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I did the Woodside to Paddington a couple of times. Journey time was about 7 hours. The route was Chester, where the loco changed ends, Wrexham, Shrewsbury, Birmingham Snow Hill & after that I can't remember. It didn't touch Crewe, which was LMS territory & this train was GWR. (Lime St. to Euston was about 4 hours on one of the expresses; Red Rose, Manxman, are the ones I can remember). I have to say, 7 hours is longer than even I expceted but doesn't surprise me. Indeed, the loco would have to change ends at Chester, I'd forgotten about that. The modern-day train from Holyhead to Cardiff (or Maesteg) also has to do that as it comes in off the North Wales coast line and then back onto the Wrexham, Shrewsbury line. I've been following some of the original Birkenhead-Paddington route on my travels over the summer. I took some photos at Ruabon and then at Shrewsbury. A few weeks back I was at Snow Hill (en route to Stratford upon Avon). I've also done the route from Marylebone to Moor street and I know that Chiltern railways do run an occasional service into Paddington in order to keep drivers famililir with the route. I'm wondering if the Birkenhead services did take the Chiltern main line, south of Birmingham. I went to RAF Cosford recently and there is a large map of GWR services there and has Birkenhead Woodside at the end of the main line going all the way to London - it's intersting to see it, I just can't recall the part of it south of Birmingham i.e. which way it went.
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Single questions are sometimes better Paul, that way a new thread can be concentrated on or one can be sent in the right direction. Yes I'm sure you are right, as fascinitaing as it is, it seems that have created a thread of chaos here.  On the question of deregulation, no expert myself, i think it was more down to local treaties between the transport companies. Not good for the ferries having buses running through the tunnel, etc. The little crosville bus i got at the Woodchurch every morning coming from West Kirby around the late sixties was only allowed to stop till it got to Arrowe park and then if my memory serves me right wasn't allowed to stop till it got to the tech college on Borough Rd.
That's interesting, I didn't realise there were also stopping restrictions within the Wirral itself. I was also thinking along the lines that transport companies could not operate outside their own jurisdiction etc.. Also, what you mention about competition with other modes of transport makes sense. I guess many on here will remember sometime after deregulation, when some Mersyside bus company encroached into Greater Manchester. In return, the Manchester company put on loads of "number 10" buses on the Birkenhead/Wallasey route in the original Birkenhead Corporation blue livery. There were that many of them operating for a while, many of them were almost empty. Then later, there was some sort of truce, and they withdrew all of those buses. Also, Re: Hedd Wynn, I'll certainly have to watch that one sometime.
Last edited by PaulTaters; 5th Nov 2010 11:43am.
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Haven't got the copies to hand, but I have two books on the Woodside - Paddington expresses. If you can locate a copy they may be of interest?
Paddington to the Mersey: G.W.R's Forgotten Route from London to Birkenhead by R.Preston Hendry ISBN-13: 978-0860934424
Sorry, don't know if it's still in print but I know Leamington Spa and Brimingham Snow Hill get some coverage in it - copies are sometimes on Ebay. Failing that the library might be able to help.
The other book was printed by the Great Western Railway and was one of their 'From the Carriage Window' series - again ebay or the library might be the best bet.
Cheers
Sitting on a cornflake, waiting for the van to come.
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Little bit more on Birkenheads Eisteddfods
Despite being in England, Birkenhead (known as Penbedw, in the Welsh language) hosted Wales' National Eisteddfod in 1917[27] as well as an unofficial National Eisteddfod event in 1879. As in Liverpool,[28] migrants from Wales, especially north Wales, contributed greatly to the growth of the town and its cultural development in the 19th century. The first local Birkenhead Eisteddfod, a precursor of the national events, took place in 1864.[29] The 1917 National Eisteddfod was notable for the award of the chair to the poet Ellis Humphrey Evans, known as Hedd Wyn. The winner was announced, and the crowd waited for the winner to accept congratulations before the chairing ceremony, but no winner appeared. It was then announced that Hedd Wyn had been killed the previous month on the battlefield in Belgium, and the bardic chair was draped in black. These events were portrayed in the Academy Award nominated film Hedd Wyn, and were apparently intended as a protest against the war policies of Prime Minister David Lloyd George, who was present. There is a commemorative stone for the event in Birkenhead Park.[30] The first meeting of the international Celtic Congress also took place at the Birkenhead Eisteddfod.[31]
God help us, Come yourself, Don't send Jesus, This is no place for children.
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Thanks again for any possible thoughts on these random points!
9. Did anyone here ever travel on direct rail services from Birkenhead Woodside to London Paddington (or vice-versa)? If so, how long did the journey take, and how frequent were the trains? I'm just interested personally in the validity of the "use Liverpool instead" Beeching-axe arguments.
The stopping journey from Paddington to Woodside, as stated above, took about seven hours, but there was an express from Paddington at 9:10am which arrived at Woodside at 1:57pm. The time table list the route as: London (Paddington), Ealing (Broadway), Reading, Didcot, Culham, Radley, Oxford, Wolvercot Halt, Kidlington, Bletchingham, Heyford, Fritwell, Aynho, King's Sutton, Banbury, Cropredy, Fenny Compton, Southham Road, Leamington, Warwick, Hatton, Lapworth, Knowle, Widney Manor, Solihul, Olton, Acock's Gree, Tyseley, Small Heath, Bordesley, Birmingham (Moor St), Birmingham (Snow Hill), Hockley, Handsworth, West Bromwich, Swan Village, Wednesbury, Bradley, Bilston, Priestfield, Wolverhampton (Low Level), Dunstall Park, Codsall, Albrighton, Shifnal, Oakengates, Wellington, Admaston, Walcot, Upton Magna, Shrewsbury, Leaton, Baschurch, Rednal, Whittington, Gobowen, Preesegweene, Cefn, Rhosymedre Halt, Ruabon, Johnstown, Wrexham, Gresford, Rossett, Balderton, Saltney, Chester, Birkenhead (Woodside).
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1. One of the broader definitions of the geographical Wirral Peninsula (e.g. mentioned on Wikipedia) is that it's technically an island partly bounded by the River Dee and the Shropshire Union Canal. If this is the case, then is part of the peninsula Welsh? For example, Shotwick Lake, Garden City, Deeside industrial estate, Hawarden Bridge station, RAF Sealand etc.. would all count as part of the geographical Wirral Peninsula under this definition (they are all north of the Dee), but all are in Flintshire. I think this anomaly may exist because the River Dee was rerouted via the 18th century canal, yet the English-Welsh border was never changed.
Bit on where Wirral ends and what it includes here
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That's interesting, I didn't realise there were also stopping restrictions within the Wirral itself.
Crosville buses were only allowed to pick up passengers within the Birkenhead Corporation Area when travelling out of Birkenhead, and were only allowed to set down passengers when travelling into Birkenhead. As an example, In Claughton Village you could get on the Crosville Bus coming from Park Station, going to West Kirby; but you couldn't get on the bus coming from West Kirby going to Park Station. and If you were on the Crosville bus coming from West Kirby you could get off at Claughton Village; but if you were on the bus coming from Park Station, you couldn't get off at Claughton Village. The Crosville buses used the same bus stops as the Corporation Buses in most cases, but in Claughton Village in the West Kirby direction, they each had their own bus stop (next to each other).
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The stopping journey from Paddington to Woodside, as stated above, took about seven hours, but there was an express from Paddington at 9:10am which arrived at Woodside at 1:57pm.
The time table list the route as:
London (Paddington), Ealing (Broadway), Reading, Didcot, Culham, Radley, Oxford, Wolvercot Halt, Kidlington, Bletchingham, Heyford, Fritwell, Aynho, King's Sutton, Banbury, Cropredy, Fenny Compton, Southham Road, Leamington, Warwick, Hatton, Lapworth, Knowle, Widney Manor, Solihul, Olton, Acock's Gree, Tyseley, Small Heath, Bordesley, Birmingham (Moor St), Birmingham (Snow Hill), Hockley, Handsworth, West Bromwich, Swan Village, Wednesbury, Bradley, Bilston, Priestfield, Wolverhampton (Low Level), Dunstall Park, Codsall, Albrighton, Shifnal, Oakengates, Wellington, Admaston, Walcot, Upton Magna, Shrewsbury, Leaton, Baschurch, Rednal, Whittington, Gobowen, Preesegweene, Cefn, Rhosymedre Halt, Ruabon, Johnstown, Wrexham, Gresford, Rossett, Balderton, Saltney, Chester, Birkenhead (Woodside).
Wow, thanks for that. 4 hours 47 minutes is pretty impressive compared with the Lime St.- Euston time. A couple of points from that route are interesting. First, considering all the tiny stations listed, why no mention of the stations between Chester & Birkenhead? Also, the line between Birmingham Snow Hill & Wolverhampton is now the Midland Metro tram system.
Carpe diem.
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Thanks again all for the further info. To Billy, you've given me a reason to finally get my library card renewed! I used to go down there loads and even used to read in there a bit too - thanks to the peace and quiet, but since I've been using the Internet a lot more for reading, I have let my card expire some time ago. Really should sort that out soon and check out that book you mention. To bert1, that really is very interesting about the Eisteddfodd, the draping of the bardic chair and its significance as an anti-war protest. To uptoncx, that is a handy working definition of the geographical Wirral peninsula. (Just to clarify I'm not talking about the Metropolitan Borough or the Wirral Hundred, simply the geographical definition of the peninsula) I mean the definition on this post here:- https://www.wikiwirral.co.uk/forums..._railways_of_Wirral_1830.html#Post319720So, if I assume that "The River Dee" means the present day River Dee as it is now (using the canalised section) then a small part of the geographical Wirral Peninsula is indeed in Flintshire, Wales. This first came to my attention as I started hiking a bit in that area over the last couple of years, when you come off a footpath onto a road and you start seeing bilingual road signs and Welsh flags flying in people's front gardens, you know you are in Wales. This initially surprised me as I knew I hadn't yet crossed "the blue bridge" over the Dee at that point. I believe places like "Garden City" are on reclaimed land. As stated I think that the English/Welsh boundary reflects the original course of the River Dee before it silted up, necessitating the building of the canalised section. Although the River has had its course artificially changed, the English/Welsh boundary has remained intact. This is just my theory to be honest, but I always did wonder why a very small section of the south-western corner of the geographical peninsula does seem to be Welsh territory. As for the Crosville buses, it's funny I really didn't know that. I did use those buses sometimes, but I guess I used the usual Merseybus ones much more in the 80s. So the old Birkenhead-Paddington route did use some of the Chiltern Main line then (Leamington-Warwick etc). Interesting to see it also used the Shrewsbury-Wolverhampton line via Wellington, I was on that one recently. Think I've now effectively travelled most of the whole route in various different stages, apart from Wolverhampton-Snow Hill as I haven't yet travelled on the Midland Metro, only photographed it. I should do that sometime soon and fill in the gap. Cheers.
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A couple of points from that route are interesting. First, considering all the tiny stations listed, why no mention of the stations between Chester & Birkenhead?
Good question, looking at the working timetables for Chester to Birkenhead, all of the Paddington trains are shown as 'express' and don't stop between Chester and Woodside (except that a footnote says that they will "stop at Birkenhead Town, if required to set down passengers booked to the Town Station only"). For completeness, the route from Chester to Birkenhead (from the working timetables) is: Chester, Upton, Mollington, (Dunkirk), Capenhurst, Ledsham, Hooton, Bromborough, Spital, Port Sunlight, Bebington & New Ferry, Rock Ferry, (Mersey Junction), Green Lane, (Grange Lane), (Blackpool St Junction), Birkenhead Town, Birkenhead Woodside.
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I remember when I was at school, pre mobile days, catching the direct train from Bromborough to London direct. This how ever was a special charter by Wirral Grammar. And I remember people collecting train numbers at crewe. lol
There again I collect aircraft numbers but thats for my log book / legal reasons.
Nomad
" Per Ardua ad Astra"
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De-regulation in 1986 brought the bus companies into direct competition with the railway and ferry, wheras previously they ran to places where you 'interchanged' onto each other.
The bus company want the money these days, they dont want you to get off and use another form of transport.
Dont forget that buses, trains and ferries were previous to this managed or owned by the Merseyside Passenger Transport Executive ... Crosville, Ribble and Greater Manchester buses ran under agreement with the MPTE and were handsomely remunerated for doing so.
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I remember when I was at school, pre mobile days, catching the direct train from Bromborough to London direct. This how ever was a special charter by Wirral Grammar. And I remember people collecting train numbers at crewe. lol
There again I collect aircraft numbers but thats for my log book / legal reasons.
Nomad So your special didn't use the GWR route since it went via Crewe. It would have gone into Euston. The line between Chester & Birkenhead was joint GWR/LMS if I remember correctly.
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I have an old newspaper somwhere which mentioned an Eisteddfod being held in Liverpool, it went on to say that over 100,000 welsh speakers lived in the surrounding area's !.
I thought the last "offical" steam train to leave from paddington went to birkenhead !.
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List of Eisteddfods
National Eisteddfod venues 1861 - Aberdare 1880 - Caernarfon 1881 - Merthyr Tydfil 1882 - Denbigh 1883 - Cardiff 1884 - Liverpool, England 1885 - Aberdare 1886 - Caernarfon 1887 - London, England 1888 - Wrexham 1889 - Brecon 1890 - Bangor 1891 - Swansea 1892 - Rhyl 1893 - Pontypridd 1894 - Caernarfon 1895 - Llanelli 1896 - Llandudno 1897 - Newport 1898 - Blaenau Ffestiniog 1899 - Cardiff 1900 - Liverpool, England 1901 - Merthyr Tydfil 1902 - Bangor 1903 - Llanelli 1904 - Rhyl 1905 - Mountain Ash 1906 - Caernarfon 1907 - Swansea 1908 - Llangollen 1909 - London, England 1910 - Colwyn Bay 1911 - Carmarthen 1912 - Wrexham 1913 - Abergavenny 1914 - Not held 1915 - Bangor 1916 - Aberystwyth 1917 - Birkenhead, England 1918 - Neath 1919 - Corwen 1920 - Barry 1921 - Caernarfon 1922 - Ammanford 1923 - Mold 1924 - Pontypool 1925 - Pwllheli 1926 - Swansea 1927 - Holyhead 1928 - Treorchy 1929 - Liverpool-England 1930 - Llanelli 1931 - Bangor 1932 - Aberavon 1933 - Wrexham 1934 - Neath 1935 - Caernarfon 1936 - Fishguard 1937 - Machynlleth 1938 - Cardiff 1939 - Denbigh 1940 - Eisteddfod Radio, Bangor 1941 - Old Colwyn 1942 - Cardigan 1943 - Bangor 1944 - Llandybie 1945 - Rhosllannerchrugog 1946 - Mountain Ash 1947 - Colwyn Bay 1948 - Bridgend 1949 - Dolgellau 1950 - Caerphilly 1951 - Llanrwst 1952 - Aberystwyth 1953 - Rhyl 1954 - Ystradgynlais 1955 - Pwllheli 1956 - Aberdare 1957 - Llangefni 1958 - Ebbw Vale 1959 - Caernarfon 1960 - Cardiff 1961 - Rhosllannerchrugog 1962 - Llanelli 1963 - Llandudno 1964 - Swansea 1965 - Newtown 1966 - Aberavon 1967 - Bala 1968 - Barry 1969 - Flint 1970 - Ammanford 1971 - Bangor 1972 - Haverfordwest 1973 - Ruthin 1974 - Carmarthen 1975 - Criccieth 1976 - Cardigan 1977 - Wrexham 1978 - Cardiff 1979 - Caernarfon 1980 - Gowerton - Lliw Valley 1981 - Machynlleth 1982 - Swansea 1983 - Llangefni 1984 - Lampeter 1985 - Rhyl 1986 - Fishguard 1987 - Porthmadog 1988 - Newport 1989 - Llanrwst 1990 - Rhymney Valley, 1991 - Mold 1992 - Aberystwyth 1993 - Builth Wells 1994 - Neath 1995 - Abergele 1996 - Llandeilo 1997 - Bala 1998 - Pencoed, near Bridgend 1999 - Llanbedrgoch, Anglesey 2000 - Llanelli 2001 - Denbigh 2002 - St David's 2003 - Meifod, near Welshpool 2004 - Newport 2005 - Faenol Estate, near Bangor 2006 - Felindre, Swansea 2007 - Mold 2008 - Cardiff 2009 - Bala 2010 - Blaenau Gwent[1][2][3] 2011 - Wrexham[2] 2012 - Vale of Glamorgan[2] 2013 - Denbighshire[2] 2014 - Carmarthenshire[2] 2015 - Monmouthshire[2]
God help us, Come yourself, Don't send Jesus, This is no place for children.
Bertieone.
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