Severn Beach - was it a dead end pre-Beeching?
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the green mile
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A family day trip to Severn Beach in the 50'sand 60's by train from Stapleton Road was considered to be a treat. The miniature railway was at the north end of the village by a lake as stated. Not a great deal to do there except waste money in the penny arcades.
In the 60's it was possible to see the Severn Bridge being constructed. Three decades later, I often enjoyed a bracing walk along the newly constructed sea defences to sit and watch the 2000 ton caissons of the Second Severn Crossing being manoeuvred into position. I went there on the day it was opened by HRH the Prince of Wales and filmed the preserved vessels Balmoral and Waverley sailing downstream under the main span. Following the opening ceremony, myself and the young lady I was with drove across to the Welsh side and found a very secluded hilltop overlooking the two bridges whereby we 'celebrated' the event in the open air. A very memorable day out!
I drove my first train on a return trip from Severn Beach through Clifton Down Tunnel. I was sat in the seat behind the cab of car W51070 when the driver invited me in to sit on his lap and have a go. I would have been about 8 at the time. Somehow, I just can't see something like that happening these days.
In the 60's it was possible to see the Severn Bridge being constructed. Three decades later, I often enjoyed a bracing walk along the newly constructed sea defences to sit and watch the 2000 ton caissons of the Second Severn Crossing being manoeuvred into position. I went there on the day it was opened by HRH the Prince of Wales and filmed the preserved vessels Balmoral and Waverley sailing downstream under the main span. Following the opening ceremony, myself and the young lady I was with drove across to the Welsh side and found a very secluded hilltop overlooking the two bridges whereby we 'celebrated' the event in the open air. A very memorable day out!
I drove my first train on a return trip from Severn Beach through Clifton Down Tunnel. I was sat in the seat behind the cab of car W51070 when the driver invited me in to sit on his lap and have a go. I would have been about 8 at the time. Somehow, I just can't see something like that happening these days.
Amazing that there was a bus on that route (was it 324?) that ran every hour. My Aunt lives in Hallen (on the same route) and nowadays, they get one bus in the morning and one in the evening - if they are lucky!I did tell them its not quite like as advertised and they may be a little disapointed, Off we went on our journey to Severn Beach, They asked when they got off the bus how often the bus run back to Bristol, Every hour i said but i am going back in about 15 minutes,
That's progress, eh?
Believe it or not, huge crowds used to travel there from Bristol on bank holidays. In the beginning, there were no facilities at all - not even toilets.Why was there such a large canopy at the front of the old station?
So, I should imagine the large canopy was for all those happy holidaymakers to stand under and shelter from the rain ...
You have a good memory, Yes it was the 324, I had to think about that even though i drove the dam things.jules wrote:Amazing that there was a bus on that route (was it 324?) that ran every hour. My Aunt lives in Hallen (on the same route) and nowadays, they get one bus in the morning and one in the evening - if they are lucky!I did tell them its not quite like as advertised and they may be a little disapointed, Off we went on our journey to Severn Beach, They asked when they got off the bus how often the bus run back to Bristol, Every hour i said but i am going back in about 15 minutes,
That's progress, eh?
Those funny little Bristol single deckers with the rounded roof and split windscreens with the door at the front - we used to call them "Spaceships" when I was a kid. Only other routes they were used on in Bristol was the 19 and the CCC (City Centre Circle). Not too difficult to remember, it's the 624 nowadays - they added 300 to the number when South Glos took over paying for it.You have a good memory, Yes it was the 324, I had to think about that even though i drove the dam things.
Anyhow, not to hijack this thread with ancient bus ramblings - We have a perfectly serviceable and long standing "No 33 Bus Thread" on here for that!
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Ian L Jamieson
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I wish that I knew what you are talking about, Jules.jules wrote:Those funny little Bristol single deckers with the rounded roof and split windscreens with the door at the front - we used to call them "Spaceships" when I was a kid.You have a good memory, Yes it was the 324, I had to think about that even though i drove the dam things.
You are quite right Jules they were called Spaceships MWtype but were indeed used on a lot of the country services around Bristol.jules wrote:Those funny little Bristol single deckers with the rounded roof and split windscreens with the door at the front - we used to call them "Spaceships" when I was a kid. Only other routes they were used on in Bristol was the 19 and the CCC (City Centre Circle). Not too difficult to remember, it's the 624 nowadays - they added 300 to the number when South Glos took over paying for it.You have a good memory, Yes it was the 324, I had to think about that even though i drove the dam things.
Anyhow, not to hijack this thread with ancient bus ramblings - We have a perfectly serviceable and long standing "No 33 Bus Thread" on here for that!
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Ian L Jamieson
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It was a nickname the drivers called them.Ian L Jamieson wrote:Yes, the MWs were the standard Bristol/ECW single decker from around 1959 until 1966 or thereabouts. I never heard them called spaceships though.You are quite right Jules they were called Spaceships MWtype but were indeed used on a lot of the country services around Bristol.
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jolly47roger
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Severn Beach
Not a brilliant picture - from the summer of 1960I've read that there used to be a miniature railway at Severn Beach

Ah, Severn Beach. or Severn Mud as it was known in our family!
The train service from either direction, which I faintly recall from before much was closed, was essentially run as two separate services which happened to meet there. If trains were run through round the circle, it was just an operating convenience. I can only recall from just after the diesels took over, it was three-car sets on all the operation, and even in summer you might have the carriage to yourself on the last lap.
It was the setting for a somewhat ghostly television production in probably the 1970s, after we had moved away, filmed in deserted wintertime, but we all at home instantly said "that's Severn Beach".
http://maps.google.co.uk/?ll=51.563989, ... 82,,0,5.76
The train service from either direction, which I faintly recall from before much was closed, was essentially run as two separate services which happened to meet there. If trains were run through round the circle, it was just an operating convenience. I can only recall from just after the diesels took over, it was three-car sets on all the operation, and even in summer you might have the carriage to yourself on the last lap.
It was the setting for a somewhat ghostly television production in probably the 1970s, after we had moved away, filmed in deserted wintertime, but we all at home instantly said "that's Severn Beach".
Me, same age, same time, same experience, only in my case returning from Portishead. Allowed to blow the horn for the various crossings as well. My mother said I did one back to front, high-low instead of low-high. I wonder if it was the same kid-friendly driver .....I drove my first train on a return trip from Severn Beach through Clifton Down Tunnel. I was sat in the seat behind the cab of car W51070 when the driver invited me in to sit on his lap and have a go. I would have been about 8 at the time.
I think this is here, on Beach Road. Here it is 53 years onNot a brilliant picture - from the summer of 1960
http://maps.google.co.uk/?ll=51.563989, ... 82,,0,5.76