The Shrop Branch

J.I.Jacks

Member
First some backstory.

Shropshire's county town of Shrop seems to be missing from most maps, but if you start in the Ironbridge Gorge and head just past Market Blandings, you'll get there. The peculiar geology of the area leave a perfectly flat plateau above the town, barely a hundred feet wide.

Local legend states that Gwendol the giant, on his long walk home from Wellington, worked out he had been deceived, and in his rage cut the top off of a small mountain, muttering about cobblers, before getting lost again and settling down in Wem. The locals didn't mind, as it improved the view, but for a long time noone would build there.

In the 1840's, not wanting to miss out, the town organised a meeting demanding a railway. Where exactly they wanted it to run to wasn't clear, and as the town had previously imprisoned visiting canal surveyors as lunatics ("You say you can build a river?") no external help was forthcoming. A wizened old man in white offered to engineer the project but he was quickly thrown out of the meeting by a group of short men who lived in holes on the side of the plateau.

That was that until the late 1870's when Lord Emsworth of Castle Blandings awoke with a bad hangover, to his butler announcing that the jolly evening down the pub had actually been an auction, and he had purchased most of a railway.

"A railway?"
"Yes your lordship, in Bishop's Castle."
"Why the devil would I want a railway in Bishop's Castle? Have it brought here!"

Not one to disappoint his Lordship, the Butler passed on this information to the administrators. How exactly the railway was "Brought" remains a mystery, but a line was laid from just next to the gatehouse of Castle Blandings through to the plateau above Shrop. The short men who lived in the holes were very unhappy but noone bothered with them much any more

A small engine shed was placed at the end of the line, with a short loop and a goods siding.

The line ran the other way for a few miles until they ran out of rail, but after some extraordinary dealings, worthy of a series of humourous books, connections were eventually made with the Potts, the Wellington and Drayton railway, the Coalport Branch, the SDR, the SVR, the Cleobury Mortimer and Ditton Priors light railway, the 2' gauge granite quarry railway up the Ercall, four junctions with the Wellington and Severn Junction railway, and, finally, via the M&GNR's (proposed) Llangynog to Porthmadoc tunnel, the Merioneth and Llantisilly Rail Traction Company Limited.

Due to a far too complicated ownership structure, the line became an GWR and LMS joint railway at the grouping, but became western region at nationalisation. When the region boundaries changed in 1963, the line was closed, as the midland region didn't want to put up with the mess.

In the early 2010s the line was rebuilt for a short distance to a new "International Freight Park", but unfortunately it is inaccessible by road. As of now this has only been used for storing Pacers.

Right, that sounds about as implausible as the real railways of Shropshire, and gives me plausible deniability for what follows!
 

J.I.Jacks

Member
With all that out of the way, on to the layout. I have 3x4 IKEA Kallax units on two walls with a blanked off chimney breast between them. 18" deep baseboards were (badly) constructed of 12mm ply and PSE timber. The main sections rest on top of the kallaxes with a bridge piece suspended between them using loose pin hinges. I faffed around with the track plan for a bit, before settling on an inglenook with two of the tracks joining again to form a loop:IMG_20240925_164120463.jpg
Points are second radius Hornby from my childhood trainset, currently operated by hand. After the board joint to the left are lengths of code 100 Flexi track to give trains a bit of a run.

At this point, it's just a place to play trains, testing is ongoing. I may replace the track with something more scale in future but for now this will do.
 

timbowales

Western Thunderer
First some backstory.

Shropshire's county town of Shrop seems to be missing from most maps, but if you start in the Ironbridge Gorge and head just past Market Blandings, you'll get there. The peculiar geology of the area leave a perfectly flat plateau above the town, barely a hundred feet wide.

Local legend states that Gwendol the giant, on his long walk home from Wellington, worked out he had been deceived, and in his rage cut the top off of a small mountain, muttering about cobblers, before getting lost again and settling down in Wem. The locals didn't mind, as it improved the view, but for a long time noone would build there.

In the 1840's, not wanting to miss out, the town organised a meeting demanding a railway. Where exactly they wanted it to run to wasn't clear, and as the town had previously imprisoned visiting canal surveyors as lunatics ("You say you can build a river?") no external help was forthcoming. A wizened old man in white offered to engineer the project but he was quickly thrown out of the meeting by a group of short men who lived in holes on the side of the plateau.

That was that until the late 1870's when Lord Emsworth of Castle Blandings awoke with a bad hangover, to his butler announcing that the jolly evening down the pub had actually been an auction, and he had purchased most of a railway.

"A railway?"
"Yes your lordship, in Bishop's Castle."
"Why the devil would I want a railway in Bishop's Castle? Have it brought here!"

Not one to disappoint his Lordship, the Butler passed on this information to the administrators. How exactly the railway was "Brought" remains a mystery, but a line was laid from just next to the gatehouse of Castle Blandings through to the plateau above Shrop. The short men who lived in the holes were very unhappy but noone bothered with them much any more

A small engine shed was placed at the end of the line, with a short loop and a goods siding.

The line ran the other way for a few miles until they ran out of rail, but after some extraordinary dealings, worthy of a series of humourous books, connections were eventually made with the Potts, the Wellington and Drayton railway, the Coalport Branch, the SDR, the SVR, the Cleobury Mortimer and Ditton Priors light railway, the 2' gauge granite quarry railway up the Ercall, four junctions with the Wellington and Severn Junction railway, and, finally, via the M&GNR's (proposed) Llangynog to Porthmadoc tunnel, the Merioneth and Llantisilly Rail Traction Company Limited.

Due to a far too complicated ownership structure, the line became an GWR and LMS joint railway at the grouping, but became western region at nationalisation. When the region boundaries changed in 1963, the line was closed, as the midland region didn't want to put up with the mess.

In the early 2010s the line was rebuilt for a short distance to a new "International Freight Park", but unfortunately it is inaccessible by road. As of now this has only been used for storing Pacers.

Right, that sounds about as implausible as the real railways of Shropshire, and gives me plausible deniability for what follows!
I see an excuse for running one of Rapido Trains new Ivor the Engine hidden in there :))
 

Jordan

Mid-Western Thunderer
Welcome to the Madhouse, Mr Jacks, looks like you found the right entrance - the Fire Escape one at the Back of the Class; the Naughty Step being the highly polished one on the rusty external staircase from said Fire Escape down to the Forum Playground....
However looking at the contents of your shelves, I spy kits. You may be eligible for a seat closer to the Front of the Class... ;) :)
Confused? Excellent!! Oh and our main currency is photos, lots of 'em.... :thumbs:
 

Allen M

Western Thunderer
Until you mentioned "International Freight Park" I thought it was true. :) I was so disappointed. :(
My mother's family where rural Shropshire and me, Kidderminster for my over 80 years.
Anyway welcome and enjoy the serious and the banter.

Regards
Allen
 

J.I.Jacks

Member
Thanks for your interest!
I see an excuse for running one of Rapido Trains new Ivor the Engine hidden in there :))
We shall have to see, I may have just blown the modelling budget on something else wildly inappropriate (that might be hiding in the background of one of the photos), although I have a couple of wagon kits that may find themselves liveried up for the M&LRTCoLtd...

However looking at the contents of your shelves, I spy kits. You may be eligible for a seat closer to the Front of the Class... ;) :)
Confused? Excellent!! Oh and our main currency is photos, lots of 'em.... :thumbs:
Kits? Kits! I plead ignorance! There may be a couple of wagon kits sneaking in to the roster once they are painted (please don't hold your breath!), but the loco kits in the photos may remain there for a considerable amount of time...

Until you mentioned "International Freight Park" I thought it was true. :) I was so disappointed. :(
Yeah I thought that might push the believability a bit too far, who in their right mind would put an international rail freight park in Shropshire?

You missed the Snailbeach out: (edit: oh, beg your parsnip, I just spotted the initials SDR)

View attachment 229607
Oh, and the bit of track in Doseley Pipe Works which we used to operate after we come out of Sunday School.
Snailbeach?IMG_20241221_220502663.jpg
I'm not sure they'll be using their running rights!
 
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J.I.Jacks

Member
Anyway, explanatory photos!

Here's the shed area:IMG_20241221_220711083.jpg
We've got a half finished LCut creative generic engine shed (the more modern structure replacing a previous stone built structure which "disappeared" during a boiler inspection of his Lordship's private locomotive in the late 1890s), a ratio hut and water crane and some coal stathes.

I've thrown up a quick platform IMG_20241221_220807367.jpg
Again from a cheap ratio kit, most of the surface needs covering.

Station building will either be this peco "west bay" station kitIMG_20241221_220749054.jpg
(Only partially built because I need to paint it before continuing) or this ratio wooden building.IMG_20241221_220848648.jpgThe wooden building is very Colonel Stephens, but the west bay building looks like a slightly grander version of Madley (GWR)

There's also a covered ground frame at the end of the station.
IMG_20241221_220741299.jpg
This Metcalfe kit (free with a magazine) makes a good placeholder

I've tried to keep it moderately plausible for the loco fleet with a 45xx (pretending to be a (44xx) IMG_20241221_221007825.jpg
A Webb coal tankIMG_20241221_221140345.jpg
And an Ivatt class 2IMG_20241221_221315940.jpg

There's also a Johnson 1P because why not
IMG_20241221_221354060.jpg

There's also a 57xx, 14xx (which may become a 58xx), and Collett Goods that all need their chassis finishing, a 56xx in need of a full service and a 16xx to build.

All need to be renumbered to examples which could have plausibly made their way to Shrop in the late 50s (either Wellington or Shrewsbury allocations), and thoroughly weathered

For wagons, at the moment I'm sticking to private owner opens, because they are fun to shunt. Some Parkside vans will be mixed in when they are painted. I've tried to keep the liveries moderately local to Shropshire, although I appreciate that by the era of this layout they would be scattered to anywhere. All wagons need PO numbers and a heavy weathering. Here are a selection IMG_20241221_221702368.jpg
(Please ignore the thing hiding in the background, I couldn't resist it in the Rails sale and haven't come up with a plausible backstory yet)
 

J.I.Jacks

Member
The things hiding in the background? :confused:
I thought that where a cancelled order from one of the Colonies obtained for a fraction of the proper price. :)
I had a quiet chat with His Lordship about it this afternoon.

"C53? What the devil are you on about? Ahh the Wheely-Shed! Yes, well after our previous engine went missing, we'd been using horses to pull the wagons to the little hut next to the Empress's house. That foul business put me off, I wouldn't want something like that happening to my precious little Empress.

"But I was at a garden party near Cambridge, and sharing a sherry or two with a dear old fellow, I didn't quite catch his name, we were discussing fat pigs, he raises Oxfords, and I mentioned using the horses and he told me he had an engine I could borrow for a number of months!

"Well after a couple of weeks the wheeled shed arrived with those odd carriages and I had Beach write him a letter telling him I wished to purchase it, but the letter was returned undelivered, if you can believe it?

"We've been using it ever since, you know, the Empress doesn't seem to mind it.

"A most singular chap you know, he said he was living in Stratford but had never been to the theatre and hadn't seen the canals..."

IMG_20241222_172017209.jpg
A brilliant locomotive, smooth running and lovely detail, I just need to pluck up the courage to give it a gentle weathering! And in the background is the converted bar coach, because the licencing act simply doesn't give enough hours in the day
 

James Spooner

Western Thunderer
I had a quiet chat with His Lordship about it this afternoon.

"C53? What the devil are you on about? Ahh the Wheely-Shed! Yes, well after our previous engine went missing, we'd been using horses to pull the wagons to the little hut next to the Empress's house. That foul business put me off, I wouldn't want something like that happening to my precious little Empress.

"But I was at a garden party near Cambridge, and sharing a sherry or two with a dear old fellow, I didn't quite catch his name, we were discussing fat pigs, he raises Oxfords, and I mentioned using the horses and he told me he had an engine I could borrow for a number of months!

"Well after a couple of weeks the wheeled shed arrived with those odd carriages and I had Beach write him a letter telling him I wished to purchase it, but the letter was returned undelivered, if you can believe it?

"We've been using it ever since, you know, the Empress doesn't seem to mind it.

"A most singular chap you know, he said he was living in Stratford but had never been to the theatre and hadn't seen the canals..."

View attachment 229675
A brilliant locomotive, smooth running and lovely detail, I just need to pluck up the courage to give it a gentle weathering! And in the background is the converted bar coach, because the licencing act simply doesn't give enough hours in the day
Lovely stuff but I think Clarence, 9th Earl of Emsworth, would be horrified if his Empress was little… How would she win the fat pigs category at the next Shropshire county show…?!

Nigel
 
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