I have to say
that much as I enjoy driving, trains remain my favourite form of transport, particularly
over medium distances and especially when I am planning to have a few beers at
the end of my journey. The advent of Eurostar has also made international train
travel much easier, but that’s a topic for another time.
Travelling by
train to large cities saves all the hassle of finding a place to park, or the
stress of navigating ones way through busy and often congested city streets. In
a nutshell, the whole experience is far less stressful than tearing up and down
the motorway.
Ever since
childhood I have always enjoyed train travel. I’m not quite sure what
the attraction was in the beginning, but it was probably the ability to cover
relatively long distances, in much shorter times than was possible by road.
Anyone who finds
this concept strange, should be aware that when I was growing up, back in the late 1950’s – early 1960’s,
Britain’s motorway network was still in its infancy, and fast, dual-carriageway roads were few and far between.
Car ownership was
limited as well.
It might seem incredulous, but I had reached around 9 or 10
years old before my father acquired his first car, and even then it was a
converted Austin A35 van. Prior to that the family was transported locally by
motorbike and sidecar, with my mother riding pillion behind my father, and my
sister and I squeezed into a rickety sidecar.
Longer journeys,
such as trips up to London, to visit grandparents or other relatives, were
invariably made by train, and it must have been from around this time that my
love affair with rail travel first came about.
I was three years
old when my parents moved the family from London, to Kent. Property prices were
obviously much cheaper out in the sticks, and my parents had been able to
purchase a three-bedroom, new-build in Willesborough; once a village in its own
right, but by the late 1950’s, it had become just a suburb of Ashford.
Ashford was, and
still is, an important rail junction, with good connections to London, but when
my family and I first arrived there, steam-hauled trains were still the order of the day.
Although the pre-
nationalisation Southern Railway had embarked on an ambitious
programme of electrification, World War II had put this on hold, and it
was some time before work to electrify the more outlying lines could be
completed.
As a result
of this, those early trips to London and
back, would have been undertaken on a train hauled by a steam locomotive.
Subsequent opportunities for train travel arose towards the end of my
schooldays, when my friends and I would take the train to Canterbury, for the
odd bit of shopping and the chance to hang out.
By this time the
family had move to a small village, called Brook, situated to the north east of
Ashford. We would cycle to nearby Wye, where we could leave our bikes at the
station, before taking the train. A few years later, when I was in the Sixth
form, a group of us would travel from Ashford to Folkstone by train, in order
to watch various groups perform at the Leas Cliffe Hall. There we saw the likes
of Fleetwood Mac (pre-Buckingham/ Nicks), Caravan, Groundhogs, the underrated,
but very talented JSD Band and Uriah Heep, to name a few.
Fast forward to
my student days, where a friend and I spent a month travelling around Europe by
train, taking advantage of the Inter-Rail ticket. A few years ago I posted a
couple of articles, on the blog, about my experiences on this marathon train
journey which you might have thought would have put me off train travel for
life, but it didn’t.
Instead, a decade
or so later, the previous Mrs Bailey and I undertook another long train journey,
travelling initially to San Sebastian, on Spain’s northern Atlantic coast,
before criss-crossing the Iberian peninsula to Alicante. This was pre-Eurostar,
so the trip involved ferry crossings and overnight stays in Paris and Bordeaux.
Both undertakings proved an excellent way to experience and appreciate the
countries and the cultures we travelled through, and I would not have missed
them for the world.
The other
Friday’s meet up in Shifnal, with members of the Beer & Pubs Group Forum,
allowed me to re-live part of a train journey I once made on a regular basis.
This harps back to my days as a student at Salford University, where I got to
know the train journey from London to Manchester like the back of my hand.
Making the
journey by train was something of a luxury for a hard-up student, as it was
considerably more expensive than the alternative coach option. Whilst the
latter was less than half the price of the rail journey, it took twice as long,
the seats were cramped and it was at times, something of a “white knuckle
ride.”
What I mean here
is that like cars, but unlike lorries, coaches are allowed in the outside
“fast” lane of a motorway, and with tight schedules to keep up, it was not
uncommon for drivers to tail-gate slightly slower vehicles in front of the
coach, in a bid to force them to pull over
into a slower lane. You would be just
dozing off, when all of a sudden there would be a squeal of brakes and you would be
jolted forward, as the driver came up behind a vehicle who wouldn’t play ball. This, coupled
with having been a passenger involved in two separate coach crashes, is why I
am not a fan of this means of long distance travel.
To return to the
story, arriving at Euston station, ready to board my train to Birmingham, was
like stepping back in time, apart from the station itself, which looked rather
tired compared to the bright, modern structure I remember from the mid-1970’s.
I understand the station is due to be re-modelled in order to accommodate HS2,
although given the current mess that UK politics is in at present, the future
of the project remains uncertain.
The Virgin
Pendelino train I boarded, was painted in a dull shade of grey, instead of its
usual red livery. The company have lost their franchise for the West Coast Mainline, and are due to hand over to a new operator on 8th
December. (See below).
When I was a
regular traveller on this line, the rolling stock, rail lines, signalling and
stations were all part of the unified, nationally-owned and nationally
accountable British Rail. This was a far more sensible modus operandi than the fragmented
system we have today, although of course the entire network suffered from
chronic under-investment.
My journey to
Birmingham the other Friday, involved turning off the West Coast Mainline, just
after Rugby, whereas those trips back in the 1970’s continued on to Manchester by a
route which avoids the Birmingham conurbation. The journey still brought back
pleasant memories as the train sped steadily north, passing through familiar
places and familiar landmarks.
Now that I’ve
passed the magic age of 60, I’m entitled to a “Senior Railcard”, sometimes
referred to as as “Old Git’s Railcard.” With a third off the price, even off
discounted tickets – providing one travels outside of peak hours, in the south
east, makes even long-distance rail travel more affordable and opens up whole
areas of the country to the eager explorer. Even with moderate usage, the cost
of the £30 fee is soon re-couped, and then the savings really start to mount.
A sad note to
finish on because as mentioned above, tonight marks the end of the line for Virgin Trains, after
more than 22 years of operating services on Britain’s West Coast Main Line. The
firm, which is owned by Sir Richard Branson’s Virgin Group and Stagecoach, began
serving what is sometimes known as the "backbone of Britain's
railways" in 1997. The company was stripped of its franchise in a
row with the Department for Transport (DfT) over pension liabilities. The
companies are suing the DfT over its decision.
Virgin ran its first service in March 1997, with a pledge to update the 1960s rolling
stock it inherited from British Rail. In 2001 it delivered the Voyager, capable of
125mph, and a year later, it brought in Pendolino trains, equipped
with tilting rolling stock, which enabled curves to be taken at higher speeds.
More than 500 million journeys have been made with Virgin
during its tenure on Britain’s
railways. Now that era is coming to an end, and shortly before midnight tonight (Saturday), the last ever Virgin Trains
service will roll into Wolverhampton station. The trains
will stay the same, the staff too will remain, but the iconic brand is set to
disappear from our railways for good.
The new operator is Avanti West Coast, a joint partnership
between the Italian state railway company TrenItalia and First Group. Avanti says
passengers can expect simpler fares, new trains and more frequent services on the West
Coast Main Line. (Sounds too good to be true?)