Gerry Beale
Western Thunderer
Thanks for the two lovely photos of 7780 on the Tramway - very atmospheric. These were taken at exactly the time that I first experienced the 'Tram' and somewhere I have some snaps - taken on my childhood Brownie 127 - of 7780 running light engine in Commercial Rd. just where these two photos were taken. 7780 was very much a local engine and around the same time as these photos I saw her on a goods train going to Portland and later, on one of the very last goods trains to run to Bridport West Bay. She met her end - in 1963 I think - in a shunting accident at Weymouth locomotive shed when she came off worse in a collision with a Standard Class 5.
Work on Maiden Newton has been progressing but has primarily been on track and there has been little that I can show. Both up and down main lines are now complete and I am about to start wiring up the recently finished up main line - I will then be able to run trains in both directions. With this work complete all of the track 'south' of Maiden Newton station is done. To the 'north' both main lines are done but the Bridport branch has not yet been started - other then the point work leading to it - and that will be the next job.
As each section of track is completed I try out various locomotives and trains and new photographic opportunities open up. The photo below was taken just yesterday and shows 4988 Bulwell Hall on an up passenger train entering Maiden Newton. Most of the train is standing on track that didn't exist just last week - and please just gloss over the wrong head code on the loco!
Recently I had a short break from the tedium of threading chairs on to rails and made a few wagons as light relief. A friend gave me an ABS white metal kit for the GWR 1 1/2 ton hand crane wagon and match truck and when I opened the tube that it came in - price £2.16p - I found that the kit was completely untouched. The castings were still in their plastic packing dating from circa 1976 and I couldn't resist starting it! A few substitutions were made - etched brass brake levers and lever guards, Lanarkshire Model Supplies sprung buffers and I altered the axle boxes on the crane wagon from grease to OK type oil boxes. The result is shown below where it is standing against the buffer stop of the 'Bridport' siding where I guess it will normally repose. Although I have no evidence that such vehicles were to be found at Maiden Newton I guess that something similar would be seen from time to time. There was a sawmill at Toller on the Bridport branch which regularly received timber on bogie bolsters - or 'bogie flats' as railwaymen sometimes termed them. There was no yard crane at Toller - and only a single goods siding - so something like this must have been employed for unloading - I'd love to see a photo to prove me right!
Work on Maiden Newton has been progressing but has primarily been on track and there has been little that I can show. Both up and down main lines are now complete and I am about to start wiring up the recently finished up main line - I will then be able to run trains in both directions. With this work complete all of the track 'south' of Maiden Newton station is done. To the 'north' both main lines are done but the Bridport branch has not yet been started - other then the point work leading to it - and that will be the next job.
As each section of track is completed I try out various locomotives and trains and new photographic opportunities open up. The photo below was taken just yesterday and shows 4988 Bulwell Hall on an up passenger train entering Maiden Newton. Most of the train is standing on track that didn't exist just last week - and please just gloss over the wrong head code on the loco!
Recently I had a short break from the tedium of threading chairs on to rails and made a few wagons as light relief. A friend gave me an ABS white metal kit for the GWR 1 1/2 ton hand crane wagon and match truck and when I opened the tube that it came in - price £2.16p - I found that the kit was completely untouched. The castings were still in their plastic packing dating from circa 1976 and I couldn't resist starting it! A few substitutions were made - etched brass brake levers and lever guards, Lanarkshire Model Supplies sprung buffers and I altered the axle boxes on the crane wagon from grease to OK type oil boxes. The result is shown below where it is standing against the buffer stop of the 'Bridport' siding where I guess it will normally repose. Although I have no evidence that such vehicles were to be found at Maiden Newton I guess that something similar would be seen from time to time. There was a sawmill at Toller on the Bridport branch which regularly received timber on bogie bolsters - or 'bogie flats' as railwaymen sometimes termed them. There was no yard crane at Toller - and only a single goods siding - so something like this must have been employed for unloading - I'd love to see a photo to prove me right!
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