A railway journey in photographs along the Guisborough to Whitby line. A journey that has not been made since May 3rd 1958. By Michael Aufrere Williams (author of The Whitby-Loftus Line).
Gosh! They should never had destroy such a marvelous line! They should relay all the train tracks, and reopen the service. Thank you for sharing. Moira From England.
I used to live in guisborough, now in the states, and the USA has zero infrastructure, so even though England lost loads of it, it still has more than the USA, so be glad what you have, not what you lost. The north east is still home to me, so seeing this is simply great. Thank you for putting this together.
Excellent video with beautiful background music. The golden age of railway travel. Thankfully being brought up in the 1950s and 1960s I can remember these glorious days very well. It was a much more peaceful and slower time but sadly we cannot go back. My only problem was that the title of each shot did not stay on screen long enough therefore I had to either try and pause the video or go back a few frames.
Bloomin' marvelous! I appreciate the effort gone into creating this montage. My first job interview after leaving school in 1977's Middlesbrough was at Guisborouh Hall as a junior waiter/trainee butler. I didn't get the job but enjoyed being shown around the Hall.
PreshArts the line ran at a loss from the day it opened. It was only the ironstone at the northern end and the holiday traffic that balanced the books. In the end it was the viaducts and the tunnels that caused the demise of this line in 1958. The viaducts were designed in the style of Bouch, of the Tay Bridge disaster. After Tay Bridge collapsed the viaduct at Staithes, I'm not sure about the other viaducts, was fitted with a pressure gauge, which if it went above 28lb/sq ft the viaduct was closed to all traffic - closing the line. Being so close to the North Sea this was a regular occurance.
Thanks for this wonderful portrayal of what must regarded by many as deeply romantic railroading in any era. I'm glad I stopped by for this, I've waited for sometime for a glimpse of this as an operational railroad.
I was in the RAF at a place called East Barnby where we were billeted.. We marched to the Radar station of a morning from East Barnby.., Known as RAF Goldsborough.. I used to get off the train at Kettleness and walk to the camp, We worked at the Radar station at Goldsborough.. Happy days ..
Think how much holiday traffic would travel the coastal route from whitby with unrivalled views of coast think of the success of North Norfolk Railway Mid Wales Railway huge asset for Tourism...
I’m sure my dad was a fireman on this line in the 1950s. He was made redundant when the line shut but managed to get another job on the railway, eventually becoming an inspector.
Great slide show, not really into trains myself, but this is a great glimpse into the past. Shame these stations all closed. I can remember Loftus station before the bridge was taken down. and then later replaced by the new one for the potash trains.
This line didn't even reach the arrival on Beeching. Steam was and always will be an inefficient means of directly powering a train in terms of fuel usage and manpower.
Whilst watching this video at 5:32, with the Ivatt Pig pulling into Sandsend Station, the exact photo of 43074 is the front cover of a book I have based on the 'Lost Railways Of North & East Yorkshire' by Gordon Suggit (amazing book, would Highley recommend) and I was absolutely shocked and stunned on how I fou d the photo, and if anybody wants the book, where I bought it was at the wenslyde railway, or you could look on Google for it
Fantastic video , thanks for putting this on :) do you have any of the line from Pickering to Malton or the Helmsley to Scarborough line in the days of steam please ? :) x
All decimated by treacherous politicians determined to put everyone in a car. All planned, I do declare. Greetings from a Brit residing in the USA. Keep safe!
cool to see the old stations but dont the coast ones all look a bit alike spent a lot of time in kettleness station as a scout and they all look like roughly the same building weird
They had to build a lot of buildings at the same time so they standardised. The same building as the Kettleness type was used on other lines like between Durham and Newcastle (Chester Le Street station is a good example).
This slideshow is gorgeous, true, but it also really romanticizes and gives people a rosy-eyed view of rail travel both nowadays in back in 'those days' Firstly, railway stations back then were HORRIBLE. Trains were smelly, dirty, and noisy. Stand in the wrong place on the platform and you got covered in soot. Life expectancy for train crews was around 15 years lower than average due to their constant exposure to cancerous filth. Secondly, there were good reasons this line was stopped. No, it wasnt Beeching, the line died many years before his butchering of the railways. It died because it was unprofitable and it was its operators that ended it. There was a better line inland (the Esk Valley line) that was not liable to drop into the sea in the near future, and there was a FAR better way to transport people around coming into service - BUSES - and an even better way getting more popular - personal motor cars. These 2 tie into the third reason below. Thirdly, many people do not realize how much towns have sprawled. Take this line for instance - Whitby, back in 1920 around 98% of the towns population lived within five minutes walk of one of the two railway stations (Whitby Town and the now demolished Whitby West Cliff). Nowadays, less than 5% of the population live with five minutes walk of them (even assuming the WC station still existed). Hence why rail to work, popular back then and even nowadays in specialist rail-to-work hubs, ie the London commuter belt, is completely nonviable nowadays.
Absolute nonsense ! Before this line was removed we used it to go on holiday to my father's village Hinderwell every year from our home town of Cleethorpes ! The smell of steam and coal I can still remember ! It was wonderful ! If it was still running tourists would come from all over ! The cancerous filth from diesel and petrol vehicles is far worse !
@@paulrowe9604 Hinderwell and Cleethorpes? As in the place everyone was talking about after the last womens football competition, and a place in Lincolnshire? Probably much easier to get a train from Grimsby to Boro then a bussy bus to Hinderwell.....
onthegoldenline Dear Mike, I hope this finds you well. It’s been a long time since Bradninch and Dunchideock. Is there any chance your research work on rood screens will be published for a broader readership? Best wishes from the cathedral city of Winchester, a short distance from the Hospital of St. Cross and Almshouse of Noble Poverty. Keep on rocking! Yours aye, Lyndon