There was nothing quite like the Thames-Clyde Express. Covering well over 400 miles, its route stretched from the dreaming spires of Londons St Pancras via the Shires of England, the legendary Settle-Carlisle line, Walter Scotts Border Country and finally into Glasgow the Second City of Empire. It never offered the quickest journey between England and Scotland, but it was undoubtedly the most scenic. A former signalman on the tracks of the Thames-Clyde Express, David Pendleton has written what he terms a love letter to this famous named train. Rather than a text ending on the sad day in 1975 when the last train reached its destination, he instead views its history and the route it traversed from a present-day perspective. Here is a rich mix of anecdotes and observations, including attractions and oddities either visible from todays train services or within easy reach of principle stations Gavin Morrison, one of Britains most experienced railway photographers, has compiled more than 60 books and has gained the highest reputation for the quality of his work. He is able to capture the Thames-Clyde Express in its glory days and portray both steam and diesel locomotives on the complete route from London to Glasgow in its many moods. The result is a superb array of images taken during a lengthy period of well over 60 years between 1955 and 2022. Collectively this book is a journey in both words and pictures that is highly informative and richly illustrated. It is to be enjoyed as a record of recent times as well as evoking memories of years long past
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Product Details
Dimensions: 178 x 246mm
Publication Date: 19 Jun 2023
Publisher: Great Northern Books Ltd
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781914227479
About David Pendleton
David Pendleton was a signalman for thirty-four years at locations as diverse as Hellifield and Seamer. He recently left the railway to open a gin distillery in the North Yorkshire seaside resort of Filey. In between signalling trains he studied at Leeds Metropolitan University and De Montfort University Leicester. At Leeds his Masters dissertation focussed on holiday making patterns on the Yorkshire coast with a particular interest in events at Skipsea. David became a Doctor of Philosophy at Leicester via a study of commercialised sporting leisure in sporting Bradford. Photographer Gavin Morrison got his first camera way back in 1943 and within a few years his hobby became an obsession. He has now amassed some 200000 images in one of the largest personal collections still in hands of the original photographer. Unlike many he did not put his cameras away when the age of steam ended in 1968 and he continues to record the changing railway scene. A dedicated Yorkshireman he lives near Mirfield and has always had a special regard for the Thames-Clyde Express.