Steam Around Liverpool 1950's and '60's

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  • Опубліковано 25 сер 2024
  • BR era steam on railways around Liverpool. Lime Street, Exchange and Central featured along with rare footage of the CLC line to Southport Lord Street.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 17

  • @pauldonohoe7343
    @pauldonohoe7343 4 місяці тому +3

    Some great footage. Excellent shots with Lister Power Station in the background. A terrific tour of the railways around Liverpool. Great and valuable work.

    • @yakacm
      @yakacm Місяць тому

      Did you know, Lister Drive was the 1st place in the UK to have those iconic shaped cooling towers? I happened on the fact randomly when, for whatever reason, I was looking at the website of an old architects, they are a Dutch design apparently, so there, if you feel like boring friends or loved one during a lull in conversation you can hit them with that fact.

  • @stephensmith4480
    @stephensmith4480 Місяць тому +6

    That was absolutely amazing. I started my Railway career as a Trainee Signalman at Garston Church Rd which was shown here. The Box was not for me so I moved outside and went Shunting. If I had a pound for every time I have pulled the points at the Edge hill head shunt shown at the beginning I would be a rich man. We used to run round the coal trains there for Fiddlers ferry, as well as other stuff. An old hand Driver who is sadly no longer with us told me that he worked with a young engine cleaner who we all came to know as Billy J Kramer. He started at Bank hall shed but was at Aintree for a Time, that's where this lad knew him from. I also remember the last days of the MD&HC Loco's although I was only a toddler at the time. One of the last shots is one passing the old Grain terminal at the bottom of Hill St. I grew up not a five minuet walk away. Happy days.

  • @1BCamden
    @1BCamden 9 місяців тому +3

    I grew up in Liverpool in the 50s and 60s, thanks to all those special people who were smart enough to film it all before its demise.

    • @Tonydevon1
      @Tonydevon1 8 місяців тому +3

      Liverpool ia on the UP ! I am 72 , i love my memories. The City is now wonderful, easy to walk around, vistors love it .

  • @practice2391
    @practice2391 Місяць тому

    I was an enthusiastic train spotter in the 50s and 60s and this video brought back a lot of good memories. So pleased that I was able to see this. Thank you.

  • @fisherpeter695
    @fisherpeter695 22 дні тому

    This marvellous look back is a reminder of the ingenuity of the Victorian, and Edwardian
    Liverpool society. The transport infrastructure they created evolved to this day.
    And it was done more likely without the hundreds of millions of pounds of public money spent on Liverpool transport nowadays.
    Having worked in Victoria Street in the mid 1960s I still recall the vibrancy created by the mix of business's in the street and the pre-war architecture of the buildings, offices, fruit exchange, and head post office. Now the area, in daytime is bereft of people and business's

  • @lesallen5256
    @lesallen5256 8 місяців тому +2

    Fantastic thank you I cycle a lot on the loopline so good to see what it looked like

  • @Exalted_Wolfe
    @Exalted_Wolfe 2 місяці тому +1

    fantastic video loved every second of it, beign a 80s child i missed the golden age so was great to see it

  • @andrewbayliss5421
    @andrewbayliss5421 Рік тому +4

    Thanks for sharing

  • @bob.ainsley
    @bob.ainsley Місяць тому

    Beautiful narration and wonderful footage. I remember my mum taking me on the Overhead in the 1940s. Thanks foe your painstaking research. All a very enjoyable reminder of another age.

  • @lukegreen5341
    @lukegreen5341 7 днів тому +1

    49:03 I've Been To The City Of Liverpool In Merseyside In England In The United Kingdom Which Is The Home Of The Beatles This Year And It Was Super Awesome. Thanks Mate. X❤🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🇮🇳🇯🇵🇭🇲🇿🇦🇬🇧🇨🇦🇺🇲🇺🇸

  • @yakacm
    @yakacm Місяць тому

    We grew up in a big old Victorian house in Stoneycroft in the 1970's and 80's. I remember the old station on Mill Lane West Derby was a green grocers called, rather prosaically, The Station, it's a fireplace showroom today. Anyway, that rail line, or rather where it was, is now the Liverpool Loop Line footpath. IDK when the rails were lifted from that track, but I have this very distinct memory of taking the dog out for a walk at the walkers playing field and seeing a train come down that line. What's up with that, I hear you ask, well in all my time I'd never seen a train on that track, but the other thing was it was a steam train, this would have been the late 70's so a long time after steam had finished. The thing is in this memory I have it was general election day, looking at the dates it would have been 1979. I'm not too sure if any of this actually happened, as I know your memory starts to play tricks on you as you get older. Maybe it was some steam special connected with the general election, IDK.

  • @kevinpidwell1275
    @kevinpidwell1275 Місяць тому +1

    I'd love to know what happend next, but the film was cut. At 23:25, apparently, after having disgraced itself whilst on Southport shed, the York and Lancaster Regiment had to be rescued by the breakdown train. However at 23:43 we see a driving wheel happily chomping through pieces of wood, followed by the front bogies that took a dislike to the wood and derailed at 23:50. Did they have to send out a second breakdown train? 🤣🤣

  • @guytruth5598
    @guytruth5598 17 днів тому

    Said to say most enthusiasts mostly recorded the brand and class of the locomotives and its history, very very few almost to none that have recorded the day to day of the passengers train and its operations and function which is more interesting to know and watch how was the pubic doing their daily routine and their lives on train era. In fact in general public view who cares what class
    and brand was it I mean in watching videos sense, all are the same black head loco thats what people think .

  • @Robert-tl5em
    @Robert-tl5em 28 днів тому

    My dad used to take me on the overhead when I was a kid.What a waste to have it dismantled.Poor foresight by the powers that be.Today it would be excellent for commuters
    .

  • @jas20per
    @jas20per Місяць тому

    Those Dock Board tanks where the major cause of the Overhead Railway closure because of the high sulphur coal and steam both converted to Sulphuric Acid causing vast amounts of metal rot of the overhead metal work. When it came to repairs or scraping the overhead railway the Dock Board kept their hands firmly in their pockets and allowed this Liverpool Jewel to be scraped. Yet another one of Liverpool's powers that be bad decisions,