Great Western Star

Page 76

a cart crossed the railway close to the “Stag and Castle” Inn, Thornton, and a train ran into it. After that, Mr. Smith tells us, “We had a whistle. It was a kind of steam trumpet.” And when the engines were first run at night, it caused the greatest consternation. The old Ratby Station, which still stands upon the left side of the railway, has a history which is interesting. It is a brick building, probably about 10 feet by 12 feet. It served for weighing machine office, station master's office, and passengers' waiting-room; but, most strange of all, it was an old licensed public house. The stationmaster, in addition to all his other duties, was an innkeeper, and, as Mr. Smith remarks, “they wouldn't allow that sort of thing now.” There were no guards' vans in those days. Goods guards had to ride upon the waggons; and when they wanted to stop, they had to run along the tops, and apply the brakes, which they did with a kind of brake stick, which, Mr. Smith says, was known as a “sprigger.” The early engines had loose eccentrics on the axles, and the levers on the footplate were in constant motion backwards and forwards, and care had to be taken to avoid getting some smart raps from them. In 1838, Mr. Smith went from West Bridge to take charge of a contractor's locomotive, the “Etna”, working at the construction of that portion of the Midland Counties Railway between Trent and Rugby. When the Midland Counties line was opened throughout, on 1st July 1840, “Old Tom Smith” became one of that company's drivers, being stationed at Derby and working to Rugby and to Nottingham. When the Midland Counties Birmingham and Derby - and North Midland Companies, in 1844, became amalgamated into the present Midland Railway, Mr. Smith was taken over with the rolling-stock and other property, and became a driver under the new company, and worked trains to Rugby, Leeds, Hunslet Lane, Hampton, Birmingham (Lawley Street); also, to Lincoln when that extension was opened. In the spring of 1848, Mr. Smith was sent to Southwell to open and work a new branch. The passenger traffic, after about twelve months, was found not to pay, and locomotive working was given up, a horse being employed to draw a carriage. Mr. Smith returned once again to the West Bridge, Leicester, in March 1849, to work two passenger trains a day to Burton and back with engine No. 51, and in August of the same year the line from Desford to Leicester 76

GREAT WESTERN STAR MAGAZINE

Spring 2021

was opened. He then ran for many years with engines Nos. 41-45 and 100 between Leicester, Peterborough, Burton, and Derby. On a modest estimate, it is probable that Mr. Smith must have ridden on the footplate as fireman and driver some 2,000,000 miles, or say eighty-five times round the world, and in all this long journey he had not met with any accident. However, on one occasion, when running to Kettering with a special train, he found the distant signal at Kibworth “all right”, but on sighting the “home” signal it was at “danger”. Being without the modern continuous brakes, his only hope was to reverse his engine (No. 190) and put steam against her. The catch flew out, and the lever dashed forward, crushing “Old Tom” between it and the weatherboard. He was laid up for some weeks and never drove on the main line again. The Company placed him in charge of a stationary engine, working the coal stage at Leicester, and here he was of considerable use in moving engines, or doing a bit of shunting in the locomotive sidings up till 18S6, when, after fifty-five years' work, he retired, thinking, as he says, that he had done about enough railway work. Mr. Smith, it is pleasing to know, enjoys excellent health. He is as active and vigorous as most men of sixty. He maintains, and, we think, with considerable reason, that enginedriving is a healthy occupation, and it will no doubt interest our readers to know that he has just become an honorary member of the Associated Society of Engineers and Firemen.

An Abnormal Load!

This photograph is believed to have been taken in the late 19th century, offering an abnormal load for the Midland Railway. It obviously doesn’t matter which way the train is going as the elephants face in opposite directions!


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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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