AndyRush wrote:As is always the way, just after posting the above, I found my 'lost' Section H WTT for Winter 1955 and found that the Highdyke - Frodingham services had been rerouted via Boston and the East Lincs line by then.
Regards
Andy
I remember the iron ore trains running on the Sleaford-Boston route in the 1960s because my parents garden almost backed on to the line. My father was friendly with a signalman from Sleaford East box and he maintained that the short uphill gradient just west of Ancaster limited the capacity of eastbound loaded trains.
If my memory is correct, they were around 27 wagons plus brake van. On one visit to Sleaford East (strictly for educational purposes
) I was shown a large number of b/w photographs of these trains at locations between Barkston East and Rauceby. I dont remember who the photographer was, but maybe he was a relief signalman from the area and photographed trains passing various signal boxes where he was working. I often wonder what happened to those photos, because shots from that area are quite rare. I hope they may still be in existence in someones loft, somewhere.
As a schoolboy I could never understand why most of the returning trains of empties were twice the length (35-36 wagons) but I rarely saw many light engine movements. I can only assume there were unbalanced workings maybe of steel southwards from Frodingham and certain locos returned on those.
O2s were the most frequent locomotives, but O1s, O4s and the occasional WD also appeared. I have no access to the WTTs so have no idea if the High Dyke trains were supplemented by others from Colwick yard, but many of the O1/O4 locos were allocated to Colwick shed. 9Fs were very rare on that route. I lost all my notes from that period so cannot say if the few 2-10-0s I did see were working iron ore trains, or occasional timber trains to/from Boston Docks.
I would estimate that in 1960/1 there would be around 12-15 loaded trains per day, but within a few years diesels took over and the train lengths increased and their frequency decreased. Brush type 2s were used initially, but type 4s appeared later in 1964
and during 1965 the iron ore trains virtually disappeared (see the AndyRush comment earlier in the thread, about the Newark curve).
Observations at Barkston Junc in 1968 show Brush type 4s handling up to 50 loaded wagons plus brake van, which is almost three times that of the O2s through Sleaford.
John