British Railways in Transition: The Corporate Blue and Grey Period, 1964–1997
By Jim Blake
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About this ebook
Jim Blake took a huge number of pictures capturing both the dramatic changes and decline of the railways pre-1997, both in the London area where he lived and around the country. This book provides a photographic history of the period, covering all aspects of the railway and its operations. It portrays the process of coming to terms with the post-Beeching, post-steam era, before a change of political will brought more rail investment. The volume looks not only at locomotives and trains, but also the overall railway scene during a tumultuous era.
Jim Blake
Jim Blake was born at the end of 1947, and he soon developed a passionate interest in railways, buses and trolleybuses. In 1965, he bought a colour cine-camera, with which he captured what is now very rare footage of long-lost buses, trolleybuses and steam locomotives. These transport photographs have been published in various books and magazines. Jim also started the North London Transport Society and, in conjunction with the group, he has compiled and published a number of books on the subject since 1977, featuring many of the 100,000 or so transport photographs he has taken over the years.
Read more from Jim Blake
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British Railways in Transition - Jim Blake
Introduction
This photographic survey looks at a variety of BritishRail diesel and electric locomotives and multiple units,from the mid-1960s to the time of BR’s full privatisation in 1997. The thirty or so years involved encompass the deliveries of the last of what now are referred to as ‘firstgeneration’ diesel and electric rolling stock, to the appearance of many types of modern traction that are still in service today.
In many respects, diesels and electrics were somewhat neglected by photographers in the mid and late 1960s, when British Rail’s last steam locomotives were being withdrawn from service and, to some extent, for a few years afterwards. This certainly applied to my own photographic output, though as the pictures in this book will show, I did photograph types that even in those days were becoming extinct. It was the withdrawal of older electric multiple units (notably on the Southern Region) and types of diesel locomotive that were considered non-standard from the late 1960s onwards that prompted more general interest in ‘modern traction’ and in any case, since steam had ended in August 1968, it was a natural progression anyway.
By the early 1970s, several of the first generation diesel locomotives were being withdrawn from service. These ranged from the ill-fated ‘baby Deltics’ which worked suburban services on my local Great Northern lines, to the Western Region’s large fleet of diesel hydraulics, which much to the consternation of Swindon management, were deemed non-standard by the BR hierarchy and therefore slated for early withdrawal and replacement by their favoured diesel electrics.
The time period covered by the photographs in this book also reflects the break-up and eventual privatisation of British Rail, which may be clearly seen by a gradual change from the corporate BR ‘rail blue’ livery first seen in 1964 to various regional liveries and route-branding, most notably Network SouthEast whose services stretched all the way from East Anglia to Exeter.
In the time covered by this book, I travelled quite a lot around the country mainly to film and photograph buses and trolleybuses (as well, of course, as BR steam until its final demise) but, fortunately, also captured on film diesel and electric rolling stock at places as diverse as Perth, Cardiff, Manchester, Ely, Portsmouth and Rye. From 1987 onwards, owing to the demise of ‘slam-door’ diesel and electric multiple units, I also travelled extensively around the Network SouthEast area specifically to photograph them, which will explain why there is a greater proportion of pictures of such stock in this book. However, I was also able to capture on film a good variety of ‘first generation’ diesel locomotives on both freight and passenger workings during this period as well as some of the newer locos then replacing them. Seeing some of the latter in BR livery was of course to be a short-lived spectacle.
Most of the photographs included herein have not been published before, and I hope that readers will find them of interest. Grateful thanks go to Colin Clarke who has spent about six years scanning my 100,000-strong collection of negatives, to my editor John Scott-Morgan, and also to Ken Wright for his help in ironing out a number of queries that arose whilst compiling this book.
Jim Blake,
Palmers Green,
September 2018
How the mighty have fallen! One of the two pioneer LMS/English Electric main line diesel locomotives, 10001, shunts wagons across the Grand Union Canal near Old Oak Common MPD on 31 December 1964. By now, it was the only survivor of the pair, and was finally withdrawn early in 1966.
From the beginning of January 1967, the famous Bournemouth Belle Pullman was scheduled to be worked by Brush 4 (Class 47) diesels loaned from the Western Region, though right up to the end of steam six months later, steam locomotives often hauled it instead. On Saturday 3 June