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Flying Scotsman

Discussion in 'Steam Traction' started by 73129, Aug 24, 2010.

  1. John Petley

    John Petley Part of the furniture

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    Mine was in 1978 when I happened to be spending a couple of weeks in the north west of England and went to see the Eric Treacy memorial trains which featured 4472, 35028 and 92220. Two years later, I travelled on one of the first "Cumbrian Mountain Expresses" with the motive power being 5305 to Skipton and 4472 from there to Carlisle. In those days, Scotsman did not have the same superstar status that it enjoys today - just one of Carnforth's pool of main line locos.

    I have made the effort to photograph it when it has run on the main line not too far from home - notably its one and only trip around Kent. I also have had one further trip on the main line behind it courtesy of an old schoolfriend who had two tickets for the British Pullman which he could not use. These were the days when Scotsman was owned by Tony Marchington and was painted in apple green while nonetheless running with double chimney and smoke deflectors. I must admit, I was never that keen on this inauthentic combination, but not sufficiently so to decline the offer of a spin round the Surrey Hills while my wife and I enjoyed an excellent meal - and all for free!
     
  2. GWR4707

    GWR4707 Nat Pres stalwart

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    Not sure when TBH probably sometime late 70's round the Cumbrian Coast possibly on a Santa Special and then various times in the early 80's possibly on CME's and others, two stick in the mind a CME when she was the Hellifield-Carnforth motive power and they used to run the stock down the Blackburn line for the loco to drop onto and she couldn't for a very long time get the stock moving back into Hellifield station, and a second posh thing we went on, I assume for some anniversary or something from KX to York where we had to go dining and I hated the asparagus soup!
     
  3. 68923

    68923 Member

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    Me and my mate, Wakefield Westgate "Up" Platform end 1959/60 ish as 60103 rolled in on a Leeds-Kings Cross. "Can we cab it please?" "Sure". I can still feel the heat from the open firedoors!
     
  4. Big Al

    Big Al Nat Pres stalwart Staff Member Moderator

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    My first encounter was when it strayed onto the Southern back in 1965 and ran all the way from Waterloo to Weymouth and then back to Paddington via Westbury. A great day out with the Southern crews handling the loco better than the GWR men but with only 7 coaches behind the tender it was hardly a challenge. However we did have the benefit of an unassisted climb of Bincombe.

    An interesting day that revealed how quirky an A3 can be. Almost ran from Soton to B'mth in even time and made a nonsense of the 39 minute schedule but then crawled up Bincombe at 15 mph dropping time hand over fist. Only ten late back into town. My next outing was a year later on the Newcastle trip out of Kings Cross when Scotsman ran to and from York and Merchant 26 did the leg to and from Newcastle. We ran to Peterborough in a pretty nippy 78 minutes including two checks with steady eighties on the fast bit beyond Hitchin and handed over to the Merchant at York just a few minutes down. A lovely run to and from Newcastle - 87 minutes northbound and 83 southbound with 90 on the flat around Thirsk. Not to be outdone on the ECML, Scotsman managed 93 downhill on Stoke and we were back in London a few minutes early. Much more recently I had a tidy run with FS on GBX in 2017 up to York, especially north of Grantham.

    That said, FS is also the loco that has failed with me on board more than once, a record that is exceeded only by Tornado. Clearly LNER locos and me don't seem to get along too well! :)
     
  5. MellishR

    MellishR Resident of Nat Pres Friend

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    Can someone please explain that post to me?
     
  6. class8mikado

    class8mikado Part of the furniture

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    Original post was Misspelt ( or maybe written phonetically as) 'Yark' ,
     
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  7. MellishR

    MellishR Resident of Nat Pres Friend

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    When did that become impossible? VT took 6233 to York on 17th June 2022, then on to Newcastle and all the way back to Tyseley on 18th.
     
  8. blink bonny

    blink bonny Member

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    I first saw it on 9th May 1964 when it hauled a special north to Edinburgh through my local trainspotting ECML location at Longhirst in Northumberland. I'd started the hobby only a couple of weeks before. A gleaming Union of South Africa, still in BR service at the time, hauled the return south that afternoon - my first 'streak'. A3s were still common locally on both freight and passenger then and I loved those distinctive blinkers and the way they gave an aura of strength and power to the locomotives. I praised Alan Pegler for ensuring that Flying Scotsman survived alone amongst its class, and appreciated the attempt to display a 'correct' livery, but even then I understood that I wasn't seeing the loco as it ran under the LNER, despite the colour of the paintwork, or the number it carried. I dubbed the conversion 'Peglerised'. At the time it was the fashion to decorate any preserved loco in the livery of a past existence, mainly to set it apart from all the other BR black or green steam locos that were common on the network, so it served a purpose, indicating to the general public that this unfamiliarly decked-out engine was 'special'.

    I'm still not a fan of that insipid green of the LNER, especially on Tornado, which would have been turned out in Express Blue had it been built as a direct follow-on from the later members of the class, and I love the BR livery with deflectors 60103 carries, which is correct for its final years in service. It looks as I remember them, as a memorial to all the other A3s I saw in those days, albeit that their greenness was masked by a cloak of dirty, greasy grime, with the cabside number cleaned with an oily cloth for identification.

    I was hauled by 4472 on the Journal Steam Special from York to Carnforth in July 1977 (Deltic 55002 from Newcastle), again on a Scarborough Spa Express in July 1981 and finally as 60103 on a Fife circular in 2021.

    4498 & 4472 at Carnforth, 3 July 1977. 36a-4498-&-4472,-Carnforth,-3-July-1977-fbook.jpg
     
  9. blink bonny

    blink bonny Member

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    Slipping a little off topic. Apart from 4472 and 4498, 10A Carnforth was host to a galaxy of other stars that weekend in 1977.

    34a-Ivatt-2MT-6441,-Carnforth,-3-July-1977-fbook.jpg 14a-DB-012-104-6,-Carnforth-3-July-1977-fbook.jpg 15a-44932,-green-Black-Five,-Carnforth,-3-July-1977-fbook.jpg 16a-45407,-Carnforth,-3-July-1977-fbook.jpg 17a-B1-1306,-Carnforth,-3-July-1977-fbook.jpg 18a-Black-Five-44871,-Carnforth,-3-July-1977-fbook.jpg 31a-SNCF-class-231,-Carnforth,-3-July-1977-fbook.jpg
     
  10. 5944

    5944 Resident of Nat Pres

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  11. RalphW

    RalphW Nat Pres stalwart Staff Member Administrator Friend

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    I believe overnight stabling is ok, it's longer periods that are the problem, don't ask me why that is.
     
  12. guycarr360

    guycarr360 Part of the furniture

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    Surely the mooted facilities at Darlington could be a way to prepare / dispose, as well as giving a stabling point for stock.
    And if FS is unavailable, a great way to make use of Tornado, on a repeat itinery.
     
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  13. peckett

    peckett Member

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    My first photo was on 15/08/1978 at Arnside with a Cumbrian Cost Express ,the first year of these trains I think. My first sightings were going over the G C R bridge at Rugby when it was allocated to 38c Leicester GC. That would be 1952/3.It didn't stay long at 38C ,not popular ,erratic steaming I was told .
     

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  14. silversteellady

    silversteellady New Member

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  15. MuzTrem

    MuzTrem Member

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    Worth noting GNR saloon No. 397 next to the German Pacific. Fully restored and a main-line runner at that time, I believe. Later sold for use as a restaurant in Newcastle. We must be grateful that it survives, but I can't help but feel that it wasn't the best outcome

    Sent from my SM-A125F using Tapatalk
     
  16. Johnb

    Johnb Nat Pres stalwart

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    Probably one of my favourites from the Pegler days. On it's way to Norwich at Belle Isle in the days before pallisade fencing and CCTV, 6th June 1968

    4472 Belle Isle 09-06-68 a .jpg
     
  17. Johnb

    Johnb Nat Pres stalwart

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    I think the engine is now back in that awful inaccurate livery on the Lakeside Railway.
     
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  18. The Green Howards

    The Green Howards Nat Pres stalwart

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    That's a lovely photo John, and especially of the London skyline back then.
     
  19. Johnb

    Johnb Nat Pres stalwart

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    Thanks, the entrance to Kings X goods and top shed also looks very different today.
     
  20. big.stu

    big.stu Well-Known Member

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    In my mind, I first saw Flying Scotsman at Bressingham, but I don't believe that's true, and I certainly can't find any evidence of it ever having been there. Must be confusing it with Cromwell or Royal Scot :eek:
     
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