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Vintage railway film - Power to order - 1941 

Bennett Brook Railway
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Power to Order follows the production of a steam locomotive at the renowned Doncaster works.
Original promotional description for the film, 'Power to Order'.
Railways are the arteries of industrial Britain's trade. British engineering skill and British steel have made our engines famous all over the world. In this film an engine is built. The growing engine is followed through the boiler-shop, the machine-shop and the assembly-shop.
(Films of Britain - British Council Film Department Catalogue - 1941)
Several complete locomotives are shown towards the end of this film, and have been identified as the following (in order of appearance):
This LMS 8F 2-8-0 freight locomotive was introduced in 1935 and designed by W. A. Stanier. This type was initially built during WW2 for the Ministry of Defence and Overseas Service. The train we see here is probably in Turkey; it’s fitted with air brake hoses and the tender alongside has the Turkish crescent on the side.
An unusual locomotive, this is an Iraqi State Railways PC class. A streamlined steam locomotive that ran on the Baghdad to Istanbul route, only four of this model were ever built and only three made it to Iraq - one being lost when the ship carrying it was sunk. It is thought that this particular engine is the 502 ‘El Mosul’ - delivered to Iraq in March 1941, its name (written in Arabic) is just visible on the side.
The next train is the LMS 8F again.
Merchant Navy Class, introduced 1941 and designed by O. V. Bulleid. In Southern Railway livery and with the original streamlined casing, This particular engine is the 21C1 ‘Channel Packet’- the first prototype engine of this class, with the original streamlined casing and green livery. You can find archive footage of its naming ceremony here.
The 4493 ‘Woodcock’: LNER class A4 Pacific, designed by H. N. Gresley. Delivered new July 1937 in garter blue livery, it was withdrawn in October 1963 and scrapped. This train is the class-mate of 60022 ‘Mallard’ - the world steam record holder - which can be seen today in the National Railway Museum in York.
Skipping ahead to 9:13 we see a streamlined LMS Princess Coronation 4-6-2 heading north between Euston and Watford. It was probably decorated the famed crimson lake livery with gold stripes, with matching coaches, on a Euston to Glasgow train. Introduced in 1937 and built up to 1947 it was again designed by W. A. Stanier. The Art Deco streamlined casings were removed from 1941 onwards, but a restored locomotive, the 6229 ‘Duchess of Hamilton’ can bee seen at the National Railway Museum.
At 09:25 we see a Southern Railway N15 King Arthur Class. Introduced in 1925 the train we see was fitted with eight wheel tender for the Southern Railway Western Section, Waterloo-Exeter-Plymouth.
This film has been made available for non-commercial research and educational purposes courtesy the British Council Film Collection. film.britishcou.... The British Council Film Collection consists of 120 short documentaries made by the British Council during the 1940s designed to show the world how Britain lived, worked and played.
View, download and play with the Collection at www.britishcouncil.org/film

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4 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 50   
@simon.revill
@simon.revill Год назад
“… but remember, in less than a century’s time, it will all be squandered away”
@neiloflongbeck5705
@neiloflongbeck5705 Год назад
As the people and industry turned to the more reliable roads and the ability to travel wherever they wanted. We lost our railways because we decided to not use them.
@nickmiller76
@nickmiller76 Год назад
This beats "working from home".
@chriswilson2431
@chriswilson2431 Год назад
We need more informational tv like this. It’s done in such a way you can’t help but learn. Lovely bit of footage from a bygone era.
@gibbo9089
@gibbo9089 Год назад
Thank you Mr Cholmondley-Warner for the narration.
@williamhamblen3808
@williamhamblen3808 Год назад
No personal protective equipment to be seen!
@TurtledIn1991
@TurtledIn1991 Год назад
Watching this gave me so much pleasure, not just in seeing a WD go together like a massive Airfix kit, but in the pride we used to have for our industry & its creations. The globalistic obsession with the bottom line and outsourcing has really gutted not just Britain, but so many other nations.
@neiloflongbeck5705
@neiloflongbeck5705 Год назад
The obsession with the bottom line is what gave us the railways, the motor car and other road vehicles.
@TurtledIn1991
@TurtledIn1991 Год назад
@@neiloflongbeck5705 There has certainly been a profit motive behind these things, but I was specifically referring to the way we now "just get a cheaper country to do it" with no regard to how this attitude impacts national security, and the hollowing out of the communities left behind when the main industry in town moves out. Both of these things are coming back to haunt us now.
@neiloflongbeck5705
@neiloflongbeck5705 Год назад
@@TurtledIn1991 that's fine but we, as a country, have consistently voted for lower taxes which effectively means lower spending by our government or a higher national debt. We personally want things that our cheap but also want high wages which effectively prices our national products out of the market. The problem is the population not the system.
@billpugh58
@billpugh58 Год назад
@@TurtledIn1991 Perhaps now we have left the evil EUSSR we will build everything ourselves? Maybe we dont need to belong to the worlds largest and wealthiest free trade area? The tories will save us :)
@TurtledIn1991
@TurtledIn1991 Год назад
@@billpugh58 In a way the tories have already saved us, displaying their incompetence and showing us all what a sham our two-party system really is 🤣 Jokes aside, regardless of how we feel about the Brexit result, what would it say about our commitment to the democratic process if we were to ignore the majority vote of the British people? I say this as someone who voted Remain. In addition, just because we're not politically a part of the EU that doesn't mean we can't still trade with them. There'll be additional hurdles, yes, but if we make our industries and products attractive, they'll find a way to trade with us. The UK is in a really dire spot right now, with the fall of our industrial might coinciding with our dependence on foreign markets squeezing the people from both sides (wages are stagnant, meanwhile our over-reliance on Russian gas is seeing energy prices skyrocket, for example), but I have faith that we can unleash the power of our heritage and reclaim our prosperity. We just need to educate the people on what we used to have; let them know we have options other than being at the mercy of international markets. That's what films like this do really well.
@jeffreyhodge5564
@jeffreyhodge5564 Год назад
Look at the skills ,not a template in sight ,wonderful!
@neiloflongbeck5705
@neiloflongbeck5705 Год назад
Template seen at 3:46. Should have gone to SpecSqvers.
@barneswallace1944
@barneswallace1944 Год назад
Took me back a few years even the supervisor foreman wearing a bowler hat. Beeching who probably never soiled his hands, turn in your grave. God rest all the engineers, fitters and foundry workers who built Britain.
@damianharris2167
@damianharris2167 Год назад
Beeching was just the scapegoat for Ernest Marples and his crooked ways.
@neiloflongbeck5705
@neiloflongbeck5705 Год назад
As anybody who can Gogle Richard Beeching would know, he was a research physicist and worked at the Fuel Research Station at Greenwich and then at thomond Nickel Laboratories in a London where he did research I'm metallurgy and mechanical engineering. During the war he work in the ministry of Supply initially working on shell designs riding g to become the Deputy Chief Engineer. After the war he joined ICI working on improving the efficiency of various production lines and improving their production costs. Perhaps you should check the facts before giving your opinions.
@Wooburnmusic
@Wooburnmusic Год назад
Back in those days work was work, REAL WORK !
@simonfunwithtrains1572
@simonfunwithtrains1572 Год назад
Forging shop skills amazing, not much in the way of health and safety about. For more on this read Life In A Railway Factory By Alfred Williams. GWR in the 1800's
@neiloflongbeck5705
@neiloflongbeck5705 Год назад
Just the Factory Act and similar legislation. But still those rivetters lost their hearing.
@grotekleum
@grotekleum 7 месяцев назад
@@neiloflongbeck5705 Hindsight is a wonderful thing, but now H&S is just to create jobs, constant new regulations on top of new regulations.
@geoffreyvincent6086
@geoffreyvincent6086 Год назад
how apprpriate that the photographer for this film was mr hornby
@blackthorne57
@blackthorne57 Год назад
Thank you for sharing this rarely seen film.
@TheStickCollector
@TheStickCollector Год назад
I want to get into building steam trains so this is useful
@reneastle8447
@reneastle8447 Год назад
Good on you, buddy.
@martinmarsola6477
@martinmarsola6477 Год назад
Thank you for todays historic film. Quite entertaining and enjoyable. Cheers mates! ❤😊
@jeffreyhodge5564
@jeffreyhodge5564 Год назад
HELP We want our railways back!
@neiloflongbeck5705
@neiloflongbeck5705 Год назад
You never miss the water until the well runs dry. We, as a country, moved back to the roads away from the railways.
@simonfrancisrosanes321
@simonfrancisrosanes321 Год назад
Do more british vintage railway films. Please.
@allabouttrains6027
@allabouttrains6027 7 дней назад
WD356 in this video never got used, it was sunk on the MV Berhala on its way to Turkey on 23 May 1941, off the coast of Freetown Sierra Leone.
@grandpaears8746
@grandpaears8746 2 месяца назад
Fabulous !!!
@trailwayt9H337
@trailwayt9H337 Год назад
This video is very amazing. Thankyou for given this very interested information of view of made of steam Locomotive. Feeling as very nostalgic in Beautifully 💚👏👏👏👏
@philliplabuschagne
@philliplabuschagne 11 месяцев назад
British engineering is to be seen world wide. South Africa had a well run efficient railway. Sadly we have nothing left even the stations have been wrecked and lines stolen and sold for scrap.
@alexandermontagano2833
@alexandermontagano2833 Год назад
Awesome
@timelessengineering
@timelessengineering Год назад
Great stuff thanks for sharing.
@478vivi
@478vivi Год назад
le montage est excellent!!!🎥
@qpr543
@qpr543 Год назад
Watching this process for the first time!
@RebelWithACause-ts7de
@RebelWithACause-ts7de Год назад
UK railways are a shambles today!
@philliplabuschagne
@philliplabuschagne 11 месяцев назад
Come to South Africa to see a real shambles.
@p.istaker8862
@p.istaker8862 6 месяцев назад
It's going to be ok. They're building a new railway that would be better off having the money spent on the trunk routes that were recommended for re-investment in the Beaching report.
@rottenroads1982
@rottenroads1982 Год назад
1941, The UK in involved in WW2 at this time.
@fredburgessea4925
@fredburgessea4925 Год назад
Jolly good show what
@cbaboxsqueeze
@cbaboxsqueeze Год назад
All British actors and broadcasters had that diction right up to probably the 1960's. What they are saying is perfectly clear despite the primitive microphone technology of the period.
@grotekleum
@grotekleum 7 месяцев назад
@@cbaboxsqueeze Yes, rather, RP ruled the airwaves in thowes deys, ginger beer and ays-scream all round, what!
@CarlB_1962
@CarlB_1962 Год назад
The only thing we manufacture so efficiently these days is egos.
@paultrevett1287
@paultrevett1287 Год назад
Yep social media has a lot to answer for"!
@redmi9anio
@redmi9anio Год назад
...at minute 0:22 what is the name of the viaduct bridge.?
@zeddboy46
@zeddboy46 Год назад
Where ha our pride gone?
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