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Bristol-Mangotsfield Line
Posted: Sat May 14, 2011 1:40 pm
by trafalgar45682
Posted: Mon May 16, 2011 10:50 pm
by AndyK
Lovely photos. Thanks for posting them

Re: Bristol-Mangotsfield Line
Posted: Wed May 25, 2011 10:38 pm
by Robin Summerhill
trafalgar45682 wrote:Roger wrote:
The early 1960s were indeed great days to spend a day at Temple Meads, or, as I did quite often, Lawrence Hill to spot the workings that avoided Temple Meads. The steam worked expresses climbing towards Fishponds looked and sounded superb from Lawrence Hill station.
I had some great times at Lawrence Hill, like Roger.
It never even crossed my mind in those days to go to Lawrence Hill, although coming down the Midland line from Mangotsfield or Staple Hill would have made the journey difficult (short of pulling the chord towards the bottom of the bank!).
But surely the amount of stuff you missed on the GWR main line in and out of Bristol was much more than you could have seen of trains avoiding TM at Lawrence Hill?
Posted: Thu May 26, 2011 8:04 pm
by trafalgar45682
One reason I spent a lot of time at Lawrence Hill was that I travelled to Temple Meads by train from Redland and stopped off at Lawrence Hill to go around Barrow Road before continuing to Temple Meads. Also by Summer 1964 there was virtually no steam south of Bristol and not much on the line to Bath. Most steam turns were to South Wales, the North to West route and the Midland line from Bristol. Anything going north was usually worked hard because of Filton and Fishponds Banks. It was a very interesting and busy place to be.
Posted: Thu May 26, 2011 10:20 pm
by Robin Summerhill
trafalgar45682 wrote:One reason I spent a lot of time at Lawrence Hill was that I travelled to Temple Meads by train from Redland and stopped off at Lawrence Hill to go around Barrow Road before continuing to Temple Meads. Also by Summer 1964 there was virtually no steam south of Bristol and not much on the line to Bath. Most steam turns were to South Wales, the North to West route and the Midland line from Bristol. Anything going north was usually worked hard because of Filton and Fishponds Banks. It was a very interesting and busy place to be.
Very true. After St Phillips Marsh closed in June 1964 there was virtually no steam working except to the north from Bristol (ie via Filton or Fishponds)
Re: Bristol-Mangotsfield Line
Posted: Sat Jun 11, 2011 10:24 pm
by Geoffers
I had some great times at Lawrence Hill, like Roger. Summer Saturdays between 1.00 and 3.00 were particularly busy. Here are some shots from the 1963-64 period.
Thanks so much for sharing - what a fantastic set of photos - and not just these! Your sets at Flickr are amazing and ought to be in a book or at least on a website of your own.
Are there any more to come from this era?
Posted: Sun Jun 12, 2011 4:01 pm
by trafalgar45682
Thanks for your comments. The Bristol photo's from 1963/64 were taken by me and a friend who I have not met for 35 years, but who I am hoping to meet up with again this Summer. Other photo's were taken by myself. Visiting Temple Meads and the local steam sheds every day over the two years meant that I built up a lot of information on train workings and photo's. I still have many more to put on Flickr, including some away from the Bristol area. I have started work on preparing a website based on steam in Bristol in 1964, which is my most documented year. I hope to publish it in the Autumn.
Posted: Sun Jun 12, 2011 4:11 pm
by bristolian
trafalgar45682 wrote:Thanks for your comments. The Bristol photo's from 1963/64 were taken by me and a friend who I have not met for 35 years, but who I am hoping to meet up with again this Summer. Other photo's were taken by myself. Visiting Temple Meads and the local steam sheds every day over the two years meant that I built up a lot of information on train workings and photo's. I still have many more to put on Flickr, including some away from the Bristol area. I have started work on preparing a website based on steam in Bristol in 1964, which is my most documented year. I hope to publish it in the Autumn.
That'll be worth viewing - I look forward to it being made available

Posted: Mon Jun 13, 2011 9:13 am
by AndyK
bristolian wrote:trafalgar45682 wrote:Thanks for your comments. The Bristol photo's from 1963/64 were taken by me and a friend who I have not met for 35 years, but who I am hoping to meet up with again this Summer. Other photo's were taken by myself. Visiting Temple Meads and the local steam sheds every day over the two years meant that I built up a lot of information on train workings and photo's. I still have many more to put on Flickr, including some away from the Bristol area. I have started work on preparing a website based on steam in Bristol in 1964, which is my most documented year. I hope to publish it in the Autumn.
That'll be worth viewing - I look forward to it being made available

I second that.
I don't suppose you took any photos of the Bristol Harbour lines did you? Some of my earliest railway memories are of the shunting at Canon's Marsh; I'd love to see more pictures of those lines but they seem to have been all but ignored by photographers.
Posted: Mon Jun 13, 2011 9:35 pm
by trafalgar45682
I'm afraid I can't help you there, Andy. There are a couple of photo's of Canons Marsh in Bradford Barton "Great Western Steam around Bristol" and Terry Nicholl's video production Vol 84 Railways around Bristol has a section on steam at Wapping Wharf.
Patrick O'Brien
Bristol-Mangotsfield Line
Posted: Tue Jun 14, 2011 10:18 am
by Tiddles
You could look at GWR Goods Services Part2B by Tony Atkins (Wild Swan)
several Pics etc. And the excellent ltttle booklet Pannier Tanks & Shunting
Poles Part 1 by D.J.Fleming Printed locally by R P Printing Services which
as well as the Panniers has Pic's of the 03s used at the end.
Happy Day's I lived in Clifton Wood in the 1950s and used to lie in bed listening to the noise of shunting at Canons Marsh
Posted: Tue Jun 14, 2011 10:44 am
by Geoffers
trafalgar45682 wrote:I'm afraid I can't help you there, Andy. There are a couple of photo's of Canons Marsh in Bradford Barton "Great Western Steam around Bristol" and Terry Nicholl's video production Vol 84 Railways around Bristol has a section on steam at Wapping Wharf.
Patrick O'Brien
Is "Great Western Steam around Bristol" the book that has a photo taken from what is now The Arnolfini, and shows a ship moored opposite adjoining what are now restaurants with the Canons Marsh railway clearly visible behind it?
I hope so as I have been trying to recall this book ever since "The Post" published that photo.
Posted: Tue Jun 14, 2011 10:48 am
by Geoffers
Geoffers wrote:trafalgar45682 wrote:Is "Great Western Steam around Bristol" the book that has a photo taken from what is now The Arnolfini, and shows a ship moored opposite adjoining what are now restaurants with the Canons Marsh railway clearly visible behind it?
I hope so as I have been trying to recall this book ever since "The Post" published that photo.
Actually I don't think it can be because the above is apparently from 1975 and the book I saw reviewed in "The Post" was published around 2000, give or take 5 years either way. It was definitely about ships or boats but that's all I can recall.
Posted: Tue Jun 14, 2011 2:23 pm
by AndyK
Geoffers wrote:Geoffers wrote:trafalgar45682 wrote:Is "Great Western Steam around Bristol" the book that has a photo taken from what is now The Arnolfini, and shows a ship moored opposite adjoining what are now restaurants with the Canons Marsh railway clearly visible behind it?
I hope so as I have been trying to recall this book ever since "The Post" published that photo.
Actually I don't think it can be because the above is apparently from 1975 and the book I saw reviewed in "The Post" was published around 2000, give or take 5 years either way. It was definitely about ships or boats but that's all I can recall.
That rings a bell. I recently read "Bristol's Floating Harbour: the first 200 years" by Peter Malpass and Andy King (Redcliffe Press) and I've an idea there was a picture in that that answered your description (not the same book that you were thinking of, obviously, but perhaps the same or a similar picture was included in it)
What it
does have is a view of the Canons Marsh Wharf taken across the water from Wapping Wharf in which you catch a tantalising partial glimpse of a panier tank on the quayside.