In today's world, Buckinghamshire Railway Centre has become a topic of constant interest and debate. Whether it's its impact on society, its historical relevance, or its influence on popular culture, Buckinghamshire Railway Centre attracts the attention of people of all ages, genders, and backgrounds. Over the years, Buckinghamshire Railway Centre has generated all kinds of opinions, theories and interpretations, becoming a central element in numerous areas. In this article, we will explore different aspects of Buckinghamshire Railway Centre and its meaning in the contemporary context. From its origin to its current repercussions, we will take an in-depth look at the importance of Buckinghamshire Railway Centre in our world today.
Established | 1969 |
---|---|
Coordinates | 51°51′54″N 0°55′44″W / 51.865°N 0.929°W |
Type | Operational railway museum |
Key holdings | Metropolitan Railway E Class No.1 GWR 4073 Class No.5080 Defiant GWR 6959 Class No.6989 Wightwick Hall South African Class 25NC 4-8-4 No.3405 |
Owner | Quainton Railway Society (Some land leased from Network Rail) |
Public transit access | Quainton Road or Aylesbury |
Website | BucksRailCentre.org |
Buckinghamshire Railway Centre is a railway museum operated by the Quainton Railway Society Ltd. at Quainton Road railway station, about 5 miles (8.0 km) west of Aylesbury in Buckinghamshire, England. The site is divided into two halves which are joined by two foot-bridges, one of which provides wheelchair access. Each side has a demonstration line with various workshop buildings as well as museum buildings.
In 1962, the London Railway Preservation Society was formed. It bought a series of former London Underground vehicles and collectables, and holds the largest collection of London and North Western Railway memorabilia.[1] These were held at various sites around London, mainly two government depots at Luton and Bishop's Stortford,[2] making both access, restoration and preservation difficult.[1]
While other closed stations on the former MR lines north of Aylesbury were generally demolished or sold,[3] in 1969 the Quainton Railway Society was formed to operate a working museum at the station.[4] On 24 April 1971 the society absorbed the London Railway Preservation Society, taking custody of its collection of historic railway equipment.[5]
The station was maintained in working order, used as a bookshop and ticket office.[6] The extensive sidings were still intact, and although disconnected from the mainline in 1967,[7] were used for locomotive restoration work.[4] The Society eventually restored the main station building to its 1900 appearance, renaming the site the Buckinghamshire Railway Centre.[8] A smaller building on the former Brill platform, once a shelter for passengers waiting for Brill and down trains, was used first as a store then as a shop for a number of years before its current use to house an exhibit on the history of the Brill Tramway. A former London Transport building from Wembley Park was dismantled and re-erected at Quainton Road to serve as a maintenance shed.[9]
Although the BRC's trains are run on the former station sidings, the station still has a working Network Rail line passing through it. This connects Aylesbury with the Bletchley to Oxford cross-country route at Claydon (LNE) Junction. Regular landfill freight trains and High Speed 2 spoil trains traverse the line from waste transfer depots in Greater London as well as some from the freight terminal at Tytherington and other freight locations in the South-West of England to the former brick pits at Calvert. The High Speed 2 trains also terminate here, but are used for the construction of the new High Speed 2 depot at Calvert.[10]
From 1984 until 1990, the station briefly came back into passenger use, when special Christmas shopping services between Aylesbury and Bletchley were operated by British Rail Network SouthEast on Saturdays only, and stopped at Quainton Road.[11] From August Bank Holiday 1971 until the 1987 season, and again from August Bank Holiday 2001 until May 2017 the station has had special passenger trains from Aylesbury in connection with events at the Centre - these shuttles ran regularly each Spring and August Bank Holiday weekend.
With an extensively redeveloped site on both sides of the working mainline, BRC houses around 170 items of locomotives and rolling stock, in buildings dating from 1874 to the 1960s. The adjacent World War II warehouses of the Ministry of Food Buffer Depot in the former downside yard have been taken over to display many items awaiting restoration, whilst the Society have added a members' reference library.
Rewley Road, the Oxford terminus of Harry Verney's Buckinghamshire Railway and of the Oxford to Cambridge Line, closed to passengers on 1 October 1951 with trains diverted to the former GWR Oxford General, the current Oxford station. In co-operation with the Science Museum, Rewley Road was dismantled in 1999. The main station building and part of the platform canopy were then moved to BRC and re-erected in 2002 at the north-west corner of the site, now providing improved visitor facilities and the main offices of the QRS.[12]
As one of the best-preserved period railway stations in England, Quainton Road is regularly used as a filming location for programmes such as The Jewel in the Crown, the Doctor Who serial Black Orchid, Midsomer Murders and was a recurring location for the eighth series of Taskmaster.[7]
High Speed 2's planned route passes immediately to the west of the site, not impacting the centre directly, although it will preclude any restoration of the Brill Tramway.[13]
The collection includes locomotives, carriages, and assorted rolling stock, plus a large amount of memorabilia and documents.[14]
Class | Number (and name) | Chassis | Status | Notes | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Metropolitan Railway E Class |
No.1 (London Transport L44) | 0-4-4T | Under overhaul | Built 1898. Withdrawn from service early needing boiler repairs. | |
LSWR 0298 Class |
314 (British Railways 30585) |
2-4-0WT | Static Display | Built 1874. Boiler ticket expired in 2016. | |
Peckett and Sons | No.1159 Annie |
0-4-0ST | Under overhaul | Built 1908. Arrived in April 2018 from the Embsay and Bolton Abbey Steam Railway. Part way through a major overhaul. | |
Peckett and Sons | No.2105 Rokeby |
0-4-0ST | Static Display | Built 1951. Mainly used on goods/vintage trains. | |
North British Locomotive Company | Coventry No.1 |
0-6-0T | Static Display | Built 1939. Previously acted as Thomas the Tank Engine on "Thomas" days. On static display after her boiler certificate expired. | |
Hudswell Clarke | No.1742 Millom |
0-4-0ST | Operational | Built 1946. Used on goods and vintage trains. Currently running in guise of Percy the Small Engine. Boiler ticket expires in 2027. | |
Aveling and Porter | No.3587 Sydenham |
0-4-0WTG | Under overhaul | Built 1895 | |
GWR 6959 Class | 6984 Owsden Hall |
4-6-0 | Under restoration | Built 1948. Transferred from the Swindon and Cricklade Railway in November 2019. Its tender is currently in use behind 6989.[15] | |
GWR 6959 Class | 6989 Wightwick Hall |
4-6-0 | Operational | Built 1948. Returned to service for the 2019 May Bank Holiday Gala. Restoration complete as of 11 December 2018. Using 6984 Owsden Hall's tender. Currently on loan to the Bluebell Railway from 2023 to 2024.[16] | |
GWR 7200 Class | 7200 | 2-8-2T | Under restoration | Built in 1934 | |
Hunslet Austerity 0-6-0ST | No.3890 NCB 66 |
0-6-0ST | Operational | Last Hunslet Austerity built in 1964. Boiler ticket expires in 2024. | |
Peckett and Sons | No.1900 | 0-4-0ST | Under overhaul | Built 1936. Britain's smallest standard-gauge steam locomotive. | |
Andrew Barclay | No.699 Swanscombe |
0-4-0ST | Under overhaul | Built 1891. The oldest surviving Barclay. Repainted in July 2013 into pseudo-Metropolitan Railway livery as Brill No. 1. | |
Bagnall | No.2469 Scott |
0-4-0ST | Static display | Built 1932. Boiler ticket expired in 2024. Mainly used on goods trains. | |
Andrew Barclay | No.1477 | 0-4-0F | Static display | Built 1916. Fireless | |
Andrew Barclay | No.2243 | 0-4-0F | Static display | Built 1948. Fireless | |
Aveling and Porter | No.807 Brill |
0-4-0TG | Static display | Built 1872. Brill Tramway No.1 | |
GWR 5700 Class | 7715 (London Transport L99) |
0-6-0PT | Static display | Built 1930. Bought by London Transport in 1963, their L.99 until 1969. Out of service from December 2011 with a cracked boiler foundation ring. | |
Hawthorn Leslie | No.3717 Swanscombe No.3 |
0-4-0ST | Static display | Built 1928 | |
Hawthorn Leslie | No.3718 Swanscombe No.4 |
0-4-0ST | Operational | Built 1928. Arrived in 2018 near the end of a major overhaul. She entered service in August 2018. Boiler ticket expires 2028. Currently located at the Northampton and Lamport Railway. | |
Hudswell Clarke | No.1334 Sir Thomas |
0-6-0T | Static display | Built 1918 | |
Hunslet | No.3782 Arthur |
0-6-0ST | Operational | Built 1953. Returned to service in 2024. Currently running in guise of Thomas the Tank Engine. | |
LNWR | 3020 Cornwall |
2-2-2 | Static Display | Built 1847. On display inside the Rewley Road visitor centre. On loan from the National Railway Museum. | |
South African Class 25NC | 3405 | 4-8-4 | Static Display | Built 1953. 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) gauge | |
Sentinel Waggon Works | No.6515 Isebrook |
4wd | Operational | Built 1945. Returned to steam in 2019 after overhaul. Boiler ticket expires in 2029. Currently located at the Cholsey and Wallingford Railway. | |
Sentinel Waggon Works | No.9366 Cynthia | 4wd | Operational | Built 1945. Returned to steam in late 2017 after a major overhaul. Boiler ticket expires in 2027. | |
Yorkshire Engine Company | No.2498 Chislet |
0-6-0ST | Static Display | Built 1951 | |
British Rail Class 04 | D2298 | 0-6-0DM | Under Restoration | Built 1960. Under restoration after suffering an engine failure at the East Lancashire Railway. | |
John Fowler | No.20067 Osram |
0-4-0DM | Static Display | ||
F.C. Hibberd "Planet" | No.3765 | 0-4-0DM | Operational | ||
F.C. Hibberd | No.2102 | 0-4-0DM | Static Display | ||
F.C. Hibberd | No.3271 Walrus |
0-4-0DM | Static Display | ||
Hunslet | K4428 Redland |
0-4-0DM | Static Display | ||
Hunslet | No.2067 | 0-4-0DM | Operational | ||
Ruston & Hornsby | No.425477 | 0-4-0DM | Operational | ||
Ruston & Hornsby | No.463153 Hilsea |
0-4-0DM | Under Overhaul | Ex-British Gas |
Original company | Number | Type | Status/Notes | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|
LCDR | 9 | 4-wheel first | Built 1880. Sold to Woolwich Arsenal in 1916. One of only two LCDR carriages to be preserved on their original underframe. Operational. | |
WCJS | 102 | 6-wheel sleeper, then inspection saloon. | LNWR design, converted to family saloon, later rebuilt as an inspection saloon in 1903. Body only. Stored on a GNoSR underframe. | |
LNWR | 112 | 12-wheel First class sleeper then cinema coach. | Built in 1907. Withdrawn in 1937 then rebuilt in 1952 to cinema coach at Liverpool Central, until 1972. Preserved 1973. Now plays Quainton Railway Society's story on weekends. | |
LNWR | 182 | 6-wheel picnic saloon. | Built in 1894. Later grounded, body is now on an ex-LMS underframe of the same length. Now restored and operational, although inside Quainton Road workshop as of 3 March 2019. | |
LNWR | 249 | 12-wheel first class diner | Built in 1901. Used for staff on royal train from 1905 to 1967, preserved that same year. Restored and operational. | |
GNR | 459 | 6-wheel third | Built in 1900. Now under restoration as of 3 March 2019. | |
Great Central Railway | 652 | Suburban Brake Third | Built in 1916. Arrived at Quainton in 1997. Restoration started while on display inside museum, doors are inside the carriage with GCR numbering and lettering. | |
MSJAR | 1076 | 6-wheel third | Built by MSLR for MSJAR in 1890. Operational, restored as an open saloon. | |
GNR | 1470 | 6-wheel brake third | Built in 1889. Operational in GNR livery. | |
GNR | 1727 | 6-Wheel Passenger Brake Van | Built in 1897 at Doncaster. Withdrawn in 1938, became a fitters' van in February 1939, then a Pooley's van in 1960s. Went from Nene Valley Railway to Quainton in April, 2003. | |
GWR | 2242 | Hawksworth Brake Corridor Third | Built in 1950 by Metro Cammell. Arrived at Quainton in January 1983 for 9466 Group. Being used for overnight volunteer accommodation. | |
BR | 5324 | Mk2 Tourist Second Open | Built in 1968 at Derby. Preserved as a body only in 1988, grounded as a QRSL office for some time; now 6989 Wightwick Hall sales coach. | |
GWR | 9001 | 12-Wheel Collett Special Saloon | Built in 1940 at Swindon. Used by Winston Churchill and Dwight Eisenhower during WWII. Went to GWR preservation sites (Tyseley and SVR) before arriving at Quainton Road in January 2002. | |
BR | 16235 | Mk1 Corridor Composite | Built in 1963 at Derby. Preserved August 1992. Now on replacement B1 bogies. Operational. | |
LNER | 22219 | Suburban Third | Built in 1926. Only one of specific coach type left. Arrived at Quainton in 1983. | |
BR | 24993 | Mk1 Corridor Second | Built in 1956. Operational, recently repainted from BR Maroon to BR Crimson and Cream. | |
BR | 25500 | Mk1 Corridor Second | Built at York in 1958. Preserved in 1983. One bogie currently missing and that end of the coach is held up. | |
BR | 35192 | Mk1 Brake Corridor Second | Built in 1958. Operational. Painted in BR Crimson and Cream | |
BR | 53190 | Mk1 Suburban brake second | Built in 1954 at Doncaster. Preserved in 1977, at the Watercress Line till 1985. Operational. |
Original company | Number | Type | Status/Notes | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|
LNWR | None, later DM279982 | 6-wheel full brake. | Built in 1891. Lasted as C&W department stores van, later abandoned at Wolverton, of which its existence was not known by BR when alerted by a QRS member, later preserved (according to Buckinghamshire Railway Centre stockbook of 1990). | |
SR | 1108 | 4-wheel PMV | Built in 1936 at Ashford Works. Preserved in 1973 by 6024 Preservation Society. Recently underwent a repaint. | |
LSWR | 5025 | 4-Wheel Luggage Van | Built in 1917 at Eastleigh. Withdrawn in 1940. Preserved in 1971, then sold to Quainton in 1983. Now restored and operational. | |
LNWR | 11388 | 6-wheel Covered Carriage Truck | Built in 1911 at Wolverton. 1 of 2 survivors. Later used as a cell truck. | |
BR | 86450 | General Utility Van | Built in 1954 by Pressed Steel. Arrived at Quainton in January 1994. Was used as an exhibition and stores vehicle, painted in BR Maroon. | |
BR | 94578 | 4-wheel Covered Carriage Trust | Built at Earlestown in 1960. Withdrawn in 1983, was to be scrapped but went to Quainton in October 1984. | |
BR | 96403 | 4-wheel Horse Box | Built in 1957 at Earlestown. Used for horses of Household Cavalry at Kensington Olympia and at Prince of Wales' Investiture at Caernarvon June 1969, preserved in 1972. Is an open display in the carriage shed. |
Original company | Number | Type | Status/Notes | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|
M&GCJR | 1 | 4-wheel Hand Crane | Built in 1914. Only M&GCJR-owned rail vehicle. Being restored.[19] The original match wagon is not usable right now[when?], so an LMS wagon underframe is in its place. | |
LMS | No. ADM 27 | 10-ton hand-operated crane | Built in 1944 by Cowans Sheldon Ltd. Withdrawn in October 1982. New match wagon underframe created from a hopper wagon. |