Last Days of Steam Northern Eastern
Released: Oct 20, 2015
Publisher: GARDNERS VI BOOKS AMS006
Format: Hardcover, 144 pages
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Description:
In the 1950s a magnificent array of steam locomotives still operated on the lines that criss-crossed the North and East of Britain. However, in 1955 the Modernisation Plan was issued that showed that steam traction was doomed. By 1960/61 the Beeching Report was starting to have a major effect on the steam fleet and some major and well-liked classes disappeared entirely. All the Princess Royals were withdrawn by the end of 1962 and the Duchesses were eliminated south of Crewe by 1963. All of the 440s were gone by the end of 1962 and many well before that date. Tony Butcher was fascinated by railways from a young age. His first reasonable camera was a Kodak which allowed him to take action shots in 1956. From that he graduated to a square bellows camera with a 500 shutter in 1957 and a 35mm camera in 1961. With this equipment, Tony amassed a priceless collection of images, recording the last, glorious days of steam, notably in the Northern and Eastern Regions which are the focus of this book. Chasing Society Steam specials, which were often aimed at using last in class engines, as well as traversing colliery and ore lines and routes either freight-only or about to be totally closed, Tony Butcher's black and white images portray the poetry and the power of these living machines. From 1962 his colour images add a sometimes startling depth and immediacy to his collection, especially in the very last days of British Steam from 1965-1968. Together, these classic examples from Tony Butcher's peerless picture archive, offer a nostalgic yet stunning view of the Indian summer of steam traction between 1956 and 1968, in what are some of the most fascinating Regions in Britain.
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