I have been collecting suitable 00 Gauge rolling stock for the layout for a while now. I think they'll set the scene and the era of the layout. As I am hoping to model the 1930s period, 1932 to 1939 I'll need LMS stock, a few of the the Big Four's stock and some private owner wagons.
CH Burt was a coal contractor. Based in Woodford Halse, some six miles from Blakesley, the station there was on the Great Central Railway but there was a connection to the SMJ line. I have assumed a delivery of limestone is being delivered locally. Williams was a coal merchant who was based at the SMJ Hub of Towcester. An excellent picture of this wagon appears in the British Railway Journal. The Coalite wagon was also photographed on the line. As a smokeless fuel, coalite was popular amongst householders and Williams of Towcester regularly received deliveries of it.
JG Stanton was a coal merchant based at Brackley six miles south west of Blakesley and where I was schooled. Brackley had two stations, one on the Great Central mainline, linked to the SMJ at Woodford Halse and also the on the London and North Western Railway which connected to the SMJ at Banbury. So although this is not strictly an SMJ wagon, it is certainly local. The cattle wagon is a Large LMS (Midland) one. Built from a kit, I bought this one ready made on Ebay as a bargain. Cattle wagons were common on the line, there was a huge livestock market at Banbury and Cattle docks were a feature of most SMJ stations. I have photo evidence of the GWR 5 plank wagon at Towcester and Stratford upon Avon so I am happy to run it through Blakesley.
The journal of a Model Railway. A 4mm/1foot model of the real Blakesley Station in rural Northamptonshire and the Blakesley Hall Miniature Railway. Set in the period of 1932, the railway features the unique Ro-Railer and the worlds first narrow gauge petrol locomotive, all in a small village station. The model is 4mm/1foot or 1/76 scale.
Monday, 5 March 2012
5.Blakesley Hall Miniature Railway
The Blakesley Hall Miniature Railway was constructed by Mr CW Bartholomew who was the occupant of Blakesley Hall. It was to 15 inch gauge, and originally operated an American outline 4-4-0 Steam locomotive around the grounds of the Hall. Later it was famous for having a diesel locomotive, albeit hidden under a steam outline body, as early as 1909! This makes it possibly the first diesel locomotive in the world even if it was powered by a car engine. WJ Bassett-Lowke, the famous model engineer was based in nearby Northampton is known to have been involved in this pleasure line. It was opened on high days and holidays to the public, including the Annual Flower and Produce Show.
The Bartholomews owned collieries in Wombwell in South Yorkshire and coal was delivered, at no cost, to the household via the siding at Blakesley station. As a an engineer, Bartholomew was keen make use of his line to carry the coal 1/4 mile to the house. He managed to gain access to the SMJ trackbed under the Railway bridge (Bridge 25) and built a small station next to the mainline one. He also arranged for a siding to meet the very end of the mainline railway's siding for coal deliveries.
Bartholomew bought six V tipper wagons and one flatbed bogie truck to add to the three bogie passenger carriages already in existence. 15 inch gauge tippler wagons were not common and it is believed that he bought these through mining contacts on the continent. They allowed coal to be shoveled from his own collieries' wagons to the Halls' boiler room almost directly.
The Bartholomews owned collieries in Wombwell in South Yorkshire and coal was delivered, at no cost, to the household via the siding at Blakesley station. As a an engineer, Bartholomew was keen make use of his line to carry the coal 1/4 mile to the house. He managed to gain access to the SMJ trackbed under the Railway bridge (Bridge 25) and built a small station next to the mainline one. He also arranged for a siding to meet the very end of the mainline railway's siding for coal deliveries.
My model of the platform and shelter of the Blakesley Hall Miniature Railway. |
4. Bridge 25 - Across the Railway.
Crossing the railway from the village to Blakesley Hall was an unclassified road. It crossed the SMJ Line on a hump-backed bridge. This was Bridge 25 on the SMJ. It was originally Ironstone and red-brick but there was an upgrading of the line by the LMS Railway in the 1930s. During this time, the Bridge was strengthened and the parapet walls were re-built with blue engineering brick.
This weekend, I spent an hour drawing up sketches of the bridge with a view to making a model. I mocked up the bridge in foam-core board. It was successful and so I used the mock-up as a skeleton for the model. The foamcore-board is covered in Slaters English Bond Brick and Dressed Stone embossed plasticard. Painting was with water based emulsions. Making a decent ironstone effect that actually looks like the oolitic limestone of the region was not easy.
Here is bridge 25 mocked up in place on the baseboard. It will form the scenic break at thr right hand end of the layout. You can see the standard gauge and the Blakesley Hall Miniature Railway line side by side as per the prototype.
An Ex LNWR Super D 0-8-0 passes under the Blakesley Station Bridge. |
This weekend, I spent an hour drawing up sketches of the bridge with a view to making a model. I mocked up the bridge in foam-core board. It was successful and so I used the mock-up as a skeleton for the model. The foamcore-board is covered in Slaters English Bond Brick and Dressed Stone embossed plasticard. Painting was with water based emulsions. Making a decent ironstone effect that actually looks like the oolitic limestone of the region was not easy.
The foamcore basis of the model can be clearly seen here, withe the original ironstone and blue engineering bricks replicated. |
The Bridge is looking well bedded in now. The construction of this end of the layout is nearing completion. The 15 inch gauge line is now complete. |
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