British Steam Sunset (ePub)
A Vision of the Final Years 1965–1968
Imprint: Pen & Sword Transport
File Size: 21.0 MB (.epub)
Pages: 112
Illustrations: 200
ISBN: 9781473857117
Published: 2nd October 2018
In this new album from Pen & Sword, transport historian and photographer Jim Blake presents a selection of pictures he took around the country in British steam's final years.
British Railways withdrew their last steam engines with almost indecent haste in the mid- to late-1960s, many having seen only a few years' service before consignment to the scrapheap. Jim's pictures graphically show how not only the locomotives themselves were neglected in their final years, but also their working environment. Their motive power depots were also badly run down, particularly when slated for closure upon steam's demise.
Most of Jim's pictures of steam locomotives, taken fifty years ago, are previously unpublished. In BR steam's last two years, they were based in two distinctly different areas on the London & South Western main line, and in the industrial north. However, their decline was just as sad and depressing in both areas once proud depots such as London's Nine Elms, with broken windows and roof open to the sky, not repaired after wartime, piles of ash and clinker everywhere, were just as derelict as those in such places as Wigan or Sunderland. Many scenes herein invoke the sad, eerie atmosphere of steam's last months.
Ironically, it was London Transport who operated the last publicly-owned standard gauge steam locomotives in 1971, some three years after BR's had gone. These are included within these pages too.
Like many young lads born in the early post-war years, Jim soon developed a passionate interest in railways including the myriad steam engines that were still the norm on the rail network in those days.
Methodist Recorder
The results are all here in this nostalgic coffee table book, a steam enthusiast’s dream if I ever saw one. Here we have engines imbued with personality.
Unintentional religious imagery abounds; thus we have the “last days” and “death” of steam, even purgatory – if the famous Barry scrapyard counts as that – and resurrection (steam on preserved lines). An evocative piece of railway history.
Yes, those were the days …
About Jim Blake
JIM BLAKE was born in December 1947 and brought up in Islington, North London. As did most young lads then, he soon developed an interest in railways, but also London's trams, trolleybuses and buses since North London's last two tram routes ran near his home, at the heart of London Transport's trolleybus system. His interest developed into transport photography in 1961 and he took over 100,000 photos before retiring his cameras in 2015. He still lives in North London today.