Exploration: The Scarborough & Whitby Railway (An Excerpt)

The coastal route between Scarborough and Whitby opened in 1885. The single-track route was draped over the moors and cliff sides of East Yorkshire’s coast. It was a masterpiece of Victorian engineering, with commanding vistas, challenging gradients and spectacular viaducts and tunnels. It offered a lifeline to sleepy remote fishing villages turning them into attractions in their own right.

Naturally as competition to road traffic grew in the 1960’s the line was under threat of the Beeching Axe. It’s remote nature proved problematic for the new diesel multiple units of the era. Seasonal traffic and declining freight would also contribute to the lines eventual downfall and closure in 1965.

Although the track is now long gone, the route remains largely intact and forms the majority of the 20 mile Scarborough & Whitby Rail Trail cycle and walking route.

On a recent get-a-way to the area I took the opportunity to sample a small section of the route between Ravenscar and Robin Hood’s Bay.

https://flic.kr/p/G9JwMu

Views from The Cleveland Way

We’d already walked the destinations in reverse on the Cleveland Way via Boggle Hole – a walking route some 2 miles shorter but one that really did rise and fall with the terrain.

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100 Journeys: No 18

This week took me to a part of the network I don’t normally frequent and to a station I’ve never alighted at before: Warwick Avenue.

I don’t find myself on the Bakerloo Line often, but I’m very fond of it. If this project was about sounds then those of the Bakerloo would feature heavily in my list of favourites. The uneven clatter of the doors slamming together, the tuneful hum of the air compressors and the distinctive drone of the Metro-Cammell motors. It’s like traveling back in time.

The Bakerloo Line is the old gent of the Underground. It was there at the birth of The Tube in the early part of the 20th Century pioneering subterranean travel. It was an elegant Victorian transport solution and had stylish stations designed by legendary architect Leslie Green. It became a surban icon as it shared in the prosperous Metroland idyll with branches to Watford and Stanmore. It survived a Blitz. The Bakerloo Line has been through some stuff and it could tell you so many stories.

As time went on the Bakerloo Line grew old. It’s cousins on the Central and Northern kept up with the times evolving new technology and new trains. The Piccadilly got an extension to the airport to greet all of London’s guests whilst the Bakerloo had to give up one of it’s branches to the flashy new kid on the block. It’s stations got tattier (Warwick Ave Below), it’s responsibility shrunk, it’s signals aged and it’s dream of reaching Camberwell was abandoned. With most of it’s route superseded or duplicated by newer or more express lines, and without the unenviable task of having to run out to two suburban outposts, it’s hard to tell what the Bakerloo Line is really for anymore… But that’s never stopped the old chap. A reprieve is a long way off as new trains and signalling is not due until 2030. So until then the Bakerloo will keep soldiering on every day like it’s 1932.

You might get to your destination quicker on the Jubilee Line, or in more comfort on the Overground, but once in a while take The Bakerloo… It’ll tell you some stories…

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