Railway Journeys - Your
Responses...
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Train to the coast. A sight that marked
the start of a holiday for many.
(Photo - Hugh Irvine) |
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Yvonne Foster (nee Stewart)
My uncle Ernie (Luney) worked on the trains at York
St,when I had to go to the dentist my treat on the way
home was to go to a bridge near where all the engines
were kept so that I could give my favourite uncle a
wave. It was worth getting teeth out just for that.
We also had lots of train trips to Whitehead. The smell
inside the carriage and the smoke were just great. I
think my uncle was a guards man. He used to bring home
a little black leather bag that we were told never to
touch as it had detonaters inside for the trains. They
were left on the track for some reason. I must have
been around 7 at the time I remember this, when we went
into a tunnel all sorts of scary noises were made to
scare us and if that didn't work at the next tunnel
we were tickled to death, but as we came out of the
tunnel there was uncle Ernie sitting in the same place
denying he had tickled us. Oh happy days.
Ronni Sloan, England
Like Matthew Jackson, Dromore, (see below)
I remember travelling to Portrush by train, but with
the added excitement of getting on the train at Eden
Halt, travelling through the Barn Halt, into Carrickfergus,
and then onto Belfast, where we had the extra excitement
of changing to the 'big' train to go to Portrush.
Neither can I remember anything but sun and that was
also in the early to mid 50s. We spent the day (one
day only) eating candy floss and ice cream, visiting
Barries, and building sandcastles or paddling in the
sea. The train journey and the tunnels that seemed to
go on forever, especially that big one, added to the
excitement. I remember being terrified of getting on
and off the train. I had heard of someone falling onto
the line and I always thought I would fall between the
step and the platform. I was also terrified of that
strap on the door window, and of being locked in and
not being able to get out before the train moved on
somewhere else.
We went every year and it was our big day out. We all
got new sandals for the trip and made sandwiches to
eat on the train. We were lucky and lived in Eden, just
a stones throw from the 'Halt' and we would watch the
train go by every day. We loved the big 'chuffer' trains,
but at the same time were secretly terrified of them,
although we were quite used to train journeys as our
mother and us children would often travel from Eden
Halt to the Barn Halt, where we would get off to go
visit our grandmother. We had many happy memories on
trains, and the smells and sights will stay in my mind
as long as I live.
Eugene McGreevy, Barrie Ontario Canada
I have recollections regarding my last train trip on
the GNR line. I grew up in Maghermayo which is located
between Ballyward station and Leitrim station. It was
a favorite pastime of mine to look across the fields
from our farm and watch the train as it passed through
the countryside. Like most young boys of that era I
found the long whistle and the chug of the locomotive
to be quite exciting. It was a big event when it was
announced that the GNR was closing that line. As a teenager
I realized that I wanted to experience a farewell journey
on the line I bought myself a ticket at Leitrim station
from station-master Jimmy Cochran and boarded the train
one last time. It was a bittersweet excursion for everyone
on board The end of the line was Newcastle. I went for
a walk on the promenade and had a wee drop of tea and
a bun. I boarded the train for the last time to go back
to Leitrim. This last ride back was not only the last
trip it was also the passing of a way of life for many
communities along the line. I still love train rides.
Hearing the sound of a whistle and the roar of the locomotive
takes me back to my childhood. I emigrated to Canada
in 1966. I operated subway trains in Toronto. My wife
and I enjoy taking trips on the polar bear express in
northern Ontario.
Matthew Jackson, Dromore:
I remember as a boy of about 6 or 7 going to Portrush
on the train. This would have been in the early '60s.
Portrush was a very long way away to me then and this
was a life-event! It meant sunny days, sandcastles,
fish & chips and of course, Barrys! I remember how
the excitement of a journey on a steam-train kept me
awake the night before. The rattly carriages of the
train were painted brown with gold stripes and lettering
on the outside and cream on the inside. It was somehow
important for me to walk up to the front of the train
and see what the name on the engine was before getting
on. The train left York St. Station quite early in the
morning and I remember how the carriages jerked and
squealed and thumped as it lumbered into motion leaving
the station. As far as I can remember the seats were
red leather and there were overhead storage racks with
cord netting. The electric lights were dome shaped glass
bowls on the ceiling and never seemed to work. The "communication
chain" as it was known was indeed a real chain which
was painted bright red. There was a stern sign threatening
a 拢2 fine for pulling it out of mischief.
I can recall clearly how the wooden-framed window in
the carriage door slid open and closed vertically and
it was held in place by a leather strap at the bottom
about 3" wide. The strap had holes in it just like a
belt and these engaged with a brass pin on the door.
This way you could hold the window open at about 10
different heights. If you let go of the strap before
it was safely pinned, the weight of the falling window
would fling it outwards and you could easily have been
hit in the face with the end of it. As a child I wasn't
allowed to touch the strap or the window. I can remember
too how to get out of the train at a station you had
to first of all open the window and then lean out and
open the door from the outside by turning a big brass
handle. The first time I was allowed to do this on my
own the stiff door opened suddenly and I fell out onto
the platform.
It was a small boy's ambition to get into a carriage
as near as possible to the front of the train near to
the engine and hear the wonderful puffing sounds. Train
drivers were very important people and they blew the
steam engine's whistle along the way to warn people
off as it hurtled along the tracks at a breakneck speed,
which probably wasn't over 50mph but seemed like 100
as the big metal snake lunged from side to side over
every set of points. We used to sit with our faces glued
to the window watching the shadow of the train move
back and forth across the blur of the other railway
tracks and we tried to gauge our speed by the clickety-clack
of the bogies over the joins. Every time we passed under
a bridge we'd jump with shock as the sound changed.
We even used to scream when we flew into tunnels. I
have strong memories of going through a tunnel (which
I think was near Ballycastle) and how smoke and steam
belched in through the open window and filled the carriage.
In the dark nobody could get the window closed. It was
a unique tarry smell which clung to your clothes for
a while afterwards. I've never smelt anything quite
like it since.
I can't ever remember arriving in Portrush in anything
other than sunshine. I must have thought that it never
rained there at that age. Getting off the train there
marked the beginning of two glorious weeks of sand-castles,
candy-floss, ice-creams, fish & chips and dodgem
rides. Nowhere on earth could have been better.
Des Lyttle, living in Vancouver,
Canada.
Your article and the stories sure brought back memories
for me. I lived in Portadown, facing the old Armagh
railway line. I well remember the steam trains chugging
past, sometimes lost in a vast cloud of smoke.
There was a pedestrian foot-bridge close by, we called
' the stoney loanin' and we as children used to stand
in the middle of it and wait until a train came. As
you might guess we were enveloped in the sooty smoke
of those magnificent steam engines.
A wonderful article folks which brought back memories
of a carefree by-gone era.
Do feel free to add your thoughts, responses or stories
at the bottom of the page or e-mail ypam-online@bbc.co.uk
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