.post img { border:5px inset #d2d2d2; padding:2px; }

Translate 'Along These Tracks' Railway Photo Blog Posts For Your Chosen Language

'Along These Tracks' Railway Blog Posts

Showing posts with label electric trains uk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label electric trains uk. Show all posts

Monday, 12 August 2019

Night Photo London Midland Trains Desiro Class 350233 EMU Train Bletchley 2018

London Midland Trains Class 350233 Electric Multiple Unit, Bletchley


colourful night image of class 350233 london midland uk passenger train waits at bletchley station 2018
Photo:  Charles Moorhen



The railway station of Bletchley looks deserted in this night image of 2018 as desiro 12-car London Midland Trains, Class 350 233 electric multiple unit (EMU) passenger train, waits before continuing on towards Wolverton and Northampton.

 

This was the last night photo, out of a total of around fifteen which, happily for me included Southern Trains Class 377701 Turbostar, I took on this particular summer night.


The West Coast Main Line station of Bletchley, once came to the public's attention for all the wrong reasons!
 
 
 
Video Clip - Two Class 350 EMUs Pass at Bletchley

 




Bletchley Train Crash - 1939

Today, as Class 66s, Class 86s and Freightliner Class 70 diesel locomotives haul long and heavy freight trains along this section of the West Coast Main Line, and Class 350 electric multiple units transport thousands of commuters into and out of London each day, and Class 390 tilting trains pass one by in the blink of an eye, it is hard to imagine that the Buckinghamshire station of Bletchley, was once the location of an horrific train crash during the early months of World War 2.

In the morning gloom of Friday the 13th October 1939, the 07:37 Euston - Inverness express train was stopped in the station (approximately where Class 350233 is standing in the photo above), whilst a shunting locomotive - a London & North Western Railway 0-8-0 Class G1 number 9168 - was attaching an extra coach to the rear.

Whilst this operation was in progress, the 07:50 Euston - Stranraer express, double-headed by two immensely powerful steam locomotives - one a 4-6-0 Royal Scot class, the other an LMS Stanier 'Black Five' No. 5025 (subsequently re-numbered 45025) - was bearing down on Bletchley station; running at high speed and three minutes behind schedule.


'Black Five' 5025 in Preservation

An inevitable disaster was merely seconds away.

The impact of the resulting collision was so powerful when it happened, that it lifted a number of coaches and one of the locomotives up onto the adjacent platform, a height of around 4 feet, totally demolishing the waiting and refreshment rooms.

Amid the carnage - station staff, passengers, volunteer members of the ARP unit (Air Raid Precautions) and a number of doctors offered what assistance they could to the injured, while ambulances summoned from the surrounding towns rushed to the scene.

A postman, a railway porter, an RAF serviceman and the engine driver of the G1 shunter locomotive were killed instantly.  40 other people were injured.

The more seriously injured, among them a shunter and a refreshment room waitress, were transported by road to Northampton hospital 20 miles away.

The inquiry into the cause of the crash put the blame squarely on the shoulders of the driver and fireman of the Euston to Stranraer express train.  They inquiry panel cited; excessive speed and the passing of a number of track-side signals set at red as the main cause.

On a happier note:  Against all the odds, one of the steam locomotives involved managed to survive the events of the 13th October 1939.  'Black Five' No. 5025 was eventually repaired and put back into mainline service.  It worked for a further twenty-nine years until retirement on the 31st August 1968.

Saved from the scrapyard, it survives to this day on the preserved Strathspey Railway in Scotland.


Don't forget to subscribe to  'Along These Tracks' to get all new posts and updates sent directly to you.



Blog update:

Previous posts are now easier to find.  

All blog posts are now listed alphabetically on the right side of your screen; under the heading, 'Previous Photo Posts'.


"I hope this makes your search easier".



Tuesday, 2 April 2019

Photo Class 444030 Desiro EMU in South West Trains Livery at Brookwood 2014

Class 444030 Desiro EMU Brookwood Train Station

photo of Class 444030 Desiro electric multiple unit train passing through brookwood station 2014
Photo:  Charles Moorhen


South West Trains, Desiro Class 444030 electric multiple unit, (EMU), photographed speeding through Brookwood station, Surrey, England, operating a 'fast' service to London Waterloo on the 29th June 2014.


The station building behind the train on platform 2 is an historical structure.  It was built for the Necropolis Railway which operated in Victorian times from 1854 until 1941- first from Westminster Bridge Road, London, (1854 - 1902) and subsequently from Waterloo Station (1902 - 1941).

The station was built specifically to handle transportation of coffins and mourners to Brookwood Cemetery.

The cemetery boundary was close to the station building and could be accessed by an underpass.  

The original station underpass is still open as is the cemetery.

Further details about the Necropolis Railway can found in a blogpost on 'Along These Tracks' entitled, Victorian Funeral Railway History. 



Don't forget to subscribe to  'Along These Tracks' to get all new posts and updates sent directly to you.



Blog update:

Previous posts are now easier to find.  

All blog posts are now listed alphabetically on the right side of your screen; under the heading, 'Previous Photo Posts'.


"I hope this makes your search easier".



Wednesday, 28 June 2017

Photo Class 450108 Desiro South West Trains EMU Brookwood Station 2014

Class 450108 EMU Brookwood, Surrey

photo of class 450108 in orange blue and red livery of South West Trains electric multiple unit at Brookwood station, UK
Desiro Class 450108 EMU
Photo: Charles Moorhen



South West Trains Class 450 450108 third-rail electric multiple unit, is seen at Brookwood station operating a stopping service to London Waterloo on the afternoon of Sunday the 29th June 2014.


Class 450108 commuter train was built between 2002 and 2006 and allocated to Northam (Southampton) EMUN.

Class 450108 unit coach numbers are as follows: 63708  66858  66808  63758.

Although it was a Sunday I saw a fair amount of Class 450 and Class 444 EMU activity on the line - but no freight.  

It was my first trip to Brookwood station, although I passed through it many times as a boy in the 1950's behind a variety of Southern Region steam locomotives on my way to Basingstoke for my school holidays.  





Apart from the absence of smoke-stained Southern Railway green paint, not to mention equally smoke-stained railway staff, it seemed as though it had hardly changed a bit.

****************************************************************


Brookwood station features elsewhere on this blog under the title, Brookwood Cemetery Station and the London Necropolis Funeral Railway.  
The blog post makes for interesting reading if you are partial to a bit of unique railway history.



Don't forget to subscribe to  'Along These Tracks' to get all new posts and updates sent directly to you.



Blog update:

Previous photo posts are now easier to find.  

All blog posts are now listed alphabetically on the right side of your screen; under the heading, 'Previous Photo Posts'.


"I hope this makes your search easier".







'Along These Tracks' Featured Post of Over 200 Images

Class 387115, 387123, 387124 Thameslink Trains Bedford 2015

  Class 387115 Thameslink Trains EMU Bedford 2015        Photo: Charles Moorhen     C lass 387123 Thameslink Trains EMU & Class 222023 D...

'Along These Tracks' Popular Photo Posts