This is not so much about railways, but about an area I knew well which a railway ran through.
I was on the Rawcliffe bus with my mother, looking across the fields at a nearby metal bridge. It was a bright, sunny day, long before I started school. She would not yet have been 30.
“Is that Boothferry Bridge?” I asked.
“No, that’s the railway bridge.”
A few minutes later I asked again.
“Is that Boothferry Bridge?”
“No, that’s the railway bridge.”
I asked three or four times. A woman in the seat opposite looked at us and smiled.
The bridge carried the Goole to Selby railway line across the River Aire near Rawcliffe. It was a similar structure to Boothferry Bridge, but that is a road bridge across the River Ouse a couple of miles downstream. I had probably just learnt its name.
On 21st May, I included this evocative picture of a rather ancient train arriving at Goole around 1960. More recently, I mentioned the Flanders and Swann song “The Slow Train”, which contains the line “No one departs and no one arrives, From Selby to Goole, from St. Erth to St. Ives.”
It turns out that the train pictured is the very same Selby to Goole train. It travelled back and forth between the two towns for much of the day, and was sometimes called “the Goole and Selby Push and Pull” because it ran tender-first in one direction, so did not need to turn round. You can find pictures of the same engine and coaches at the Selby end.
That railway holds some of my earliest memories. Although I travelled on the line only once, the bridge, the railway track, and the area nearby form a backdrop to my childhood. I passed often and always looked out for them.
My one trip on the line was when, still very young, Dad took me to see the powerful East Coast Main Line locomotives that then passed through Selby. I suspect he wanted to see them more than I did.
The Goole to Selby route was a single line track, about 10 miles long. I learnt the station names: Goole, Airmyn and Rawcliffe, Drax Hales, Barlow, and Selby. I remember being fascinated as Dad explained how the drivers had to possess a token to enter each section of track, and watching the tokens being handed over by the signalmen. Tokens were like large metal keys, with sturdy wire loops so they could be handed arm to arm, with minimal risk of drops. There was only one token for each length of track, which meant that successive trains had to travel in opposite directions. I think there were two sections of track, with a changeover point half way to allow trains to pass. The driver and signalman had to swap two tokens simultaneously without stopping, giving one and receiving one, not an easy procedure. When we went, trains were still steam hauled before diesel multiple units were brought in.
The line pretty much bisected Goole and Rawcliffe by Airmyn and Rawcliffe Hill, where the road ran over the railway. It was a local landmark, the countryside being so flat. I passed at least once a week.
I liked the big lorries that came over the hill through Rawcliffe from the West to call at the nearby Woodside Café. At times, there could be 20 from all over the country parked there. Even after the M62 was built, drivers made the short detour to call in.
Mum liked to walk to the adjacent Bluebell Wood from which it took its name, to see and pick the abundant bluebells. We did not know better then. I remember going on another warm sunny day, also pre-school, past the distinctive Glews Garage, and the row of houses known as White City that were built for returning war veterans.
Airmyn and Rawcliffe station was next to the hill. For a time, Dad had a customer who lived in one of the station cottages. I liked to sit and wait for him when he took me to Grandma’s. “What a fantastic place to live,” I thought. Around the same time, my mother’s sister and her husband rented a smallholding nearby across the main road. I liked visiting there too. They had cows and chickens.
This is Airmyn and Rawcliffe station in the early 1960s. The stations were all made of wood.
Working late one Friday night in a thunderstorm in the dark, Dad arrived home very shaken. He had pulled up in his van behind a car that had stalled half way up Airmyn and Rawcliffe Hill, and was immediately hit from behind by another van that had failed to stop in time. He eventually made it home with the rear of his van smashed in, its contents ruined, and a painful back. I think it was one of the reasons he decided to retire a year or two later.
Even after the railway closed completely, Airmyn and Rawcliffe Hill remained for many years, with a tricky bend in the middle and the empty track bed running underneath. I became quite skilled at drifting round the bend in my Mini Van without slowing down. Eventually, the road was levelled, but the local landmark remained beside the new section of road, still with a tricky bend, empty track bed, and silent and unused railway bridge across the fields.
The Goole to Selby Line had only a short life; in fact, it has now been closed longer than it existed. It opened in 1910 and closed in 1964 as part of the Beeching cuts. It never attracted the expected goods traffic, and passenger numbers were low.
This football special for Selby Town supporters travelling to a match against Goole during the 1950s was an exception. Those were the days when if you needed a longer train, you just got more coaches out of the carriage sidings.
Much of the track has now been taken over by the A645 from Goole to Drax and Selby, which uses the railway bridge, and cuts about 8 miles off the previous route via Rawcliffe and Snaith. All that remains of the site of Airmyn and Rawcliffe Hill is a roundabout. The station cottages are still there, but unrecognisable. Unless you know, you would never imagine there had ever been a station there or any railway at all. Glews Garage stood prominently just off the M62 for many years, with its name on the roof in large red lettering, but has now gone, and White City is no longer white. It is good to see the Woodside Café still in business beside the wood, but few lorries stop there now, and I suspect there are no more bluebells.
I still look for all of them, though.



Some lovely memories there. We had no railway anywhere near when I was young - the only way to get anywhere was bus or car but we had to walk across the railway line after we'd got off the bus when visiting Gran in town. - It frightened me in case a train came but as the gate crossing man was in a little hut and had to open and shut the gates that was very unlikely!
ReplyDeleteThere were so many railway lines everywhere.
DeleteSweet memories. Beeching didn't do the country any favours when he shut so many railway lines.
ReplyDeleteThey thought everyone would only be in their cars.
DeleteRailway station buildings were so attractive back then, unlike most of the modern replacements these days.
ReplyDeleteFunction over form.
DeleteI was already living in the US when Beeching started slashing rail travel. But I heard a lot of mourning from UK friends as one after another the trains vanished.
ReplyDeleteShort termism.
DeleteA lot of ghosts returned to mind today. Beautiful ramble through what was. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteYes, I am afraid it is a bit of a ramble, but I enjoyed writing it.
DeleteMake no mistake...I enjoyed the ramble very much. It reminded me of one of Pat's lovely srories.
DeleteAround the world people who have any knowledge of English railways, know very well what 'closed in the 1960s' refers to, without even naming him. Nice memories to have. I wish I taken more interest in trains when I was younger.
ReplyDeleteI wish I'd taken more interest when I was older!
DeleteYou do well to remember so much from such early years of your life - I seem to have blanked a lot and only found out in adulthood that I went to kindergarten before school - and apparently hated it (which might explain blanking it from memory).
ReplyDeleteWhen you have a lot of time unable to do much, these memories become very intense.
DeleteMy brother and cousin were fascinated by trains they even ran away from boarding school and got on a train. Peter when we came home after school would head for the station in Wolverhampton (forbidden) and then walk with someone onto the train, and I would wait for him at the other end so we could arrive home together. We were found out though...
ReplyDeleteWolverhampton was an interesting station. West coast main line?
DeleteThis was a fascinating read, thank you!
ReplyDeleteIt is interesting what we find wonderful as children, and how things change as we grow up - both in our minds and in reality. I often make it a point to walk in parts of my hometown where I used to live as a child, or went to school, or where my grandparents lived etc., so as not to forget what it was like, even though all of it has changed quite a lot.
Thank you. Yes, so much is now unrecognisable.
DeleteI suspect there are no more bluebells.
ReplyDeleteI still look for all of them, though.
It's like the ending of a nostalgic poem. Your ability to recall such detailed local history is most impressive though I suspect some research was required to fill in the gaps. The name Glews Garage certainly rings a bell for me. In my childhood, Boothferry Bridge always seemed like the gateway to another world.
It was the gateway to the East Riding.
DeleteYes, I do research things.
Bluebells are quite persistent -- you might be surprised!
ReplyDeleteInteresting stories about that particular railway line, which of course is utterly unfamiliar to me. I think Britain has done an exceptional job of maintaining its rail network, at least compared to the United States, where outside of the northeast it can be impossible to find a passenger train.
It is good in the London area, but elsewhere is can be very poor.
DeleteI love train travel and sometimes feel that I missed out on the 'golden age'. A beautiful recount.
ReplyDeleteAs said above, it is a bit of a ramble, not all about trains. But, the golden age was wonderful.
Delete