daodao
Established Member
There was a regular restaurant car express from Bradford to Paignton via Birmingham New Street called the Devonian.Bradford (city of over 500,000) to Birmingham - possibly via Manchester.
There was a regular restaurant car express from Bradford to Paignton via Birmingham New Street called the Devonian.Bradford (city of over 500,000) to Birmingham - possibly via Manchester.
The line remained for freight, but it had been formally closed to passengers 31.12.67. No scheduled passenger trains ran over it until the Bicester-Oxford section was re-opened in the (late 90s?). When Euston station was being reconstructed for electrification (64-66) some Sleeping car trains ran via this line from Bletchley to the Calvert connection to terminate at Marylebone (and others diverted to Kensington Olympia), to give longer overnight track possessions. Don't think any started from there in the opposite direction.But the Bedford to Oxford line remained (I don't think it was ever formally closed, was it?) and yet there was never anything sent that way.
I saw recently there was an open access application for a Bristol to Nottingham service via Swindon, Oxford, Bedford and Leicester. While the government aren't too keen on approving OA at the moment I think this makes sense, and wouldn't abstract revenue from the faster XC route via Birmingham.There was never any significant long distance cross country traffic via the Cambridge-Oxford route. It remains to be seen whether East West Rail ever changes that.
Good question. Merthyr was suprisingly well connected with six different companies operating services out of Merthyr Station at the time of grouping.Were there ever regular passenger services from Merthyr Tydfil, Aberdare, East Kilbride etc. to places outside Wales / Scotland?
SW to East Midlands seems like a route that would be worth trying.I saw recently there was an open access application for a Bristol to Nottingham service via Swindon, Oxford, Bedford and Leicester. While the government aren't too keen on approving OA at the moment I think this makes sense, and wouldn't abstract revenue from the faster XC route via Birmingham.
You can do it now with a 14 minute connection at New St northbound, 17 southbound.SW to East Midlands seems like a route that would be worth trying.
Whilst my suggestion lacked ambition, I dont think Cleethorpes is Roman?Birkenhead-Margate was a GWR train. It ran via Reading and Redhill. The Kent/Sussex portions split/joined at Redhill
Euston-Stranraer trains went via Ayr after the Port Road closed.
What lack of ambition! This is a bit reminiscent of the Cleethorpes-Exmouth, which did exist. It was basically a Midland train so ran via Lincoln, Nottingham, Birmingham and Bath.
A summer dated Hull-Paignton ran for many years out on Friday night back on Saturday.Was there ever a Hull to Birmingham/Bristol service, Leicester to Newcastle, or Bristol to Scotland via Shrewsbury?
Shame there's no good way to make Cross Country work on the Tonbridge-Redhill-Guildford-Reading lines, opening up Kent to other routes while avoiding London. Especially if there was more interchange onto that line from intersecting routes, most of which seem to travel under or over without a decent junction or an interchange station (or if they do exist, it tends to be an annoying out-of-station interchange like Edenbridge or Dorking)And through the west midlands to Nottingham.
It's only really the north east and Scotland where direct services are lacking. Plus Kent, but Kent has no useful interregional services to anywhere.
That would make too much sense, it's interesting how much Manchester but not Liverpool being on XC affects the mental geography for people living in the south west. I've been to Manchester five or six times but never once anywhere near Liverpool (unless you count Manchester itself as near Liverpool...?)Bristol (or Exeter/Plymouth) - Liverpool via Birmingham and Crewe.
Was that as a fore-runner to the Blackpool - Harwich service. Maybe one for a different thread but did the 150/1 do much work in Anglia? Seems odd to train crew on them unless they were similar to the 150/2 which did.It was Ipswich to Sheffield. The unit was used for training in its long lay over at Ipswich and returned in the afternoon.
These trains ran in BR days, maybe 2 a day in each direction. Northbound the morning one called at Hartford (Cheshire,) allegedly because - or for the convenience of - ICI top brass going from Avonmouth(?) to the Northwich works.Bristol (or Exeter/Plymouth) - Liverpool via Birmingham and Crewe.
Everything else was loco-hauled at the time. This was just a one-off for one maybe two timetables. The Big Bang came in May 1988 when 156s took over with a cross country timetable like we’d never ever seen before.Was that as a fore-runner to the Blackpool - Harwich service. Maybe one for a different thread but did the 150/1 do much work in Anglia? Seems odd to train crew on them unless they were similar to the 150/2 which did.
No. The Blackpool-Harwich started in May 1986. It was a combination of the Blackpool-Cambridge and Peterborough-Harwich, and pre-dates the Sheffield-Ipswich.Was that as a fore-runner to the Blackpool - Harwich service. Maybe one for a different thread but did the 150/1 do much work in Anglia? Seems odd to train crew on them unless they were similar to the 150/2 which did.
Hull to Birmingham would be nice. Perhaps CrossCountry could divert one train a day to Hull instead of York, as a starter.Was there ever a Hull to Birmingham/Bristol service, Leicester to Newcastle, or Bristol to Scotland via Shrewsbury?
There was a plan to divert the Reading - Newcastle service to Hull each hour after HS2 was fully complete but that of course is now not going to happen.Hull to Birmingham would be nice. Perhaps CrossCountry could divert one train a day to Hull instead of York, as a starter.
When I was looked after unit control we had 213, 217, 227, 229, 231, 235, 237, 255 & 257 allocated to Crown Point. These were later joined by 245 from Scotrail.The class 150/1s only ran into East Anglia in the May 1987 timetable. They pre-date the introduction of class 156 in May 1988, which is when the loco hauled trains finished.
Class 150/2 did not come to East Anglia until the 1990s.
It would have to terminate at Hull rather than run it via.How bad would the time penalty be to run it via Hull.
Bad, I'd assume. But Hull seems pretty badly connected considering how big it is.
They did. See post #47.Liverpool to Bristol and Liverpool to Cardiff , would be routes id suggest.
How bad would the time penalty be to run it via Hull.
Bad, I'd assume. But Hull seems pretty badly connected considering how big it is.
Past tense, what Guildford got. Guildford isn't on the CrossCountry network now, except for occasional diversions due to engineering work and empty stock workings. The trouble with extensions such as Guildford and Hull is the disproportionate effort to get staff and units in the right place to run the service.The most likely would be one or two a day in each direction for an early/late service (similar to what Guildford gets)
I can see why it would be a long trip that might make it undesirable, but I can't see what would make it impossible to go Leeds - Selby - Hull - Selby - York.It would have to terminate at Hull rather than run it via