Journeyman
Established Member
- Joined
- 16 Apr 2014
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I took a very enjoyable trip on the SRPS railtour around the Fife Circle and down to Tweedbank yesterday, hauled by Black Five 44871. This loco was famously one of the four that handled The Fifteen Guinea Special on 11th August 1968, BR's final standard gauge steam-hauled train.
It got me interested in that trip, and I found out quite a lot online. Four locos were involved in total, of which three survive today (44871, 45110 and 70013). 44781 was scrapped. The train was formed of ten Mark 1 coaches, three in maroon and the rest in blue and grey, and apart from two kitchen cars, the whole train was formed of open second accommodation. Two vehicles from the train (M4933 and M4937) survive at the East Lancs railway.
Apart from a bit of late running, the whole thing seems to have run very smoothly, and obviously it got a LOT of attention from photographers. Much has been made of the cost of the tickets, but I wonder if people are perhaps being a bit harsh. Maybe BR did profiteer a bit, but in "today's money", it cost about £260. For an eleven-hour trip, with four locos involved, morning coffee and two meals thrown in, complete with a bit of alcohol included, it doesn't seem like bad value. Obviously it's still a lot of money and it was beyond the reach of a lot of people, but I don't think it's beyond the amount of money people fork out for things today.
Apparently about fifty seats on the train were empty.
Did anyone here travel on it? Any recollections? Anecdotes? Memories? How about reflections on the aftermath? It must have been quite a moment to see it trundle away into the distance, thinking that was steam gone forever.
It got me interested in that trip, and I found out quite a lot online. Four locos were involved in total, of which three survive today (44871, 45110 and 70013). 44781 was scrapped. The train was formed of ten Mark 1 coaches, three in maroon and the rest in blue and grey, and apart from two kitchen cars, the whole train was formed of open second accommodation. Two vehicles from the train (M4933 and M4937) survive at the East Lancs railway.
Apart from a bit of late running, the whole thing seems to have run very smoothly, and obviously it got a LOT of attention from photographers. Much has been made of the cost of the tickets, but I wonder if people are perhaps being a bit harsh. Maybe BR did profiteer a bit, but in "today's money", it cost about £260. For an eleven-hour trip, with four locos involved, morning coffee and two meals thrown in, complete with a bit of alcohol included, it doesn't seem like bad value. Obviously it's still a lot of money and it was beyond the reach of a lot of people, but I don't think it's beyond the amount of money people fork out for things today.
Apparently about fifty seats on the train were empty.
Did anyone here travel on it? Any recollections? Anecdotes? Memories? How about reflections on the aftermath? It must have been quite a moment to see it trundle away into the distance, thinking that was steam gone forever.