Class 321412 Electric Multiple Unit, Wolverton Station
Photo: Charles Moorhen |
Electric multiple unit, (EMU), passenger train Class 321412, in London Midland Trains livery, waits at Wolverton station in Buckinghamshire with a service from London Euston to Northampton.
The Class 321 EMU fleet of 117 units were built between 1988 and 1991. These passenger trains superseded the Network South East Class 317 units that themselves had replaced the old and worn out British Rail Class 310s.
Wolverton was once well-know for the Carriage and Locomotive Works since being established in 1938 by the London and Birmingham Railway Company. Part of the works stood approximately where the block of flats in the background now stand.
Nowadays Wolverton Works is much reduced but remains notable as the home of the British Royal Train.
Wolverton railway station historical note:
It was at Wolverton railway station in Buckinghamshire, on the 9th September 1845, that bare-knuckle fighter, Bendigo, stepped from a carriage of a London & Birmingham Railway train surrounded by a horde of his supporters.
His destination was the nearby town of Newport Pagnell where it was arranged that he would take part in an illegal fight with Ben Court.
At the last possible moment, for various reasons, the venue was switched to the village of Lillington Lovell, 4 miles north of Buckingham.
The match went ahead with Bendigo being heralded the winner after 96 gruelling rounds.
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All blog posts are now listed alphabetically on the right side of your screen; under the heading, 'Previous Photo Posts'.
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