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Paul Bigland

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Paul Bigland

Category Archives: West Yorkshire

30th January picture of the day…

30 Sunday Jan 2022

Posted by Paul Bigland in London, Musings, Photography, Picture of the day, West Yorkshire

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London, Musings, Photography, Picture of the day, West Yorkshire

Apologies for absence these past few days folks but I’ve been busy dealing with life, the universe and everything. Which includes the weather. Yesterday we were hit by a gale with the innocuous name of ‘Malik’. For a change it didn’t arrive overnight where we were simply kept awake but couldn’t see its effect until morning. This time it blew most of the day, which was ‘interesting’ as the effect the gales had on the local woodland was instructive to say the least. We managed to survive mostly unscathed from what I can ascertain so far although I really need to be able to get onto the roof for a close examination. There’s odd chunks of material that have plonked themselves on the slabs (this being Yorkshire, we have a stone roof, not slate) which makes me wonder about the cement capping on the chimneys. The biggest surprise was to see that an Azealea bush which I have planted in a tub with the whole thing weighing several kilos was blown off its sheltered position on a roof at the back of the house. That’s one thing I didn’t expect to move! The other morning I did have to take down a bird-feeder outside the bedroom window which bares to full force of the wind across the valley as it was doing a passable impression of a propeller!

In-between gales we’ve been having a quiet weekend at home. I’ve been prepping a few new blogs and cooking Dee’s been busy with similar culinary activities and enjoying her well-earned weekend. We’ve even sallied forth together to meet friends at our local pub which feels a lot less risky and far more normal now the Pandemic is receding.

Now it’s Sunday evening and we’re battening down the hatches for the next storm in the cycle. We enjoyed a long walk earlier whilst the weather was good and even nipped up to one of our favorite pubs for a quick drink and chats afterwards although we could already see the next storm-front arriving over the horizon as we approached. Having buggered off home we’re now relaxing in the warm whilst the rain beats down outside. We’ve both got a busy few days ahead so a quiet night in with a home-made seafood risotto isn’t a bad way to end the week.

With such thoughts I’ll leave you with the picture of the day, which is very different to Yorkshire. I took this shot at the Columbia Rd flower market in the spring of 1996. I was still living in London’s East End at the time and this was the market where we all went to buy our plants, carrying them back home by tube or on bikes. In those days it was still a fascinating mix of the traditional and bohemian – as this picture shows. The chap in the hat was a classic old stallholder, barking out the prices to people in a way that hadn’t changed in years.

I’ve a favour to ask…
If you enjoy reading this blog, please click on an advert or two. You don’t have to buy anything you don’t want to of course (although if you did find something that tickled your fancy that would be fab!), but the revenue from them helps to cover some of the cost of maintaining this site – and right now (because of Covid), us freelances appreciate all the help that we can get to aid us in bouncing back from lockdowns. Remember, 99% of the pictures used in my blogs can be purchased as prints from my other website –  https://paulbigland.zenfolio.com/

Thank you!

Rolling blog. Another game of Pennine ping-pong…

24 Monday Jan 2022

Posted by Paul Bigland in Film and TV, Hs2, Manchester, Photography, Rolling blogs, Travel, West Yorkshire

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Hs2, Photography, Railways, Rolling blogs, Travel, West Yorkshire

10:00.

I’m out and about both sides of the Pennines today, starting off with a trip to Leeds. Sadly, it’s hardly a vintage day weather wise but that won’t affect either assignment as neither is about sesxy landscape shots. My walk into Halifax was fun. Passing the Piece Hall where the new Marvel comics ‘Avengers’ film is being shot I noticed the film industry’s answer to this problem towering over the area. Bring your own sun!

Here’s the ‘little’ brother of the other rig…

I’ve not bumped into any of the actors but Samuel L Jackson posed for selfies with locals outside a nearby restaurant the other day. Halifax seems to be much in demand by the media at the moment as another TV series of ‘Happy Valley is being shot here at the same time.

Leaving the bright lights (literally!) of the film industry behind I’m now on a Northern train to Leeds via Bradford. Passenger loadings are pretty good and seem to be recovering from the latest Covid knock. I’ll be interested to see how Leeds looks compared to my last visit.

14:30.

Well, that was an interesting interlude! I was being coy about where I was going as I didn’t want to draw attention to the fact that I was going to turn up to the anti HS2 farce (don’t you mean ‘day of action’? Ed) in Manchester’s Piccadilly gardens which was due to kick off at 12:00. It took me a while to find it as it was tiny! Just 10 people, a child and two others dressed as a white elephant where there. They were outnumbered by members of the media who patiently waited for them to assemble their banners and elephant before they set off on a circuit of part of Piccadilly Gardens. Their shouts were led by one Karen Wildin, an XR protester from *checks notes* Lreicester! In fact, I doubt any of the were actually from the city they were trying to prevent gaining green infrastructure, regeneration and thousands of jobs. It’s always been noticeable that there’s never been a single organised stopHS2 ‘action’ group in the whole of Manchester – hence them having to draft in people from elsewhere. I’ll do a separate blog about this whole farce, which lasted less then two hours before they traipsed back to Piccadilly station before catching their trains home to whence they came. The attitude of Manchester? Meh! Meanwhile, this afternoon, the HS2 phase 2b Crewe – Manchester Hybrid bill has been deposited in Parliament. It will get its 2nd reading in February, when it will fly through the vote as the opposition to HS2 has collapsed.

Here’s a picture of their farcical demonstration.

Somehow, I don’t think MPs will be quaking in their boots. I’ve seen more people turning up to protest about parking restrictions!

19:30.

I’m now on the train back across the Pennines after an interesting and certainly varied day. After attending the farcical and futile protest I spent a bit of time editing pictures and getting other images off to a client before their deadline, then had a wander around Manchester. I have to admit, the weather wasn’t exactly what you’d want for such perambulations but hey – this is the North in January after all. I did manage to bag a few more library shots which will appear on my Zenfolio picture website soon. After that, it was time for a trip to Chinatown to pick up some more edible goodies. I love mooching around the Chinese supermarkets as I always discover something new that I have to resist the urge to buy as – more likely than not – It’ll end up sitting in a cupbord as I don’t really know what to do with it.

Right now I’m on Northern’s 18:58 from Manchester to Leeds made up of a pair of 2-car Class 195s. It’s surprisingly quiet, not that Victoria station was. That was buzzing with hundreds of young people off to a gig at the Arena (just don’t ask me who was playing as I’ve no idea!).

12th January picture of the day…

12 Wednesday Jan 2022

Posted by Paul Bigland in Musings, Picture of the day, Politics, Railways, Travel, West Yorkshire

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Musings, Photography, Picture of the day, Railways, Travel, West Yorkshire

Funny old world, isn’t it eh?

I took a break from blogging yesterday due to the fact that you never know what’s going to happen in life and Tuesday was a classic example. I’m now propelled on a course which I hadn’t mapped but could prove to be very different to the one originally charted. All will be revealed soon.

Mind you, life’s full of surprises at the moment, although the fact our Prime Minister can no longer deny the utter shit-show that’s his Premiership is less of one. We all knew he knew about the parties at number 10 during lockdown, it’s just that it’s taken so long for him to finally admit that fact – sort of, ish…

The Prime Mendaciter apart, I’m amazed at the number of people who still fall for this shyster and the rest of his chaotic Cabinet. I try not to do politics too much in these blogs (although that’s probably about to change) as the invective would flow. How this country has been laid low by the forces that sold it Brexit – and then Johnson – which people then voted for is one of those things I’ll never come to terms with. What it has done is make me feel that this is no longer the country I was quietly proud of and was happy to call home. What on earth have we become – apart from an international laughing stock? Nowadays it’s embarrassing to admit to being English.

My sense of detachment from the UK is growing, and 2022 may well see that manifest itself more as the world gradually reopens for business. Covid is looking like its burning itself out and we’re going to be living with a virus that’s endemic rather than being a pandemic. Once that’s true across the majority of countries we can begin to return to some sort of normalcy and I can make up for lost travel time.

Talking of travel, the picture of the day comes from yesterday’s jaunt to Leeds to look at the work Network Rail carried out to extend platforms and increase capacity at the station. Work that was part of the Trans-Pennine route upgrade and that the Dept of Transport dishonestly claimed was part of the universally derided IRP. But then lying is endemic in Government right now…

So, here’s one of the former Scotrail Class 170s which have been cascaded to Northern from Scotrail leaving Leeds in lovely light as it works a service to York via Harrogate.

I’ve a favour to ask…
If you enjoy reading this blog, please click on an advert or two. You don’t have to buy anything you don’t want to of course (although if you did find something that tickled your fancy that would be fab!), but the revenue from them helps to cover some of the cost of maintaining this site – and right now (because of Covid), us freelances appreciate all the help that we can get to aid us in bouncing back from lockdowns. Remember, 99% of the pictures used in my blogs can be purchased as prints from my other website –  https://paulbigland.zenfolio.com/

Thank you!

Rolling blog. More travels and travails…

07 Friday Jan 2022

Posted by Paul Bigland in Rolling blogs, Travel, West Yorkshire

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Rolling blogs, Travel, West Yorkshire

09:45.

We’re putting the finishing touches to packing before loading the car ready for Dee to drive down to Farnham. Just to make it ‘interesting’ the Gods decided to dump some snow on us overnight! Here’s the view from the house right now.

Thankfully, it’s not heavy, although the leaden skies keep teasing us with more flurries. The forecast is crap across most of the Western side of the country this weekend, including the ‘sunny’ South so I many have to be inventive with the camera as I was hoping to have a day out tomorrow. We shall see…

I’ll blog about our journey down as it happens, so feel free to pop back and see what we get up to…

11:30.

We’re on the M1 and heading South now after avoiding the M62 by cutting across country along the A637. It’s a country road that takes us from Elland to Junction 38. The roads windy and narrow but it traverses the hills South of Wakefied and affords some wonderful views of Castle Hill at Huddersfield to the South. To the North you have views as far as the power stations such as Drax. We dipped in and out of the snowline which gradually petered out the further East we got – all in glorious sunshine. En-route we passed this interesting new house. Imagine the 360 degree views this affords you!

The weather here on the M1 is awful. It’s a combination of rain and sleet. The spray’s making visibility difficult so I’m going to finish for now to give Dee (who’s doing the driving) an extra pair of eyes…

14:30.

We’re off the M1 now which is a relief. Although the traffic wasn’t too heavy the changeable weather certainly made driving challenging.

One oddity was that we discovered a humbug shortage. Neither of us are great sweet eaters – except on long car journeys when we do enjoy boiled sweets with humbugs being a favourite. Normally motorway services and petrol stations are stuffed with ’em, but not today despite us trying several outlets. Oh, the irony, England suffering from a humbug shortage in this day and age…

We’re currently cutting across country via several A roads including the A43. We had a brief pitstop at Brackley to top up with fuel and allow me to have a look at early work on building the HS2 rail line which will pass under a diverted section of the A43, building the new dual carriageway has only recently started.

The Brackley roundabout. The new A43 will come off this roundabout in the centre of the picture. The ‘old’ road behind the HGV will be closed. HS2 will cross the picture from Left to Right in a cutting a few hundred meters North.

15:30.

We’re on the last leg nowhaving left the M4 at a humongous and complex roundabout by Reading to head South on the A33.

The roads have been surprisingly quiet for a Friday. Even the A34 which is normally congested around Oxford. Even the M4 was pleasant – not a word I’d normally use to describe the Thames Valley racetrack! I’m assuming a combination of folk isolating or working from home are the culprits. But it’s been to our advantage.

Sadly, the weather’s still crap, consisting of dull skies, rain and sleet. For the benefit of my many overseas readers who may find my seeming obsession with the weather odd – I’ll explain in another chapter of this blog after we’ve arrived…

18:55.

And relax! We’re now sitting by a wood fire here in Tilford, relaxing after the journey down. The weather deteriorated after my last post, the sleet turned into proper snow just before we hit Farnham but the ground was far too wet for it to stick even if it had persisted. Instead we’re in a very soggy Surrey, which isn’t what we’re normally used to, although there’s a certain feeling of festive deja vu as this is just how it was when we were here at Christmas.

But right now the weather’s behind us as we’ve a quite night in. Dawn’s planning on cooking so soon the house will be filled with the delicious aromas of chicken Korma and Bakewell tart to compliment the whiff of wood-smoke from the fire. Me? I’ve some picture editing to do…

I mentioned earlier about why the British seem to always be talking about the weather. For me that’s partly because it can have such a major impact of my job. I’m an outdoor, not a studio photographer so I’m often at the mercy of the elements. Sure, I do indoor jobs too, but the outdoors is a huge part of my work so I’m always keeping one eye on the weather map. I also live in the Pennines which is renowned for its micro-climates. We can have glorious weather in the Calder Valley whilst it could be blowing a blizzard in the Colne valley next door.

The British Isles benefit from the warm waters of the Gulf Stream, but this – and the islands location means that our weather patterns are unpredictable to say the least – and even more so now that the climate’s changing. It’s getting warmer, and wetter. I sometimes envy countries with more stable seasons, which is why I always love travelling in tropical SE Asia where there’s not the same variations and you don’t need to pack to cope with extremes. In the UK we can have snow in Summer! I shouldn’t really complain too much as the variety we experience can make for some dramatic skies and pictures – if you happen to be in the right place at the right time. Sadly, the law of Sod means that often, the opposite happens to me! However, it does teach you patience (and a certain amount of fatalism) to be stood out in the landscape in beautiful sunshine waiting for a certain train to arrive only for the event to coincide with a large, dark cloud muscling in to block the sun at exactly the wrong moment, then to clear just as the bloody train’s passed! Not a problem I encounter in Asia. I sometime joke that in the UK we don’t have climate, we have weather. Whether it’s snowing, rainy or sunny, it’s always whether! So this is why you may notice my keenness in noting the conditions outside.

Talking of the weather (sorry!) my plans for heading out tomorrow are looking dicey as nowhere seems to escape from the band of rain that’s due to sweep across the country which is making deciding where to go rather a challenge. Scenic shots are looking like they’re going to be out of the question, so I may have to decide my plans first thing tomorrow. Maybe a day indoors beckons…

I’ve a favour to ask…
If you enjoy reading this blog, please click on an advert or two. You don’t have to buy anything you don’t want to of course (although if you did find something that tickled your fancy that would be fab!), but the revenue from them helps to cover some of the cost of maintaining this site – and right now (because of Covid), us freelances appreciate all the help that we can get to aid us in bouncing back from lockdowns. Remember, 99% of the pictures used in my blogs can be purchased as prints from my other website –  https://paulbigland.zenfolio.com/

Thank you!

4th January picture of the day…

04 Tuesday Jan 2022

Posted by Paul Bigland in Denmark, Musings, Photography, Picture of the day, Travel, West Yorkshire

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Denmark, Musings, Photography, Picture of the day, Travel, West Yorkshire

No blog from me yesterday I’m afraid. One of my new year resolutions is to reboot my exercise levels which took a dive in December. In order to do that something has to give sometime and yesterday that was blogging.

The reboot’s going well. I covered over 10 miles in 21,000 steps yesterday and hit all my targets except one as I was well below my calorie count – which will help burn off some of the Christmas excess! It’s not that I’m overweight, it’s just that I’m near the top end of the scale at which I’m comfortable with and I want to get back to where I feel happiest. After all, I’m not getting any younger and I’d prefer to be an active pensioner rather than a sedentary one!

As if to offer me encouragement the weather’s changed. We’ve lost the rain – and the mild temperatures. They’ve been replaced with colder, sunnier days. In fact, when I opened the bedroom blinds this morning I found there was snow right across the valley tops. It didn’t last long as the sun soon disposed of it, although it was amusing this evening watching cars go past that were still covered in snow. It was almost a weather vane to show how high up the valley side these people lived.

As well as my physical activity I have managed to get some work done, although I’m easing myself back into the swing of things as Dawn’s still on holiday as she’s a mountain of untaken leave to use up. As well as getting some pictures off to a couple of clients and wading through paperwork I managed to finish off scanning yet another album of old slides and begin the next in the series, which will be the final images from 1995-96 but they won’t start to arrive on my Zenfolio website until the weekend. In the queue are shots from Denmark, various points around the UK compass and India, so there should be something of interest for most people and a ready source of pictures of the day. Today’s is one of the series from Denmark.

Lynn and I used to visit Copenhagen on a regular basis as we’d met a Danish woman and her daughter out in Bali a year earlier. ‘Didi’ was a 60s ‘wild child’ who’d mellowed but still had her character. Her daughter, Amalie was a young teenager and quite a famous TV and film star in Denmark. We used to have some fantastic times when we visited them in Christianshavn in Copenhagen or they came over to stay with us in London. Sadly, neither Didi or Lynn are still with us and Amalie now has her own family and lives in Sweden, so I’ve not been back for many years. But, I still have some fabulous memories of those times. The picture I’m using is a great example of how what sounds great in one language doesn’t always translate well. This was a Chinese restaurant in Copenhagen city centre. I had to do a double-take when I saw the name…

I’ve a favour to ask…
If you enjoy reading this blog, please click on an advert or two. You don’t have to buy anything you don’t want to of course (although if you did find something that tickled your fancy that would be fab!), but the revenue from them helps to cover some of the cost of maintaining this site – and right now (because of Covid), us freelances appreciate all the help that we can get to aid us in bouncing back from lockdowns. Remember, 99% of the pictures used in my blogs can be purchased as prints from my other website –  https://paulbigland.zenfolio.com/

Thank you!

 

2nd January picture of the day…

02 Sunday Jan 2022

Posted by Paul Bigland in Musings, Photography, Picture of the day, Travel, West Yorkshire

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Musings, Photography, Picture of the day, Travel, West Yorkshire

2022 has started in a relaxed fashion here in Bigland Towers, mainly because the weather’s been so wet neither of us have ventured out since New Year’s Eve! On the plus side – it’s been unseasonably mild, which has worrying long-term implications, but as there’s nothing I can do to change that right now I may as well enjoy it.

This lack of activity (although not idleness) means there’s not much of a blog from me today. I’ve kept myself occupied by writing and tidying up my picture filing by clearing away stuff from 2021 in readiness for opening 2022’s photographic account just as soon the weather improves.

Whatever the weather I’ll be sallying forth tomorrow if for no other reason than getting some exercise and working off some of the Christmas largesse. Neither of us really over-indulged, but we certainly ate more than we would normally – and multiple courses too so I’m looking forward to cooking some simpler but no less tasty food this month and cutting back on the meat dishes.

Right, I’m off to watch a film with Dawn so here’s the picture of the day. Another of today’s tasks was to polish off editing the scanned slides I’d amassed before Christmas. The last of the shots from Indonesia in 1994-95 have been added to this gallery and the British travel pictures have been added here. Next in the queue are travel shots from Anglesey, like this view of Red Wharf Bay which was taken on the 6th May 1995…

I’ve a favour to ask…
If you enjoy reading this blog, please click on an advert or two. You don’t have to buy anything you don’t want to of course (although if you did find something that tickled your fancy that would be fab!), but the revenue from them helps to cover some of the cost of maintaining this site – and right now (because of Covid), us freelances appreciate all the help that we can get to aid us in bouncing back from lockdowns. Remember, 99% of the pictures used in my blogs can be purchased as prints from my other website –  https://paulbigland.zenfolio.com/

Thank you!

A look at the Calder valley railway.

27 Monday Dec 2021

Posted by Paul Bigland in Photography, Railways, West Yorkshire

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Photography, Railways, West Yorkshire

*I originally wrote this article for RAIL magazine, where it appeared in the summer of 2021. I’m reproducing it here with added pictures*.

I’ve always enjoyed crossing the Pennines by train but it was only when I moved to the Calder Valley in 2010 that I really began to appreciate the history of the area and the way the railways revolutionised life in the valley – and beyond. It’s a fascinating story that goes right back to the very early days of the railways and involves some of the most famous railway names. 

History

The Manchester and Leeds railway had been proposed as early as 1825 but it was the successful opening of the Liverpool and Manchester in September 1830 that spurred investors on to bring the line to fruition following a meeting in Manchester in October of the same year. The board of 29 Directors appointed George Stephenson and James Walker as joint engineers. Each proposed a route. Walker’s was shorter but required expensive civil engineering. Stephenson proposed a route that was 13 miles longer as it weaved around the course of the river Calder through West Yorkshire but it had the advantage that it linked many more towns en-route.

The first bill to build the line was presented on the 10 March 1831 but failed due to the dissolution of Parliament the next Month. Appeals to reintroduce the bill were thrown out and it another five years before the process restarted with a second bill in February 1836. By this time the finances of some supporting the scheme had improved with the payment of slavery compensation money and the bill received Royal Assent on 4 July 1836. The company was authorised to build a line from Oldham Road, Manchester to a junction with the proposed North Midland Railway at the village of Normanton, 15 miles to the south-east of Leeds. Thomas Longridge Gooch (brother of the GWRs Daniel Gooch) was appointed as Resident Engineer. Despite much opposition from the canal companies the line finally opened in three sections. Manchester to Littleborough, on July 4th, 1839, from Hebden Bridge to Normanton, on October 5th, 1840 and from Littleborough to Hebden Bridge through the Summit Tunnel on March 1st, 1841. When the line opened 10 trains a day ran in each direction with 4 on Sundays. The Sunday service was so contentious 4 of the company’s Directors resigned in protest!

The Summit tunnel was the biggest engineering challenge facing the engineers. Built on the highest section of the line work began in August 1838. Delays and problems during construction resulted in the contractors being sacked with George Stephenson taking over supervision of the work himself. It was a mammoth task as the 2885 yard long, 22 foot high tunnel was dug by hand without the aid of modern machinery. The only mechanical aids were 13 stationary steam engines which were used to haul spoil up the ventilation shafts. The final cost of the tunnel was £251,000, which was £108,000 above the original estimate. Some things never change!

On the 31st October 2014, 150144 leaves the Western entrance of the Summit tunnel with a service for Manchester.

The tunnel has withstood the ravages of time, including a terrible accident in 1984 when a train carrying a million litres of petrol derailed in the tunnel and caught fire. Thankfully, the train crew managed to make their escape without injury. The spectacular conflagration burned for days and could be seen for miles with flames shooting high into the air from the tunnel vent shafts like some ghastly blowtorch. The recovery and repair work shut the tunnel until August 1985 when the line finally reopened to traffic.

The Summit tunnel’s not the only example of substantial Victorian engineering. At Gauxholme near Todmorden there’s a skew bridge over the Rochdale canal that was designed by George Stephenson. The single 31 m (102 ft) cast iron span consists of a pair of bowed ribs with vertical hangars projected above the ribs in an ornamental Gothic arcade. The abutments are semi-octagonal castellated turrets. The whole structure looks very grand and must have been incredibly impressive in its day, projecting the power of the new railways and Lording it over the old-fashioned Rochdale canal below. In 2020 the grade 2 listed bridge underwent a £3.7m restoration which involved grit blasting back to bare metal to allow structural repairs and a full repaint to take place.

Between Sowerby Bridge and Halifax stands the 23 arches of the tall Copley viaduct which was built in 1851 as part of the line from Milner Royd Junction to Dryclough Junction that was constructed in order to allow the railway to run direct trains from Manchester to Halifax. The new line opened on the 1st January 1852. The town had been linked by rail towards the East since 1st July 1844 when the steeply graded (1/45) line from Greetland Junction opened. Originally the town was a terminus as the line onwards to Bradford didn’t open until 1st August 1850.

A pair of CAF built Class 195s cross the Copley viaduct on the 8th April 2020 with the folly the Wainhouse Tower dominating the skyline beyond.

In 1847 the Manchester and Leeds and several smaller railway companies had amalgamated to form a name that became synonymous with railways across the Industrial North – the Lancashire and Yorkshire railway. Under the ‘Lanky’ (as it was affectionately known) the railways of the Calder valley thrived, being the conduit that carried coal, cotton and wool across the land from Liverpool in the West to Hull in the East, thence to all parts of the Empire. Lines in the Calder valley continued to expand under the L&Y. On New Years day 1875 a short branch from Greetland to Stainland and Holywell Green opened. Another branch from Sowerby Bridge to Ripponden and Rishworth opened in stages between 1878 and 1881 with a plan to extend the line to Littleborough in Lancashire (knocking 5 miles of the original route via the Calder valley) although this never materialised. Coal traffic was so important to the line that new sorting sidings were opened at Mytholmroyd. As an illustration, in 1960 a freight train was booked to pass Hall Royd Jn, Todmorden (the junction for the Manchester an Burnley lines) every 17 minutes.

As well as freight the Calder valley carried Leeds/Bradford/Manchester/Liverpool expresses, boat trains from Leeds to Fleetwood for Belfast, and a network of local services, not to mention huge numbers of excursions for holiday traffic when the mills closed for the annual holidays. Motive power for the Calder valley was provided by the large locomotive depot at Sowerby Bridge. Opened in 1887, this 6 road, dead end shed serviced heavy freight locomotives or sent engines to shunt the yards at Halifax and throughout the valley and continued to do until it shut on January 4th 1964, rendered redundant by the opening of the new Healy Mills marshalling yard.

The railways importance in the valley slowly began to decline in the late 1920s due to competition from trams and motor buses and the two most recent additions to the network were the ones who suffered first. Passenger service were withdrawn from the Ripponden branch on the 8th July 1929 and from the Holywell branch on the 23rd September 1929 although both remained open for freight until 1958 and 1959 respectively. Another early casualty was the station at Copley between Sowerby Bridge and Halifax which closed on the 20th July 1931.

After WW2 the station at Eastwood near Todmorden was the first to close, shutting its doors for the last time on the 3rd December 1951. Walsden station succumbed on the 6th August 1961 whilst on the 6th June 1962 Greetland, Elland and Luddendenfoot closed to passengers. As an aside, Luddendenfoot once had an (in) famous Clerk, drunkard Branwell Bronte, brother to the famous Bronte sisters and writers. He was sacked from his post in March 1842 after an audit revealed a discrepancy in the books. Today, a blue plaque on the Jubilee Refreshment rooms at Sowerby Bridge station commemorates him. The final station in the area to close was Brighouse which saw its last train call on the 5th January 1970. The 1970-80s saw the continued decline in freight traffic as coal fell out of fashion, local goods yards closed and the cotton and woollen mills fell silent. Sowerby Bridge which was once such an important centre continued to shrink. A fire destroyed the huge station building in 1978. It was demolished in 1980 leaving a ticket office operating from what’s now the refreshment rooms. By the mid-1980s all the stations were unstaffed. Completing the decline was the withdrawal of passenger services from Halifax on the original 1844 line via Greetland Jn with the line being mothballed. Passenger services via the Copy Pit line via Burnley were almost non-existent until a merger of building societies encouraged BR to begin running a daily Preston – Bradford train. (which was the genesis of the present day hourly York – Blackpool services).

A class 150/142 combo traverse the viaduct in the centre of Todmorden on the 17th May 2015. The hills around the town provide some fantastic photographic viewpoints although this shot was taken from a footbridge over the line to Preston.

Passenger services along the Calder route were reduced to hourly Leeds-Halifax-Manchester trains. Freight had also been vastly reduced, the staple traffic being petroleum trains until a BR policy change in 1985 decreed the line was a strategic freight asset (the gradients were easier than the line via Stalybridge) so coal traffic (especially MGR services) returned. But better days were to come…

The 1990s saw a gradual build-up of services as passengers returned to the railways. Walsden station reopened on the 10th September 1990. Part of the success was down to the West Yorks Passenger Transport Executive which had been formed back in 1976 as well as privatisation – although the early days were rocky due to the Railtrack debacle and the early Northern franchise being let on a ‘no- growth’ basis. Trains became half-hourly and in 2000 services were reinstated between Halifax and Huddersfield, running hourly. This revived the station at Brighouse after a gap of 30 years with new platforms being built on the site of the old. The December 2008 timetable saw a Leeds – Southport service introduced that calls at Mirfield, Brighouse and Calder valley stations.

On 23 May 2010 a new kid on the block (Grand Central) began open access services between Bradford Interchange and London King’s Cross, calling at Halifax, Brighouse and Mirfield. Another happy event occured in May 2015 when the Todmorden curve finally re-opened after 40 years. The single track forms a triangle East of the station, allowing an hourly service to run from Manchester Victoria to Blackburn adding valuable connections and extra journey opportunities. More was to come with the introduction in May 2019 of an hourly Leeds – Chester service via Halifax and the Calder valley although this change also saw services calling at Sowerby Bridge and Mytholmroyd pruned back.

Grand Central’s 180102 crosses the viaduct into Halifax station with a service from Bradford Interchange to London on the 23rd October 2019. In the background is the factory that produces one of the towns most famous exports. Quality Street sweets!

Of course, it’s not just the quantity of services that’s improved, it’s the quality too!

Passenger traction

The line’s had two types of train that have become synonymous with the route. Due to the gradients on the Calder Valley British Rail ordered 30 three-car DMUs from the Birmingham Railway and Carriage Workshops in 1961. The driving cars were equipped with 180hp Rolls Royce engines, giving them the highest power/weight ratio of any DMU of that era. A revised design of the earlier Class 104s the units were designated Class 110 and became known as the Calder Valley units. 20 were allocated to Bradford Hammerton St and 10 to Manchester Newton Heath although in their later years they were all based at Leeds Neville Hill. The trailer cars were removed in the early 1980s, making the units even nippier. They lasted in service until 1989 but by which time they’d been displaced from Calder Valley services by seven Class 155 ‘Super Sprinters’ (155341-347) purchased by West Yorkshire Passenger Transport, who also earned the sobriquet ‘Calder Valley’ units. These are the only Class 155s that weren’t converted to Class 153 single car units and although they’re still in in service with northern they’re no longer tied to the valley.

On the 1st February 2021 on of the new 3-car units built by CAF calls at Halifax station with a service to Blackpool North. The old goods yard beyond the station’s now occupied by the ‘Eureka’ children’s museum.

In 2020 the last Pacer trains which had provided many local services since the 1980s vanished with little fanfare due to the Covid-19 pandemic. They’d hung on due to late deliveries of new and cascaded stock with the final one not being withdrawn until 27th November. Now services are operated by a mix of Class 150, 153, 156, 158 and 195 units although the 156s tend to stick to the Manchester-Todmorden-Blackburn circuit. The 3-car CAF built 195/1s have taken over Leeds – Chester and York – Blackpool services whilst 2-car Class 195/0s share work on the Leeds – Manchester Victoria route with older units. The route also hosts the oldest of the 2nd generation units in the shape of the 3-car Class 150/0s which have been transferred to Northern from W Midlands services around Birmingham. Whilst 2 car trains were the norm in the valley just a few years ago they’re now rare, most services are 3-4 car (despite the pandemic).

Superb autumn colours dominate the hills around Todmorden as a Northern Class 156 crosses the viaduct in the centre of town whilst working a service to Manchester on the 15th November 2018.

The line’s an important diversionary route for Trans-Pennine Express especially when the Colne Valley route is closed due to disruption or maintenance work on the Standedge tunnel. It’s likely TPE will be seen more often when the multi-billion pound Trans-Pennine Route Upgrade starts to affect Huddersfield station.

Freight

After a long period of decline freight services through the Calder valley are buoyant although many services are ‘as required’ or only run on certain days. The longest running freight service is the tanker train between Lindsay oil refinery on Humberside to Preston Docks. Running via the Calder and Copy Pit lines this trains been worked by Colas for several years, bringing Class 56s and 70s to the route.

66766 passes Mytholmroyd with a loaded biomass train from Liverpool docks to Drax power station on the 17th August 2020. There’s a series of footbridges at his location which allow photographers to get such shots, but bring a small ladder for many of them!

Nowadays, coal is no longer king – biomass is! In October 2017 GBRf began running trains from Liverpool Docks to Drax power station via the Calder valley using a fleet of specially built high-capacity lidded wagons. Currently up to 8-9 services a day (with less at weekends) are diagrammed through the valley using either Class 60s or 66s. The same year GBRf begun running spoil trains from Manchester Collyhurst St to Scunthorpe via the Calder. Another Manchester service run by GBRf is aggregates to Pendleton and/or Bredbury from the Arcrow quarry on the Settle-Carlisle line which was reopened to rail in 2016. DB Cargo operate a flow of waste from Knowsley (Merseyside) to Wilton (Teeside) as well as a Friday Seaforth – Tinsley empty steel. Freightliner put in an appearance with their Mondays only Leeds Hunslet – Tunstead empty bogie hoppers. As well as scheduled freight there’s a variety of Network Rail services that use the line depending on requirements plus excursions and specials and the odd steam locomotive although Covid has curtailed many of these activities for the moment.

Infrastructure improvements

The introduction of the new CAF built Class 195s to the Calder valley services in October 2019 was the culmination of a series of infrastructure improvements on the line that cost several hundred million pounds. To accommodate the new trains platforms at Walsden. Todmorden. Hebden Bridge. Mytholmroyd. Sowerby Bridge and Brighouse had to be lengthened. In October 2018 a three day blockade of the line to commission the resignalling scheme saw the last three traditional signalboxes on the route at Hebden Bridge, Milner Royd Jn and Halifax taken out of service although all three remain standing.

Other work to the route has included relaying miles of track and some linespeed improvements which (coupled with the resignalling) have knocked a few minutes off the timetable and helped service resilience. At Todmorden station bridges have been renewed and redundant structures removed. Some overbridges have been renewed and foot crossings replaced by bridges – all of which have clearence suitable for overhead wires if and when the day finally comes for the line to be electrified. In 2015 the Northern Electrification task force listed the Calder Valley (Leeds to Manchester and Preston via Bradford and Brighouse) as their highest priority for electrification that should be included in Network Rails CP6 spending plans. Sadly, the report came to nothing. Another welcome investment has been Mytholmroyd rail station receiving £3.95 million funding through the West Yorkshire-plus Transport Fund for a new 181 space car park which should help increase footfall and take traffic off the main A646 road along the valley. A similar scheme at Hebden Bridge which is due to start shortly will provide another 45 spaces.

The investment the line has seen in recent years is a welcome boost but there’s more in the pipeline. Plans are being finalised for a new station in Elland which lost its original station in 1962. The proposal is that the new one will open in December 2022 – almost exactly 60 years since the original closure. Meanwhile, there’s exciting plans for Halifax which would see the the area transformed into a bus/rail interchange. The current high level entrance would be demolished and a new split level building erected as well as improving access to the South of the station by reopening an old underpass. Reinstating a third platform is also mooted.

Community

The developments in recent years haven’t all been about bricks and mortar or track and trains. The Calder valley has a very strong community rail focus with friends groups looking after many of the stations on the line. At Mirfield and in conjunction with Grand Central and local youth groups the friends have transformed the dingy underpass outside the station with murals and lighting and revitalised the massive derelict flowerbed on the island platform (site of the old station building). The group at Brighouse have turned the station into a colourful place festooned with plants and flowers all year round. At Sowerby Bridge another group based around the Jubilee Refreshment rooms have added a garden complete with original railway features, planters on the platforms and a series of information boards relating the history of the town and its famous residents. They’re an educational way of whiling away the time whilst waiting for your train. As well as gardening the group at Mytholmroyd have been instrumental in getting the huge old four-storey station building brought back to life. After being vacant since 1985 the property has been restored by funds from Network Rail and the Railway Heritage Trust (amongst others). Covid has delayed finding new occupants but the intention is to make spaces available to community groups and businesses. It’s been a mammoth task that illustrates the tangible benefits volunteers bring to both their communities and the railways. Despite the groups being unable to carry out their normal range of activities because of the pandemic the groups are bouncing back and making up for time lost over the past year, returning the stations to the attractive places they were before anyone had heard of Covid 19.

Photography along the line.

As you can imagine, there’s some great photographic opportunities on a line hemmed in by the high hills of the Pennines but it’s not just the lineside, Hebden Bridge station is a wonderful period piece that retains its original buildings and a selection of old wooden signs and running in boards that make a great backdrop for pictures.

Nowadays it’s very difficult to recreate some of the images from the 1960s – 70s because trees have reclaimed much of the valley, but there are some wonderful spots where you can get high above the railway. Gauxholme/Walsden is an excellent location as there’s footpaths aplenty that allow unhindered views up and down the line and into Todmorden. Autumn’s a lovely time to visit as the tree cover near the line is ablaze with colour. For the adventurous who don’t mind a bit of a hike there’s plenty of opportunities to be had around Todmorden as the hills provide a great platform to watch trains cross the viaduct that bisects the centre of town, giving a historic backdrop of Victorian architecture. There’s also a road bridge next to the junction at Hall Royd where the line to Copy Pit diverges. At Mytholmroyd there’s several bridges for shots along the line. Halifax provides similar opportunities as Todmorden. A steep climb from the station will take you up to Beacon Hill where the whole of Halifax is laid out behind the station, including the magnificent Piece Hall. So, whether you like a rural, industrial or historical background for your pictures, there’s plenty of options in the Calder Valley.

Freightliner’s 66617 passes Gauxholme between Todmorden and Walsden with a train of coal for Fidlers Ferry power station. It’s a bit of a walk and climb to get this shot but the effort speaks for itself.

So, why not come and visit? There’s plenty to see, visit or photograph and local businesses will welcome you with open arms! A West Yorkshire DaySaver ticket covers lines East of Walsden and costs just £8.30.

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Rolling blog. I can see for miles…

20 Monday Dec 2021

Posted by Paul Bigland in Photography, Railways, Rolling blogs, Southport, Travel, West Yorkshire

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Photography, Railways, Rolling blogs, Southport, Travel, West Yorkshire

09:45.

I wish! The weather here in the Calder Valley’s gloomy and murky still, only with added drizzle for interest. So, I’m escaping the confines of the valley to head Westwards, mixing business and pleasure in order to drop in on a couple of family members before Christmas as the way things are going with Omicron we could well be in another lockdown in January – so who knows when I’ll get to see people again?

I’m currently on Northern’s 09:22 service from Sowerby Bridge to Chester. The train seems reasonably busy but as it’s only a two-car Class 195 instead of the normal 3-car that’s hardly surprising. There’s the usual mix of ages and reasons for travelling with ramblers rubbing shoulders with Christmas shoppers and other folk heading for a day out in the bright lights and colour of the big city, which must seem very attractive after a few days of monochrome weather here in the Pennines!

It’s grim up North…

I’ll update the blog as the day unfolds, so feel free to keep popping back…

10:20.

As expected, most passengers bailed out at Manchester Victoria, leaving a handful of us still aboard. I’ll be doing the same at Newton-Le-Willows in order to check out the rebuilt station before catching a connecting service to Liverpool Lime St.

10:45.

Flying visit to NLW complete I’m on my way to Liverpool once more. Newton station’s been massively improved with a purpose-built ticket office and staff facilities, level access to both platforms provided by lifts, a new bus interchange and a massive (and busy) car park. The original building still exists on the London-bound platforms but its shutteted and closed. The subway underneath the tracks is decorayed with a variety of artworks from local sources and lit with changing coloured lights. It’s a vast improvement on the old station where you had to climb a multitude of steps to reach the platforms. New waiting rooms have been installed at platform level too.

A copy of the commemorative tablet which is in a monument on the spot further up the line where William Huskisson was struck by a train is located by the new subway.

11:50.

Curses, foiled again! I’m currently en-route to Southport having lingered long enough in Liverpool to grab a series of shots at Lime St station before wandering across to Central.

Lime St contained a couple of shots worth grabbing. East Midlands Railway have a Class 156 on loan to Northern and the unit graced us with its presence. Meanwhile, Transport for Wales had scraped together a pair of Class 153s for their service from Chester. Nicknamed “dogboxes” many, these single-car units aren’t normally allowed out on their own anymore as most have toilets that aren’t disabity legislation compliant so have to work with a set that is.

I wonder what the Welsh is for “dogbox”?

Central station was eerily quiet. I’d have expected it to be buzzing this close to Christmas but many folk seem to be staying away. Having read the latest SAGE predictions on the way over this morning that’s probably a wise move. If it wasn’t for the fact what little moral authority this Government had has been shot to pieces I’d expect a new lockdown to be declared in January. Now, I’m not sure they dare…

Empty platforms…

My curse was due to the fact I’d hoped to have been able to get more shots of the new Merseyrail trains on test runs today but none are running. Mind you, the weather’s hardly conducive. The railways are starting to be hit hard by Covid with many staff self-isolating or off sick. This is bound to have an effect on maintaining service levels but also on training. I expect to see further delays in introducing new fleets on South-West Railway and Merseyrail next year.

Still. I’m now off for lunch with my Neice and her Husband, so not all’s bad..

15:45.

Well, that was a lovely interlude! The three of us had a lovely lunch in Birkdale, a village subsumed by Southport but a place that’s very much kept its villagy feel and become quite a little community. The area around the railway station’s a thriving place full of restaurants, cafés and independent shops, many of which nestle under Victorian canopies. When Adi had to go back to work Charlotte and I stayed for another hour chatting and swapping stories. Like me, she’s inherited the footloose gene and misses travelling. We’d arranged to meet up in Bali last year (a place we both love) but Covid put the kibosh on those plans. Who knows when we’ll be able to return?

Now I’m back in Southport proper, hoping to be able to meet up with one of my siblings…

11th December picture of the day…

11 Saturday Dec 2021

Posted by Paul Bigland in Huddersfield, Musings, Photography, Picture of the day, West Yorkshire

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Huddersfield, Musings, Photography, Picture of the day, West Yorkshire

Apologies for the lack of blogging recently. This has been due to a busy work and social calendar. Yes, social! Despite the latest tightening of the Covid rules (rules that of course only apply to us little people, not to the people who make them) we managed to have a very successful Community Rail awards, then I joined a group of old friends in London for our first Christmas gathering since 2019. Today Dawn and I joined her mum to watch her dad perform in the Honley male voice choir who were taking part in a Christmas Carol service in the gorgeous Concert Hall at Huddersfield town hall. So it’s been a very sociable time. As usual we’ve both been taking lateral flow tests between events to ensure we’ve not contracted Covid and to keep ourselves and others safe. Fingers crossed, we’re still in the clear.

There’s still a couple of events in the calendar before we finally wind-down for the festive season but this next week I’ll mostly be based at home as I wrap up various projects and prepare for the end of the year. I can’t say I’m going to be sorry to see the back of 2021. We’d all hoped it was the one that would see us escape from the Covid restrictions, but that hasn’t exactly gone to plan has it?

Anyway, I’ve still a few blogs to complete and new ones to write before the end of the year but tonight I’m going to call it a day and leave you with a picture from today, taken at the carol concert earlier.

The choir appeared with the award-winning Carlton Main Frickley Colliery Band, conducted by Steven Roberts and the young ladies of the Rastrick High School Chamber Choir, directed by Charles Rhodes. It was lovely to be back at such a wonderful location and be able to hear live music again. Something that both audience and performers had really missed. Oh, my father-in-law is 2nd from the left in the 3rd row down from the top.

I’ve a favour to ask…
If you enjoy reading this blog, please click on an advert or two. You don’t have to buy anything you don’t want to of course (although if you did find something that tickled your fancy that would be fab!), but the revenue from them helps to cover some of the cost of maintaining this site – and right now (because of Covid), us freelances appreciate all the help that we can get to aid us in bouncing back from lockdowns. Remember, 99% of the pictures used in my blogs can be purchased as prints from my other website –  https://paulbigland.zenfolio.com/

Thank you!

5th December picture of the day…

05 Sunday Dec 2021

Posted by Paul Bigland in Musings, Picture of the day, The Moorcock Inn, Travel, West Yorkshire

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Musings, Picture of the day, The Moorcock Inn, Travel, West Yorkshire

The pair of us have had a lazy Sunday here at Bigland towers. Well, if walking several miles up hill and down dale counts as ‘lazy’ so maybe I’ll rephrase that. We had a slow start to the day – as neither of us dragged our carcasses out of bed at a silly hour and when we did rise it was to relax with a coffee and a bite to eat before planning anything strenuous. Whilst Dawn sorted out various Christmassy tasks and wished her dad happy birthday (he was 87 today, but if you met him you’d never know – to say he’s ‘wearing well’ is an understatement!) I prepared cinnamon flavored porridge with fruit compote, sultanas, and toasted coconut flakes to set us up for the day.

As the weather had improved we both decided to ditch thoughts of work and get out for a walk. We’ve both been chafing at being confined to the house so much – just for different reasons. Dawn’s been full-on with work as it’s the Community Rail Awards this next week and I’ve been knocked-back by a combination of the ‘lurgi’ and my Covid booster. So today we both thought ‘bugger it’ and headed out to walk up to Norland Moor and visit one of our favourite haunts – the Moorcock Inn.

Getting there from our home involves walking down to the valley bottom before a steep climb up the other side. It’s not for the unfit or faint-hearted although the views make it more than worthwhile – and there’s a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow! Here’s what the route looks like – just under 3 miles each way which would be easy-peasy on the flat – but this ain’t flat as this image from Google maps demonstrates and walking back we took the long way home!

For once and despite the fact the weather was ideal for getting pictures I had a day off from the camera to make the day all about the pair of us – so the picture of the day shows one of the things we love about the place. The chance to sit at the bar, enjoy a drink and their fabulous smoked potatoes and home-made mayonnaise whilst chatting to staff, other regulars and watching the antics of some of the dogs that make the place their home too…

Worth walking for…

Now we’re back home and relaxing as the weekend slips away. Tomorrow I leave for London where i’ll be based for a night before heading home in time to repack and head down to Southampton for the Community Rail Awards, then return via London once more to attend a small gathering of railway folk. So, expect a few rolling blogs of very different character over the next few days! I’m looking forward to getting back on the rails to see how the latest Covid developments are affecting travel. Stay with me to find out…

I’ve a favour to ask…
If you enjoy reading this blog, please click on an advert or two. You don’t have to buy anything you don’t want to of course (although if you did find something that tickled your fancy that would be fab!), but the revenue from them helps to cover some of the cost of maintaining this site – and right now (because of Covid), us freelances appreciate all the help that we can get to aid us in bouncing back from lockdowns. Remember, 99% of the pictures used in my blogs can be purchased as prints from my other website –  https://paulbigland.zenfolio.com/

Thank you!

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