Anyone "Train" famous you know?
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- petermakosch
- The Midland Mainline Man
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Anyone "Train" famous you know?
lol, i just discovered this evening that Dr Beechings lived in my Village! We have a Street named after him, lol!
Also, my Great Grandad (or something like that) helped build the Mallard, and worked with Sir Nigel Greesley.
It all fun and games!
What about you?
Also, my Great Grandad (or something like that) helped build the Mallard, and worked with Sir Nigel Greesley.
It all fun and games!
What about you?
i want to be uploaded
- martinhodgson
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- Cuchulain
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I thought the trial electrification of the Brighton mainline, was first?martinhodgson wrote:My local line was first in the UK to be electrified, but no-one famous has come from Morecambe
http://WWW.EPGPB.CO.UK - Preserving, Restoring, Maintaining and running Southern Electric units.
Re: Anyone "Train" famous you know?
Has the street been closed?petermakosch wrote:lol, i just discovered this evening that Dr Beechings lived in my Village! We have a Street named after him, lol!
mick
- salopiangrowler
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chriscooper
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Morecambe line was the first to be AC electrified, as a test bed for the WCML stage 1 electrification. Was either dual Voltage or 6.25kV, not sure.
Anyway, Loughborough has many links with railways. Being home of the Brush works which have produced some of the most sucessful Diesel locomotives to run on the rail network, and has been involved in one way or another with many others, aswell as producing the Class 92 and Shuttle electric locomotives, in my opinion only second to EE when it comes to great British Diesel manufacturers. Loughborough was also the desitination of the first railway excursion by Thomas Cook, although I have never quite understood why. It is very much a railway town, having 3 stations at one point (MR, GCR and LNWR).
Personally, two people in my family have worked in the railway industry, one being my dad at Brush, where he helped design the class 60 and later at Adtranz (now Bombardier) where he was invloved in the designing of the Scotrail Turbostars. The other was my Great Grandfarther who worked as a good guard for the GCR at Langwith in Derbyshire and recieved an MBE for services to the railways (not sure of exact details). I'm currently trying to trace my family tree, so maybe I'll find some famous railwaymen in their somewhere.
Anyway, Loughborough has many links with railways. Being home of the Brush works which have produced some of the most sucessful Diesel locomotives to run on the rail network, and has been involved in one way or another with many others, aswell as producing the Class 92 and Shuttle electric locomotives, in my opinion only second to EE when it comes to great British Diesel manufacturers. Loughborough was also the desitination of the first railway excursion by Thomas Cook, although I have never quite understood why. It is very much a railway town, having 3 stations at one point (MR, GCR and LNWR).
Personally, two people in my family have worked in the railway industry, one being my dad at Brush, where he helped design the class 60 and later at Adtranz (now Bombardier) where he was invloved in the designing of the Scotrail Turbostars. The other was my Great Grandfarther who worked as a good guard for the GCR at Langwith in Derbyshire and recieved an MBE for services to the railways (not sure of exact details). I'm currently trying to trace my family tree, so maybe I'll find some famous railwaymen in their somewhere.
- Cuchulain
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The real IKB came from Portsmouth.
I expect if i looked, i know quite a few famous railway people, as my grandads family had a major stake in the local area's railways;
From what i know;
My grandad Albert {Bert} Wright, was in charge of Fratton steam shed
My great uncle, Bernard {Bernie} Wright, was someone big in the current Fratton depot
My Grandad's other brothers, Stanley {Stan} and Frank {?} Wright, were also big names in the railway, but i'm not sure exactly what they did.
Up until a few years ago, i couldn't go very far on the railway without someone saying "Oh, you're Bert's grandson" or "Oh, you're Al's boy" still get it today through people i get chatting to
What might be interesting, is if i post a list of all the railway people i personnaly know, and then see how many other members know these people?
I expect if i looked, i know quite a few famous railway people, as my grandads family had a major stake in the local area's railways;
From what i know;
My grandad Albert {Bert} Wright, was in charge of Fratton steam shed
My great uncle, Bernard {Bernie} Wright, was someone big in the current Fratton depot
My Grandad's other brothers, Stanley {Stan} and Frank {?} Wright, were also big names in the railway, but i'm not sure exactly what they did.
Up until a few years ago, i couldn't go very far on the railway without someone saying "Oh, you're Bert's grandson" or "Oh, you're Al's boy" still get it today through people i get chatting to
What might be interesting, is if i post a list of all the railway people i personnaly know, and then see how many other members know these people?
http://WWW.EPGPB.CO.UK - Preserving, Restoring, Maintaining and running Southern Electric units.
Re: Anyone "Train" famous you know?
It's now a cyclepathmicksasse wrote:Has the street been closed?petermakosch wrote:lol, i just discovered this evening that Dr Beechings lived in my Village! We have a Street named after him, lol!
Mark T
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My route - http://www.flickr.com/photos/54270350@N ... 900927534/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/54270350@N06/albums
http://www.youtube.com/user/mark508foto ... ature=mhee
167 uploads to UKTS and counting
Oh yeah and I just remembered, Loftus where I currently live had the first Female Porter/signal...person.
Can't find a link but I did find an intresting one about wartime railway women - http://www.hastingspress.co.uk/rail/women.htm
Can't find a link but I did find an intresting one about wartime railway women - http://www.hastingspress.co.uk/rail/women.htm
Mark T
My route - http://www.flickr.com/photos/54270350@N ... 900927534/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/54270350@N06/albums
http://www.youtube.com/user/mark508foto ... ature=mhee
167 uploads to UKTS and counting
My route - http://www.flickr.com/photos/54270350@N ... 900927534/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/54270350@N06/albums
http://www.youtube.com/user/mark508foto ... ature=mhee
167 uploads to UKTS and counting
- jp4712
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That well-known railway engineer and designer, Dame Thora Hird? Or one Eric Bartholomew, later to achieve fame and fortune as Eric Morecambe?:Dmartinhodgson wrote:no-one famous has come from Morecambe
Last edited by jp4712 on Fri Feb 27, 2004 11:51 am, edited 1 time in total.
- duncharris
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Cookchriscooper wrote:...Loughborough was also the desitination of the first railway excursion by Thomas Cook, although I have never quite understood why...
It was a methodist church meeting (fun!).
- Fodda
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Bristol... What is better or more famous than that which comes from Bristol? I mean the glorious and still unsurpassed GWR of course.
Oh yeah, and my house was a GWR housing project.
I think IKB was born in France, I know his mum and dad came over to escape the revolution...
As for where I grew up in New Barnet, well there's a huge poster in the NRM that shows New Barnet signal box...
Not too sure about people, but IKB certainly spent a good few years living in Bristol. First for the railway, and then for the two trans-Atlantic steamships he built here.
Oh yeah, and my house was a GWR housing project.
I think IKB was born in France, I know his mum and dad came over to escape the revolution...
As for where I grew up in New Barnet, well there's a huge poster in the NRM that shows New Barnet signal box...
Not too sure about people, but IKB certainly spent a good few years living in Bristol. First for the railway, and then for the two trans-Atlantic steamships he built here.
- johndibben
- Bletchley Park:home of first programmable computer
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