Great Western Star

Page 74

Tales from the Four Foot Eight and a Half! I have chosen this title (with due deference to A A Milne) as a way of recording the stories of men and women who have worked on Britian’s railways and, in particular those whose time was spent on former Great Western lines. I would

like to express my gratitude to them all for telling their stories. This month’s story is slightly different in that it features the Leicester and Swannington Railway. I have taken the liberty of including it as it tells the story of a railwayman in the 19th century Life of The Oldest Railway Man Living* When we look round upon the present perfect system of railways, the fact can hardly be realised that the Liverpool and Manchester line was only opened in 1830, and that in 1829 it was a question whether the locomotive engine should be employed or not. Neither can it at first sight appear possible that such perfection can have been attained in the short period which is in the memory of living man. There lives in Leicester to-day an old railway man named Thomas West Smith, more familiarly known to his numerous friends as “Old Tom Smith” who can, it is believed, claim the distinction of being the only man now living who actually worked traffic on a railway fifty-six years ago. A representative of the press considered the chance of conversing with an intelligent man who could give such interesting recollections and details of the changes he has

Map of the Leicester and Swannington Railway

*This article was published originally in the Locomotive Engineers & Firemens Journal, September 1888 Volume 1 No 9 pp 278-280 (ASLEF). 74

GREAT WESTERN STAR MAGAZINE

Spring 2021

An early drawing of West Bridge Station

witnessed, was a chance not to be missed. Mr. Smith has therefore been, as the Americans would say, “interviewed," and in a journey over the old line he has pointed out the various places where interesting events occurred. Mr. Smith was born at Braybrooke, in Northamptonshire, on the 7th of October 1808; consequently, he will now have attained the age of 80. He began his railway career in his twenty-third year, by becoming a “porter” at the West Bridge station at the opening of the Leicester and Swannington Railway, on the 17th of July 1832; and in January 1833, the company, having increased its stock of engines, he was promoted to the locomotive department. The first engine he cleaned and fired was the “Comet” built by Stephenson, of Newcastle, and shipped by sea to Hull, and thence by canal to Leicester, her first driver being Robert Weatherbum. The tender did not arrive for some two or three months afterwards, and the supply of water was for the time being carried in a large cask on a coal waggon. Mr. Smith gives very full details of all the other locomotives, which were the “Phoenix”, “Samson”, “Goliath”, “Hercules”, “Ajax”, “Atlas”


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Articles inside

Llanbourne – an OO Gauge layout set on the North Wales Coast

4min
pages 128-132

Railway – Part 1

16min
pages 120-124

Part 3 – Paul Perton

10min
pages 114-119

The HRA Goes Virtual for 2021 Awards

8min
pages 109-110

to reopen under the Government Scheme and at Record Speed

12min
pages 104-108

into Summer with a Sigh of Relief

11min
pages 111-113

Railroad Gauges of the World (1888) The Dartmoor Line – the FIRST

4min
page 103

The Banbury & Cheltenham Direct Railway – Then and Now – Peter and Paul Towey

22min
pages 94-101

Part 2

22min
pages 86-90

Railway Art Gallery

4min
pages 91-93

William Dean’s Ugly Ducklings Taking the GWR Act to Parliament

2min
page 85

An Abnormal Load

3min
page 76

of Rail Excellence

24min
pages 79-84

Valleys Be? Tales from the Four Foot Eight and

15min
pages 70-73

The Brunel Institute – The Brunel Legacy – Tim Bryan The New UK-based Global Centre

5min
pages 77-78

a Half – Life of the Oldest Railwayman Living

4min
pages 74-75

New Technology – Solar Power will Drive Mainline Trains

3min
page 68

Growing Interest in Hydrogen

16min
pages 63-67

The Shakespeare Express

3min
page 69

The New Silk Road

10min
pages 60-62

A New Railway Museum in Kent

2min
page 59

HP335 comes of Age

4min
pages 57-58

and a Fireman’s Story

4min
page 56

Accident to I K Brunel Pages from the Past – Paper Wheels

3min
page 55

Japanese High Speed Trains

8min
pages 52-53

Part the First – Adrian Vaughan

4min
page 46

Remembering The Old Hands – Locomen’s incidents

20min
pages 47-51

Edward Thomas Celebrates its Centenary

9min
pages 43-45

Guest Column – Our Rail Industry is a sleeping giant when it comes to boosting international trade – Chris Loder, MP

4min
page 34

a reality?

27min
pages 35-42

on the Railways

35min
pages 20-29

The Class 800 Story – It’s a Cracker

1hr
pages 4-19

Increased Reliability

6min
pages 31-32

It Went With a Bang

2min
page 33

Government Funding Offers Hope for Rebuilding Cullompton Station TfW Investment Repaid by

2min
page 30

Editor’s Thoughts

4min
page 3
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