‘Cornwall’ Transition from Steam. RC Riley Archive Vol 6 – Compiled by Jeremy Clements

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‘Cornwall’ Transition from Steam. RC Riley Archive Vol 6

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SKU: 9781913251178
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Cornwall, individualistic in its landscapes and people, was one of Dick Riley’s favourite photographic locations. From the mid-1950s until the early 1960s, several times he made the long journey by road from south London to record operations in this most remote corner of the Great Western’s English network. In so doing he captured steam’s closing years and the arrival of the first diesel-hydraulics, in themselves a further manifestation of BR Western’s determination to retain a spirit of independence.

This album surveys familiar types of locomotive and rolling stock yet highlights how their composition and operations were uniquely fashioned to meet the particular challenges presented by the Royal Duchy.

In the years of Dick Riley’s visits, Cornwall remained remote through geography and by virtue of the River Tamar. This would change with completion of the long-awaited road crossing, which coincided with the end of steam in the west.

His collection surveys an earlier time when the railway served the community in an intensely localised sense. For the indigenous population it was an important conduit of communication, trade and personal movement. The images impart an impression of a world where railway personnel knew well not only their colleagues but also a sizeable proportion of the local population they served.

The steam population was also of localised character. It was familiarly Great Western but subtly different in its composition. Fewer classes were used and many individual locomotives were long-term residents. It seems probable that some rarely ventured as far east as Newton Abbot, and then only for attention in the old South Devon Railway’s works. The profile of shed allocations imparts a sense of simplicity and of focus on locomotives best suited to the work in hand. Hopefully, the views that follow capture the flavour of an interesting and individualistic corner of the (Great) Western Region’s empire. 112 pages softback.

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Weight 0.650 kg