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Cheltenham and the Cotswold Lines

Cheltenham and the Cotswold Lines


Neil Parkhouse

528 pages. 275x215mm. Printed on gloss art paper, casebound with printed board covers.

ISBN13 : 9781915069573

£50.00

The Honeybourne Line. This mammoth volume takes us on a meandering tour of all of the lines which once served the Cotswolds area of Gloucestershire and neighbouring counties, including the one main line which still remains and which over the last three decades has been slowly regaining its importance – the old Oxford, Worcester & Wolverhampton route, which we travel in stages from Oxford to Evesham. In contrast, however, all of the other routes featured are now long gone, with the exception of the one between Cheltenham and Honeybourne, much of which has been reopened by the Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway. Starting out from the long lost Cheltenham St. James terminus station, we travel first to Andoversford Junction, where we then take the old Midland & South Western Junction Railway to Swindon Town via Cirencester. Returning to Andoversford, we next head off across the Cotswolds to Kingham, where we then transfer to Oxford for a trip along the Fairford Branch. After this, we go back to Wolvercote Junction to start our journey to Evesham via the old OW&W line but make two diversions en route, first from Kingham to complete our trip to Banbury and then again at Moreton-in-Marsh so we can travel the obscure branch to Shipston-on-Stour. Finally, after reaching Evesham (which connects us with an earlier volume in the series), we turn round and head back to Honeybourne so we can complete our ‘Round Robin’ tour by heading south through Toddington and Winchcombe to Cheltenham Malvern Road. As ever, the range of motive power featured is extensive – pretty little Southern ‘Moguls’ on the MSWJ, ex-GWR ‘Large Prairie’ tanks to Kingham, pannier tanks on the Fairford Branch (with North British diesels to Witney Goods), ‘Castles’ ‘Halls’ and ‘Granges’ plus ‘Westerns’, ‘Hymeks’, ‘Peaks’, ‘Class ‘25s’ and more on the OW&W and Honeybourne lines. With a sprinkling of ‘14XXs’, ‘45XXs’, Swindon Cross-Country DMUs and Gloucester RC&W railcars for good measure, the range of trains and services covered is extensive. In addition, very little of the railway architecture depicted still survives today, so this really is a window into the past, showing a railway that no longer exists. So lose yourself in images of long lost country stations, of the viaducts at Hook Norton, the extensive junctions at Kingham and Honeybourne, and the rural charm of the branch to Shipston, in sharp contrast to the processions of summer Saturday holiday expresses passing Toddington and Bishops Cleeve, plus the rare capture of a DMU on a driver training run  on the MSWJ at Withington. These are sights, sounds and smells now lost to history but all brought back to life here in glorious colour!

Cheltenham and the Cotswold Lines - Sample Images

sample book illustration
Ex-Southern Railway 'U' Class 'Mogul' No. 31619 making its scheduled stop at Cirencester Watermoor station on the ex-M&SWJR route to Swindon and Southampton in March 1959. The crew were taking on water, although the booked stop was only for three minutes. Southern engines began appearing on the line after Nationalisation, with British Railways Southern Region being given control of the route south of Grafton. By the date of this view, BR Western Region had cut the passenger time table down to the bone, with the result that north of Swindon, there was only one through train between Southampton and Cheltenham each day, Mondays to Saturdays. The service had also been diverted away from Cheltenham Lansdown station to St. James instead, cutting the possibility of onward connections and making it even less attractive for prospective passengers. Note the signalman watching proceedings having collected the single line token for the section from Foss Cross from the footplate crew, the token apparatus being little, if ever used by this date. NPC
sample book illustration
English Electric Type '4' No. D316 was still in British Railways green livery with the lion & wheel totem on its bodysides, again on Sunday, 24th May 1970, when it was photographed heading through the station site and towards Greet Tunnel with a lengthy loaded coal train, possibly a Daw Mill to Newport working – Daw Mill loaded 21 tonners for East Usk power station. The locomotive was built by Robert Stephenson & Hawthorn Ltd and had entered service at Crewe North shed on 20th January 1961. It was allocated to Liverpool Division when seen here but moved to York North a week or so later. However, that was a short stay, D316 returning to Liverpool Division in  late August 1970. It transferred to Manchester Division at the start of February 1971, was reclassified as Class '40' No. 40116 under TOPS and was withdrawn on 1st February 1981. Class '40s', nicknamed 'Whistlers' because of the distinctive whine made by their turbochargers, were not a common sight on the Honeybourne Line. Indeed, John Dagley-Morris tells me that he lived at Gotherington from 1966 to 1970, in sight of the line and never saw one. The proliferation of trains on this day suggests that many of them were on a diversion away from the Midland line. Bill Potter/KRM