Categories
Mid 19th Century Wargaming

200 years on – tomorrow

The world’s first public railway ran on 27th September 1825. The route from the coalfields around Bishop Auckland ran through Shildon and Darlington to reach Stockton on the river Tees.

Today you can still travel the route.

And at Shildon (north west of Darlington) the Locomotion Museum may not carry the international reputation of the Railway Museum in York but it’s still worth a visit. Its facilities are all modern.

You can arrive via the original railway line or if coming by car there is a large free car park.

Frankly this is a case of less is more – museums wise!

If you just want to get your head round “railways” then Locomotion does it better and quicker.

This is one of the great things about small museums – they often “punch above their weight”: The Wallace collection in the London springs to mind.

Locomotion concentrates on both the beginning of the railways and the modern experiments with speed such as examples of APT and HST.

An HST 125 from the 1980’s peeps out from behind LOCOMOTION dating from 1825

It is the presentation of these modern trains alongside the diminutive Locomotion and other early steam engines that looks so good.

There is a good selection of other engines and coaches showing developments over time as well as technologies.

Memorabilia and the inevitable shop and cafe round off an excellent site.

APT – the gas turbine prototype
Sans Pareil
The prototype HST stop gap for the APT which became a massive success in its own right under the 125 badge.
A working reconstruction of Sans Pareil
Mid twentieth century workplace looks clean – imagine the soot and smoke engulfing this place in every tunnel or from a passing steamer! Never mind the fierce heat when opening that firebox door! It belongs to a “Black Five” steam engine – nicknamed because it was always in black paint and classified as a class five locomotive.
A black 5 – a workhorse of the LMS and later nationalised British Railways.
Shildon was a massive wagon workshop and manufacturing site
Categories
Book Reviews Military History

On the High Street 23b

I picked up some interesting secondhand books at https://shop.keoghsbooks.com/

Keoghs opened their new shop in Skipton in 2022. It’s nicely laid out with a welcoming approach.

They have high quality selected stock.

My picks were three books, one on early steam warships another on early steam railways and the third about a head to head between Michelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci.

My interests in nineteenth century show no signs of fading. And naval developments in this century framed the twentieth century. A period of technology transforming just about everything to do with Naval Warfare.
Early steam railways has also been stoked! by my recent interest in post Napoleonic Europe. I have read this story quite a few times yet not this particular book or author.
This one just caught my eye, this period is always interesting……