The Railway Magazine

40 YEARS OF RAIL ALE RAMBLES

railmaguk1804_article_033_01_01
railmaguk1804_article_033_01_02
railmaguk1804_article_033_01_03

REAL ale and rail travel somehow go together, especially with heritage railways, which often hold beer festivals at stations or on board trains. Both interests appeal to people who love tradition and want to support it in the face of an increasingly corporate world.

Heritage railways started to develop in the 1960s, and by the 1970s real ale was just as much under threat as steam a decade earlier, with the big brewers switching to mass-produced but far less tastier keg. The Campaign for Real Ale (CAMRA) was founded in 1971, when parts of the country were becoming real ale ‘deserts’ as small independent breweries were bought up and asset-stripped, a trend only recently reversed.

London, in particular, was a ‘wilderness’, but CAMRA had identified that a major thirst for real ale remained in defiance of what the big brewers wanted us to drink. That was why, in 1977, two British Rail employees (both CAMRA members) hit on the idea of running the first Rail Ale Ramble, to take ale drinkers to more promising parts of the country.

The two colleagues were Gerald Daniels and Sheridan Hughes, who worked at the area manager’s office in Surbiton on the ex-LSWR main line. Gerald – also known as co-author of the

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Railway Magazine

The Railway Magazine1 min read
Heritage Line Landslip
THE Ecclesbourne Valley Railway has reached its £30,000 fundraising target to restore services to Duffield after a landslip. The target was reached with hundreds of donations from the public and one anonymous gift of £10,000. The railway has only bee
The Railway Magazine2 min read
Colne Valley Viaduct crosses the Grand Union Canal
DECK construction work for HS2’s 2.1-mile long Colne Valley Viaduct has just over half-a-mile to go after it reached the point where the structure crosses the Grand Union Canal at the end of March. By the time of it bridging the waterway near Denham
The Railway Magazine3 min read
Electrical Issues Delay Start Of New Season
PROBLEMS with the supply to overhead power lines affected the start of the planned running season for two heritage tramways. At Crich Tramway Village in Derbyshire, home to the National Tramway Museum (where a decision was taken in early March to pos

Related