Old Railway Goods Vans etc.
Re: Old Railway Goods Vans etc.
There are old yellow National Freight van bodies and a few old railway goods vans all over the wilder parts of Northumberland for storage.
John
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Re: Old Railway Goods Vans etc.
I guess the modern equivalent is shipping containers. They are used for many purposes besides shipping, even housing.
It's the same the whole world over
It's the poor what gets the blame
It's the rich what gets the pleasure
Isn't it a blooming shame?
It's the poor what gets the blame
It's the rich what gets the pleasure
Isn't it a blooming shame?
Re: Old Railway Goods Vans etc.
I'd forgotten about shipping containers, but as if by magic, today near the Ribble estuary at Longton W.Lanc's.Mike Sales wrote: ↑11 May 2021, 12:12pm I guess the modern equivalent is shipping containers. They are used for many purposes besides shipping, even housing.
I liked the sign on the side of the old truck body next to the container as well, a contemporary sign on a temporary shelter.
Nu-Fogey
Re: Old Railway Goods Vans etc.
Colin, you and I know the area well!
Chatting online to Chat Noir a few times, and been in contact via email only yesterday.
memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=13467
Met and cycled with him, and in the same class with his older brother at primary school in Wigan back in the 1950s and 60s.
Chatting online to Chat Noir a few times, and been in contact via email only yesterday.
memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=13467
Met and cycled with him, and in the same class with his older brother at primary school in Wigan back in the 1950s and 60s.
Mick F. Cornwall
Re: Old Railway Goods Vans etc.
this was long before I come up to the borders, these were all ex Irish Gypsies, there was a whole load that had went into brick where I was brought up - it was a mad place - LOLcolin54 wrote: ↑11 May 2021, 9:53am Funnily enough, I've been reading about the Gypsies at Kirk Yetholm recently. My family on my Father's side were from the Borders.
https://www.gypsypalace.co.uk/section468194.html
I think the Yetholm ones were Romany ?
anyway, back on topic. Old railway goods vans are quite a feature up in the Cheviot hills, many of which now seem to be coming to the end of their life but they have been used for storing stuff like dry hay and feed in some very remote places, It has often puzzled me ow they got some of them to where they are.
Don't approve of the following, used for pheasant rearing, total blot on the landscape.
Re: Old Railway Goods Vans etc.
Thanks for posting those Pebble, great pictures. That's such a clever & simple way of fixing the shelters to the ground.
So easy to move them elsewhere if required. Ingenious.
So easy to move them elsewhere if required. Ingenious.
Nu-Fogey
Re: Old Railway Goods Vans etc.
My grandfather was a railway worker living in a 2 bedroomed cottage next to a rail line. He had 8 children, 4 girls and 4 boys. Somehow, he managed to have a carriage hoisted into the garden by one of the rail company's cranes. The girls slept in the house and the boys slept in the carriage.
After the boys left home the carriage became a garden shed and as a youngster I would spend hours in the shed. It was full of tools, bikes and bike bits. There was a Raleigh Lenton Sports in bits, and when I was 13 my uncle gave me the frame and a box of bits. With my mother's help we carried them home on the bus for me to build up. It was my first proper bike and the start of a lifetime's cycle touring.
After the boys left home the carriage became a garden shed and as a youngster I would spend hours in the shed. It was full of tools, bikes and bike bits. There was a Raleigh Lenton Sports in bits, and when I was 13 my uncle gave me the frame and a box of bits. With my mother's help we carried them home on the bus for me to build up. It was my first proper bike and the start of a lifetime's cycle touring.
Re: Old Railway Goods Vans etc.
Thank you for sharing that velorog, great story of your family.
I just noticed in Pebbles pictures above that the blue barrels (presumably pheasant shelters) have wooden battens mounted on the outside to stop them rolling down the hill, clever.
I just noticed in Pebbles pictures above that the blue barrels (presumably pheasant shelters) have wooden battens mounted on the outside to stop them rolling down the hill, clever.
Nu-Fogey
Re: Old Railway Goods Vans etc.
The farmer I linked to in my first post in this thread has added another aircraft fuselage ( the smaller one ) to his shed collection, type unknown...
Nu-Fogey
Re: Old Railway Goods Vans etc.
Looks like there's a bike awaiting restoration in one of them. Time for another visit.
At the last count:- Peugeot 531 pro, Dawes Discovery Tandem, Dawes Kingpin X3, Raleigh 20 stowaway, 1965 Moulton deluxe, Falcon K2 MTB dropped bar tourer, Rudge Bi frame folder, Longstaff trike conversion on a Giant XTC 840
Re: Old Railway Goods Vans etc.
The blue barrels are feeders which have fallen over. They usually have a large spring fitted in the bottom which birds peck at and grain falls out.
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Re: Old Railway Goods Vans etc.
You can spend the night in an old brake van at the Exeter & Teign Valley Railway if you want, I always meant to, but never got around to it.
The Pullman Inn at Cressing used to have a restaurant made from a Pullman car that was part of Winston Churchills funeral train. I've been in the pub, but never had a meal in the carriage.
The Pullman Inn at Cressing used to have a restaurant made from a Pullman car that was part of Winston Churchills funeral train. I've been in the pub, but never had a meal in the carriage.
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― Friedrich Nietzsche
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Re: Old Railway Goods Vans etc.
Railways have been selling-off redundant wagons and carriages since about 1850, usually as they were superseded by “the next thing”, as in bigger, faster, steel instead of timber etc, and the modern equivalent is the selling-off of worn out ISO containers.
Hereabouts, every allotment, chicken-run etc used to have a carriage or a van, because we are near what was a major railways works, but most have either decayed away or been rescued over the past c25 years. There are a few left “in the wild” though, including s small collection at one farm.
I’m not totally sure what this began life as, but I suspect an LNWR milk van.
Hereabouts, every allotment, chicken-run etc used to have a carriage or a van, because we are near what was a major railways works, but most have either decayed away or been rescued over the past c25 years. There are a few left “in the wild” though, including s small collection at one farm.
I’m not totally sure what this began life as, but I suspect an LNWR milk van.
Re: Old Railway Goods Vans etc.
But as ugly as something stuck to a blanket.
There's an old Maersk container lurking in the back yard of a garage near us. It's remarkably ugly but everything else there - wrecks, old tyres, the owner, etc. - is too so it sorta fades in.
Have we got time for another cuppa?
Re: Old Railway Goods Vans etc.
Whoops - that's what guessing does for you, thanks for the proper usage.
Nu-Fogey