The Railway Magazine

HOMEWARD BOUND York to Huddersfield in the 1970s

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IT IS a summer evening in the early 1970s on the flat farmland west of York, next to the four-track main line from the famous railway centre out to Church Fenton, where the lines pair off towards Normanton and Leeds. A train approaches on the Up Normanton line, the 17.07 York-Hull with the booked loco working hard, a nose-first single Class 20. Next comes the sound of an English Electric Type 4, at full power on a heavy Newcastle to Liverpool, but labouring towards no more than 70mph despite the clear signals and lack of adverse gradients. It passes with a thunderous roar, its 11 coaches ambling along behind it.

I spent nearly four years of my career with this train as my commuting run back to Huddersfield – day release and evening classes excepted (also every meeting away from Eastern Region headquarters that I could find a pretext to attend).

It was probably my regular appointment with the 15.42 Newcastle-Liverpool that prompted my habit of train timing as I sought to reconcile operational events with its time-keeping. Prior to taking a job in York I had also used the train regularly from Leeds to Huddersfield when my postings around the Leeds Division permitted me and I also used it from Leeds quite often when I was subsequently dispatched to the Doncaster Division as a management trainee.

Predicament

The unexpected decision of TransPennine Express to re-introduce loco-hauled trains to the route using Class 68 diesels and new CAF Mk5 coaches prompted me to unearth an analysis of my logs that I undertook for the Railway Performance Society (RPS) magazine Milepost back in the 1990s. Since then, the RPS, thanks chiefly to the endeavours of Lee Allsopp, has developed its electronic archive.

This article uses the conclusions I drew in my 1990s work plus examples of typical

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