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CRIMINAL OF THE MONTH

GEORGE SAYERS FOR LARCENY

THE FARINGDON BRANCH & UFFINGTON STATION
THE FARINGDON BRANCH & UFFINGTON STATION
more products by: TRANSPORT & WATERWAYS
£16.99

 The Great Western Railway's main line from London to Bristol, opened throughout in 1841, passed by the ancient market town of Faringdon at a distance of 3½ miles to the south. This bypassed town began to go into decline, and planning for a broad gauge railway to connect Faringdon with the GWR main line and thus re-establish a link with the outside world began in 1860. The Faringdon branch railway was built out of equal parts of local patriotism, personal prestige and the desire to improve the business prospects of the town.

After the opening of the line, in 1864, new industries were created in the town. Farmers were able to send milk to London. Employment prospects were improved. The railway served the area well through the summer of England’s Imperial power and through the miserable winter of an enormous war. With the introduction of the petrol-engined lorries and buses after the Great War, its freight and passenger traffic was gradually taken away. The directors of the GWR knew it was a liability as early as 1925, but they ran it at a loss all the same. It was not closed to passengers until December 1951 and to freight in 1964.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Adrian Vaughan was born in Reading in January 1941 and grew up closely in touch with the GWR and its nationalised successor. He was a volunteer porter at Challow station from 1953 to 1956, during which time he learned how to drive a steam engine and work a signal box. In 1960, after 4½ years in the army, he joined the staff of Challow and became a signalman at Uffington a few months later. He was a signalman for fourteen years and an amateur footplateman for six. He produced his first book on his beloved railway in 1971.

As at 2010, he has produced thirty-three books of railway history and in 2011 Amberley will be re-publishing his classic Signalman’s trilogy.


248 x 172 mm | paperback | 160 pages | 200 b&w illustrations

COVER PRICE £ 16.99

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