Tubular Anecdotes

As a northerner, a resident of the sticks that are way out there, I grew up almost entirely reliant on scant service buses, and as such, only visited the places to which the buses went. Cities, like London, with their subway systems were a great source of envy for me. Trains, being not just cool, they can take you anywhere. Using these systems, like the London Underground, give you a different perspective of them.

My First Time

My first experience of the Tube must have been in the very early eighties, and I was very little, and don’t remember very much of it. A family trip to London on the brand new Intercity 125s, and that’s about as much I recall. So my first genuine exposure to the tube was around 1994 when I visited a friend in Watford.

Being a young adult of limited means, a student, I was using the National Express, like in the song, and the way from Watford to Barnsley was via Victoria Coach Station. And the best way to get to Victoria was an Intercity train from Watford Junction to London Euston, but that was something that only happened to people with money. The cheaper alternative was the semi fast commuter service in to Euston. Cheaper than that was the slower DC line to Euston. And even cheaper than that was the Metropolitan Line to Baker Street, and then the Circle to Victoria. An hour longer than the next best option, but it cost about £1.50 instead of a tenner.

I remember this journey particularly well because of much it contrasted with my expectation of London and the South of England. To make the coach from Victoria I had leave early, before seven am. And it was still dark, foggy, snow on the ground, and to get there I had to walk through a lonely municipal park, and for the entire twenty minute walk, I didn’t see another soul until I arrived at the tube station and purchased my ticket from a chap behind a little window. The train was waiting for me at the platform, and as far I could tell, the train too was empty. I had an entire London Underground train to myself. The first stop was a couple of minutes down the line, Croxley, and no one got on or off there either, and the snow was crisp, fresh, undisturbed.

It was the darndest thing, and I began to doubt the realness of my situation. Was I dead?

Obviously I wasn’t. The whole of the South East had just over slept or something. Having an entire train to myself wasn’t going to last though, and from then on it began to fill up and by the time the train arrived at Baker Street it was standing room only.

The thing I remember most about that train ride, aside from the emptiness at the start, was looking out of the window of a London Underground train and seeing open countryside and suburbs, and with a dusting of snow no less. The closer you get to London, the denser the housing gets. Victorian terraces that stretched as far as the eye could see, four of five, or even six stories tall, smoke bellowing from the chimneys. Very Mary Poppins.

Recalling this journey made me realise something about myself. This trip was the first and only time I ever used Baker Street station without a certain song getting stuck in my head.

From a certain music video…

The onward train from Baker Street wasn’t as pleasant as the first. The station wasn’t as empty, in fact it was positively heaving. And when I did manage to board a train, well, “like a tin of sardines” might be a well worn cliche by now, but its yet to be beat. It was packed. I was unable to raise my arms to hold a hand rail, but there was no danger of losing your balance as the train jolted about beneath the streets of London. I can’t even use the word jostle, for that would imply some degree of freedom of movement within the carriage. There was none.

Gone too was the scenery. We were now deep below ground. The delightful snow topped open countryside and suburbs was replaced with armpit. A lot of armpit. Armpit in ever direction, as far as the eye could see. I’d never held breath so long, and the diesel fumes and tabacco smoke of the open London air never tasted so sweet.

Since then, I have used the tube many times and found it just as unbearable at rush hour, but quite pleasant at any other time.

Their First Time

A year or so ago I was working in London and thought it would be a good idea if the wife and kids traveled down to meet me for a weekend of sights and sounds, and travel down to meet me they did.

Waiting at Euston

It was a weekend of firsts, for all of us. It was the boys’ first long distance train ride, first time in London, first Black Cab, first West End show. It was my first, and last, Uber. It was also, the first time on the London Underground for the kids, and it did not go well.

We were staying at the Kings Cross Plaza, quite a walk from any tube station but I was absolutely adamant that we should have the experience of the London Underground. It would be fun. It wasn’t.

The nearest tube stop was Russel Square, so we walked there. I was particularly looking forward to showing the kids the steep long escalators that go so far down that you cannot see the bottom. Russel Square is not the station for that sort of thing. The platforms being accessed by lift. A very busy crowded lift as it happened. It took us a while to figure out how to buy tickets too. The whole system is geared up for using contactless tickets. You just present your oyster card, phone, or bank card to the gate and it opens for you. There was very little provision for passengers traveling with children that did not have oyster cards, mobile phones, or bank cards.

When we did finally make it down to the platform, it was quite exciting. You could hear, even feel, the rumble of the trains, the whoosh of air as trains whizzed through the tunnels, and that musty old ozone smell that is unique to the London Underground. This was what we’d come for.

The first train burst out from the tunnel and slowed to a screeching halt. The doors slid open for us to board, but we couldn’t, beyond the door was a wall of people, several layers deep. There was no boarding that train. We let it go and waited for the next one. It was the same. We observed the locals forcing their way in to the carriages and after watching the third train leave without us we resolved to give it a try.

We (wife and I) each took a firm hand of a child, straightened our backs, and took a deep breath as yet another train drew in to the station. I had the hand of the eldest, and as the doors opened, he stepped aboard along side his mother, who held tightly the hand of our youngest. Without warning. The doors slid shut, separating me from my assigned child, and my youngest from his mother. I pulled him away from the platform edge.

“I’ve got him” I shouted to my horrified wife, “Meet at next stop!”

And then they were gone. The train whizzed out of view and we had no option but to wait for the next one. I shudder to think what might have happened had the kids boarded the train together first, or been left on the station without us.

Onboard the train, our separated family unit was the talk of the carriage. All were disgusted that this could have happened. Where was the warning that the door was closing? Where was the guard? I don’t know why I didn’t make a complaint, this was a serious breach of railway safety rules. This one event would have been enough to put the kids off London, but that was only the outbound trip, later, we had to return to the hotel.

It wasn’t until much later that we returned to the Plaza, by then it was late, after eleven, and the platforms and trains were all much quieter. I think we used Leicester Square, and there was a relaxed friendly atmosphere as most passengers were wined and dined and returning from a pleasant night out. The train came in and we boarded without incident.

Just up from us was a young man sat hunched, his head in his hands. I only really registered that he was there at because it was just as I was looking in that direction that he suddenly belched the content of his stomach on to the carriage floor. It stank. We got off of that train and waited for the next one.

Larping a Commute

The thing that inspired this post to begin with was a recent trip to London for a few days, and my usual hotel haunts were unavailable so I ended up staying further out. Baker Street is well within walking distance of Bloomsbury but I rather liked the idea of pretending to be a beleaguered weary tube commuter for a few days. Larping, for the unitiated is Live Action Role Play-ing. I doubt that I will do it again.

Its nice for cities that have metros, they are fast and efficient, but in rush hour, they really aren’t fun. They are hot and sweaty, the London Underground has a constant temperature of 50 degrees Celsius, or there abouts, which is why it always feel so warm, even in winter. Even before I arrived at the station, there were crowds of people overtaking me on the pavement, a stream of people, a river, nay, a raging torrent of commuters.

Through the station gate and you have to make a payment to gain access to the trains. Everyone knows where they are going and work on autopilot. You hear the sighs from behind as you fail to complete the card payment at the gate in one fluid motion, adding crucial seconds to their journey. Baker Street station is on the junction of 5 lines, interconnected by tunnels and bridges and subways and walkways. Its easy to get turned around and find one’s self about to board a train in the wrong direction. Luckily, during rush hour, there are plenty of trains, but they’re all full, and it takes a few trains before one appears with a gap in the door way to accommodate you.

The ride itself is bouncy and awkward. You don’t want to catch anyone’s eye in case it got weird. I don’t know what would happen if that did occur, but I feel like it would be bad.

Baker Street to King’s Cross is three stops. More than enough to get the taste of a central London commute, and when you get there, you follow the swarm up the escalators and along the wide subterranean avenues. On the first day of my larping, there was some sort of delay, and crowds were gathering, hundreds of people penned in line like sheep. Its always a relief to break out in to the open air again, and promise ourselves, never again.

Please Can You Help Me

On the last day of this trip, after checking out, I made my way to the office for the last time. I had planned to take a photo of the commuters penned in like sheep to illustrate this blog post, but it was clear so didn’t bother. I took a wrong turn however and found myself walking beneath and along the undercroft beneath the magnificent train shed roof.

As I wandered past the shops and outlets beneath the railways of the international rail services, marveling at the Victorian opulence, my eye met that of another. To be fair, it was the pie that I noticed first. A disheveled young lady with a thick blue coat and backpack was eating a pie. She changed her course to intercept me. I had every intention of walking away but she said something and I had to stop.

“Please can you help me” She said.

Something about big cities and crowded spaces with strangers sort of shuts down your responsiveness to others I find. Like not wanting to make eye contact with others on the train. Whats the worst that can happen? Well, they might want something for a start. I was more than prepared to mind my own business and go about my day. For a moment, I was reminded of the movie Liar Liar, when Jim Carey’s lawyer that cannot lie character was asked on the street “can you spare any change”.

If I replied with anything other than yes, it would have been not only a lie, but it would have been a heartless lie. So I stopped and turned to face her. “What help do you need” I said.

She was very softly spoken and seemed to choose her words cautiously and deliberately. I do not know if she was recalling a well practiced script or thinking on her feet.

“Thank you for stopping and talking to me” She said. “I am homeless and destitute and I need to get money for a ticket”.

I am accustomed to this play. We have it up north, but its not usually a disheveled young lady asking politely. More often then not its a coarse “Scuse me pal you haven’t got twenty pence for the bus home have ya?” spoken in an accent not unfamiliar in one of the larger cities to the western edge of Lancashire.

“How much do you need?” I asked her, and she told me. It wasn’t a trivial amount, nor was it excessive, so I gave her what little cash I had on me. She thanked me, and said bless you. And its difficult to fathom because her expression was unchanged throughout the entire encounter, until I said “Bless You” in return.

Its almost better to believe that I had been scammed out of a small amount of money, than to think that there really are destitute and homeless people dependent on the generosity of commuters on the London Underground.

We don’t see that up north, not in the rural communities. There is no one around to ask for money for a start, and its difficult to imagine being asked for help every day without having to harden the heart a little. As useful as the underground is, I am glad I use it rarely.

Mk3 Impulse Purchase

Is it really an impulse purchase if it takes three years to act upon that impulse?

For three years now I have been attending the annual Steam Gala at the North Yorkshire Moors Railway, and at Picking station there is a stall selling new and used model trains, and in the box of unboxed odds and ends, the bargain bin, there was a distinctive orange mk3 carriage. It was there in 2023, and I thought about buying it, it was there again in 2024, and I thought about buying it.

This year, 2025, it was there again, and I thought about buying it. And again, I put it back and walked away.

But, over a plate of scampi and chips at a nearby chippy, I gave the matter some more thought, and there and then I resolved to buy the carriage, if it was still there.

Proof of scampi and chips, should it be necessary.

So after lunch I returned to the stall, and there it was, the Northern Irish Railways Intercity Mk 3 carriage.

And there it is. Mine.

This is my first Lima carriage, and it immediately reminds me of how poor my Hornby carriages are. This is not only sturdy, and nicely detailed, it is weighty, and the correct length.

I feel compelled to compare and contrast it with a Hornby variant, but I’m writing this from the Youth Hostel. Something for another time perhaps.

I did wonder why no one had wanted to buy this over the past, at least, three years. But now that I have it, I don’t really have any use for it. It doesn’t match any of my existing mark three coaches, being a different manufacturer, to a higher standard than my hornby set, a different length, different livery, different railway.

There is no prototypical scenario in which a NIR carriage would run on BR rails. They’re not electrically compatible with the British variant, and they’re not even the same track gauge.

Purely academic anyway, as I don’t even have a railway to run it on. Not yet anyway.


Edible Coal

There is a curious confectionery to be found at Railway Museums and similar. Blocks of coal that you can eat.

I’ve had it before, at the Yorkshire Coal Mining Museum. It’s a sort of cinder toffee, coated in chocolate, and coated in a blackened sugar compound concoction that turns your mouth, lips, teeth, and tongue, black. One piece is plenty.

Hickleton Plank Wagon

“Dad bought a random cart from the train stall!”

No. Dad bought a 1:76 scale model of a seven plank coal wagon, with which he has a deep and personal connection.

When ‘Dad’ was a nipper, there was a decommissioned coal mine where he would explore the derelict buildings, play in the abandoned marshalling yards, and stomp recklessly across the death trap slagheap. Would splash around with mates in the heavy metal stained orange waters that flowed from the mine nearby, and climb the felled floodlight towers for a laugh.

Family worked that mine, uncles, grandparents, his mother was born in its shadow. The lifeblood of our community in its day.

That coal mine was Hickleton Main Colliery. I had no choice but to buy it.

Unit 1000

I chose Saturday 13th September as the day to visit the Manchester Museum of Transport for two reasons. Firstly, it had only recently become a place of interest when I learned that it houses the prototype Metrolink unit and I wanted to cross it off before I forgot about it. And secondly, we were visiting family in South Yorkshire that day, and living as we do in North Lancashire, the museum is a mere ten minutes out of our way. Roughly half the population of Manchester however, chose Saturday 13th September to visit the Manchester Museum of Transport because it was free entry. We are not the same.

The plan was to get up early, have Breakfast at Truck Haven and get to the museum in time for the doors opening at 10am. We achieved this, more or less, arriving only thirty minutes late [Insert Avanti West Coast joke here].

Not gonna lie. Parking was a problem. There is no visitor parking. And as mentioned above, it was free entry, so that may have attracted a lot of extra visitors. There is however a retail park just around the corner so it all worked out in the end.

None of that has anything to do with the main event. The Metrolink unit that I wanted to see.

When it opened, the Metrolink network was the first new tram system since the Dearne District in 1933, and it was very exciting at the time. A revolution.

Unfortunately, Manchester Museum of Transport suffers the same space issue as Crich and many others. They don’t have the space to show off all of their excellent exhibits to the full, and the presentation of the Metrolink unit suffers because of it.

The Metrolink unit was set up parked in a mock tram stop and you could board it, explore, sit in the seats etc.

There is only half a unit though, these are two car units. A large mirror inside cleverly provided the illusion of the second half.

The cab is accessible, but it’s stripped of all equipment.

And that’s pretty much that. Space limitations prevent getting a good look at it. Being situated next to a wall, the undercarriage is concealed by the platform, and access to the other side is prevented by barriers and other exhibits.

It would have been nice to have a proper look at the thing. Had it been a whole unit, with a proper cab, and to walk round it, inspect the bogies and under floor equipment. But it is what it is.

The rest of the museum is worth the visit, and they operate vintage buses to connect with other museums in the area. There is also a proper tea room where they serve proper tea in a proper mug.

Midnight Train to Nowhere

Early hours of July 14th. Heard a train on the line outside just as I was about to go to bed.
It would have been crazy not to immediately run outside and film it trundling by in the pitch black.

This is one of the Network Management Trains that are used to monitor the condition of the track. It is filled with cameras and sensors and all sorts of technogubbins. You can even see the red laser light as it passes.

Wonderful stuff.

Hogwarts Train – Hest Bank 31/10/2015

It was a Saturday like any other, except that it was Halloween . For lunch we’d decided to pick up a drive thru MacDonald’s on the way home and stop off at Hest Bank shore to eat while enjoying the views and the fresh sea air. No sooner had we finished our lunhes and prepared to set off for home, I heard the distinct sound of steam engine clatter. It sounds a bit like a military helicopter at full clink and I didn’t want to miss a photo opportunity.

I grabbed my phone and leaped out of the car in time to see the train coming to halt right behind us.

It stopped, blocking the level crossing, and our only way out.

The Hogwarts Train

After a while it became obvious that the train wasn’t going anywhere, so we wandered down to the crossing gates to get a closer look.

The train was empty, but the tables were set for a meal. This is the train that is used in the Harry Potter movies, the coaches at least. They are based at Carnforth, just a mile or two up the track from here.

From the foot bridge

There was no sign of why the train had stopped here, there is no signal or station, unless this was a SPAD (Signal Passed At Danger) incident, but there was nothing in the news about it. I must admit to enjoying the sight and sound and smell of steam locomotives, and to see two of them together, on the mainline, was a rare treat, and well worth being trapped by the barrier for the thirty odd minutes.

Eventually though, the train did leave. Google composited my pictures in to a short movie. Thanks Google.

The Train Now Departing…Hogwarts Express…Choo choo!!!

An unexpected treat on a grey autumn day. Lovely.

Research Trip – Liverpool Overhead Railway

I have a story that I have been meaning to write for some time, a few actually, that are set in the old and smokey docklands of Liverpool, and to write these stories with any authority and authenticity, I need to establish an understanding of the period and setting. There is only so much that you can garner from books and archive films, and nothing beats a site visit. That was my excuse at least for dragging my wife and two children all the way to Liverpool to look at a train.

The train in particular that I wanted to see belonged to the Liverpool Overhead Railway, known colloquially as the Docker’s Umbrella. My digging told me that there was a preserved vehicle on Display at the Liverpool Museum, and probably a model railway too. Unfortunately the Model Railway wasn’t there, and I haven’t been able to track down the one that I saw at an exhibition a few years ago, but I’ll keep looking.

The lighting in the museum was really dim, and the spot lights caused a lot of glare and lens flare. J.J. Abrams would like it here.

The view from beneath gives a good feel for what it might have been like to walk beneath the elevated track, and imagine the trains rumbling above our head.

After taking the lift up to the first floor, there is a mock station display and part of the train compartment is accessible to visitors. We went inside and took a seat. I can’t imagine that these trains were this clean when they were in service. The elevated track ran for substantial sections directly above the steam operated dock railway. This would have been a much dirtier journey than we could ever expect today. Smoking would have been permitted too, and the floor was likely to be a grimy black, and littered with cigarette butts and paper wrappers.

The seats, curved slatted wooden benches, were actually quite comfortable, this was a very well built machine. Two thirds of the carriage were inaccessible, but the mannequins in period dress posed behind the glass gave a good impression of what it was like in the fifties.

Around the carriage display, there are information panels, posters and memorabilia. Its a great shame that this railway didn’t survive and would be a great transport solution for Liverpool and tourist attraction in itself. Unfortunately, when the line was closed in the 1950s, the dock was in decline and the private motor car was in ascendance. Railways and tramways were being replaced by buses and the infrastructure being torn down. Even if there was an appetite to save this railway, the decades of steam and acrid smoke from the dock engines on the railway beneath had caused substantial damage to the iron structures and full replacement was never going to be feasible.

This was a great loss to Liverpool, and the country, but like all of the beloved railways of yesteryear, this one lives on in our imagination.

Further Reading

Read more of our train posts on our Wheels of Steel page, and more travel posts here.

Start a Blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑