used on page 136 for the old view does say the down goods loop was added in 1943, but the track plan on page 137 for which I got the date from shows this line in place and is dated 1938 so there is a mistake on one or the other page.
     
  6. Jamessquared

    Jamessquared Nat Pres stalwart

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    Quite possible that the plan was drawn up to show future works, which subsequently may or may not have happened as drawn. I'd be fairly confident that the goods line wasn't there in 1940, since otherwise the Norton Fitzwarren accident wouldn't have occurred in the way it did - the passenger train would have been diverted onto the goods line rather than derailing at that point.

    Tom
     
  7. Big Al

    Big Al Nat Pres stalwart Staff Member Moderator

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    NF is an example of where the infrastructure has been pared back to the minimum needs of the system today without any thought about what might be needed tomorrow. Arguably the previous discussion about the WSR possibly extending into Taunton would have been made a great deal easier/viable with more of the original track still in place.
     
  8. GWR Man.

    GWR Man. Well-Known Member

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    What I understand when the Exeter signal box was built which controls Taunton in the mid 80's there wasn't the money to pay for the up relief line to be retained into Taunton station.
     
    Last edited by a moderator: ‏21 فبراير 2017
  9. Robin Moira White

    Robin Moira White Resident of Nat Pres

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    We on the WSR were very fortunate that the stub of the branch was used by Taunton Cider as a siding for their rail-borne traffic in the 1980's when the WSR was financially shaky. Without that the photo above would undoubtedly show just a pair of running lines and no branch.

    Below is the view the other way (towards Taunton/Bristol/London) from the same bridge.

    Robin

    IMG_4596.JPG
     
    Last edited: ‏21 فبراير 2017
  10. Greenway

    Greenway Part of the furniture

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    There seems to be plenty of room for the catenary masts; that is if the electrification of the ex GWR line south of Taunton takes place. ;)
     
  11. Robin Moira White

    Robin Moira White Resident of Nat Pres

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    I fear the low flying porcine display team will have visited Taunton before that happens.:)

    Robin
     
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  12. mvpeters

    mvpeters Member

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    Reference to R.A.Cooke's Track Layout Diagrams section 15 pages 15/8 & 9 (price £1/5/0d from all good book-sellers) shows:
    --- the Down Relief installed between 1931 & Feb 1932, re-joining the Down Main just off the end of the platform.
    --- extended in Oct 1932, re-joining the Main as in the 50's photo - the diagram shows a short stub beyond. (It's a sketch, but looks more like a head-shunt than a trap point to me.).
    --- extended again in 1943, perhaps as far as Allerford Jcn?
    I interpret this to mean the train ran off the end of the short stub - if only the 1943 extension had been in place.......

    Yes, Robin, keep the before & after photos coming!
     
    Last edited: ‏21 فبراير 2017
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  13. Robin Moira White

    Robin Moira White Resident of Nat Pres

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    The Down Goods Running Loop extended to 'Victory Siding' signal box, the next box West from NFW.

    Not so very far away as in the 1950 picture the VS distants can be seen on the same posts as the NFW starting signals.

    That box is often erroneously referred to as 'Victory Crossing' which is what is there now - an AHB - now on Exeter Panel.

    Robin
     
    Last edited: ‏21 فبراير 2017
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  14. Black Jim

    Black Jim Member

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    One of the best T & N photo yet ! Just reminds us (as if we needed it) what the railways were like in steam days.
     
    أعجب بهذه المشاركة Robin Moira White
  15. Robin Moira White

    Robin Moira White Resident of Nat Pres

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    Thanks!

    Something we can do on the WSR and need to work harder at..

    Robin
     
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  16. Robin Moira White

    Robin Moira White Resident of Nat Pres

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    WSR then and now.

    Leigh Bridge Loop

    Both photos from Leigh Bridge looking north towards Stogumber and Minehead.

    Robin

    1934

    IMG_4599.JPG

    2017

    IMG_4601.JPG
     
    Last edited: ‏22 فبراير 2017
    lowca63, Paul Kibbey, Fish Plate و 9 آخرون معجبون بهذا.
  17. Jamessquared

    Jamessquared Nat Pres stalwart

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    Another interesting photo - looks like bi-directional running on the left-hand road. Presumably the left hand road was the mainline, and the right-hand loop could be bought into use at periods of high traffic?

    Also, a terminology question for @Robin White - what did the GWR rule book use as the names for "catch" and "trap" points? The photo above shows what I would understand as one of each on the right-hand road. (i.e. I would understand the further away to be a "trap" point, designed to protect a train entering the left-hand road from an inadvertent movement in the normal direction on the right-hand road; a trap would be facing for vehicles moving in the normal direction for the line in question. Whereas the nearer set of switches is what I would call a "catch" point, designed to protect the line from a vehicle running away in the wrong direction down the right-hand road; a catch point would normally be trailing in the direction of normal traffic and would have to be clipped or otherwise held over if there was a need to deliberately make a movement over it in a facing direction.

    However - in the accident report at Norton Fitzwarren, what I would consider a "trap" point where the derailment occurred was referred to throughout as a "catch" point, including by the driver concerned. Did the GWR use alternative terminology on that, ahem, point? (Checking the signalling diagram, it appears to call the catch point a "spring point" - http://www.s-r-s.org.uk/html/gwe/S757.htm).

    Tom
     
  18. threelinkdave

    threelinkdave Well-Known Member

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    A lovely shot of historic trackwork. A work of art almost but must have been a labour of love to keep all fittings tight. I note there is what loooks to be locking cover on the diamond in the main line and no check rails so presumably a switched diamond
     
  19. Aberdare

    Aberdare New Member

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    Robin is doing an excellent job is making the effort to produce the updates for old photographs.

    Just look at those wonderful 40mph sweeping turnouts that allowed a train to cross another at near line speed. This was only made possible by the installation of GWR's version of the Whittaker Tablet Exchange apparatus which was fitted to both the Minehead and Barnstable branches, as far as I am aware they were the only GWR lines so equipped. The S&D was of course equipped with the Whittaker equipment for the single line sections and 53808 has a working slide both sides which on occasions is used in demonstrations at Washford where the S&D Trust has working lineside equipment.

    Perhaps now we need some suggestions for Robin, how about one of the following from Ian Coleby's definitive work on the Minehead Branch:-
    1. Page 87 Minehead. Tricky to get the location exactly correct and will have to await the completion of the PW works. (Robin, you will need to get in quick before ops dept fill up the stone siding again.)
    2. Page 322 top. (Robin the signal box, not the location.)
    3. Page 280 Blue Anchor. My favourite picture in the entire book.
    4. Page 255 Kentsford. (and page 236 top at the same time.)
    5. Page 204 Williton. To make this work the location has to be exact, bonus prize if you can get the current station staff in the appropriate poses.
    6. Page 181 top Leigh Wood crossing.
    Photographs if building interiors are harder to find page 271 top photograph would be ideal but hard to replicatenow unless you cheated and went to Dunster, the photograph would also need to be reversed.

    Andy.
     
  20. Maunsell907

    Maunsell907 Member

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    I note the comment wrt Norton Fitzwarren "was always effectively a station on the Minehead branch". I was surprised recognising the grand way the station was rebuilt.

    According to Bradshaw July 1939 there were on weekdays 25 Down trains stopping. These broke down as 10 Main Line (8 to Exeter, 0ne to Tiverton, one to Cullompton.) 9 to Minehead and 6 to Barnstaple.

    By September 1958 there were only 12 Down trains stopping, 6 to Minehead, 4 to Barnstaple and only two Exeter locals ( both afternoon i.e. 16.30 and 18.20 from Taunton which gave connections from the 13.30 'The Royal Duchy' and 15.30 from Paddington.)

    Michael Rowe
     

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