Heritage Railway

SHED BASHING!

While I had spent my junior schooldays with pencil and notebook at the nearby Midland main line in Leicester, my interest was not rekindled until 1964 when it became apparent that steam was on borrowed time. Equipped with my Ian Allan Combined Volume and my Brownie 44a camera, at 13 I was ready to record the demise of steam in Britain. The first in my family to own acamera, scraping my birthday money together, I had paid 37s-6d for it. With a fixed focus, a shutter speed of 1/40th and choice of F11 & F16 apertures, it took 12 pictures on 127 roll film. While one could forget about shots inside sheds, moving trains or grey locos on dull days, the relatively large format allowed remarkably good pictures, when conditions matched the camera’s settings.

My father indulged my railway interests and successive annual holidays to Sidmouth in 1964, Crieff 1965 and Swanage 1966 were by train; a large trunk of clothes having been sent ahead to the hotel. In addition to spotting on the journeys, my father also sent off for BR shed passes.

In early September 1964 we set off from Leicester Midland station for Sidmouth. In those days there was still plenty of steam on freight, BR Standard 9F 2-10-0 No. 92153 passed through and there was even the rare treat of LMS Jubilee 4-6-0 No. 45721 , amongst the Stanier 8Fs and

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