Silverwood Colliery and it's extraordinary Disused Railway

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  • Опубликовано: 28 июл 2024
  • Please watch: "The Most Beautiful Closed Railway in the UK? Scarborough to Whitby Railway Episode 2"
    • The Most Beautiful Clo... -~-
    Silverwood Colliery and it's extraordinary Disused Railway
    Join me as i venture into South Yorkshire as i explore the former railway that once served Silverwood Colliery until the mid 90's.
    Our starting point in the former colliery site, before starting our trackbed walk towards Silverwood Colliery Sidings where there are some eerie reminders of this once busy railway area.
    We then follow the route North under and over bridges before saving the best until last, you'll have to wait and see.....
    Would you like to help support my Channel? Hit the link to find out how: / @trekkingexploration
    Buy me a Coffee at ko-fi.com/trekkingexploration
    PayPal at paypal.me/trekkingtowpaths?co...
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    Join me on Patreon - / trekkingandtowpaths
    #disused #railway #walk #disusedrailway
    Soundtrack by Galaxy Tones
    Additional Music by Scott Buckley - released under CC-BY 4.0.
    www.scottbuckley.com.au
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Комментарии • 160

  • @westernmonitor
    @westernmonitor Год назад +13

    Sorry to sound boring as I have said it before. Ant this type of video is my favourite as it shows me another place from my past that I visited in the 1980s. It makes me a little sad as it reminds me the days of our heavy industry is now past. Thank you so much for this wonderful record and please keep your videos coming they are fantastic.

  • @bexhil7
    @bexhil7 Год назад +3

    A good video of Silverwood Colliery and it's extraordinary Disused Railway!.❤❤🧡🧡💛💛💚💚💙💙💜💜🤎🤎🖤🖤

  • @MyMarlinman
    @MyMarlinman Год назад +8

    Really enjoyed your trip to Silverwood Colliery. I started work there as an apprentice back in 1966 . I worked there until the early seventies leaving to work for British Railways at Tinsley Marshalling Yard. Alas they are both gone now. I think it’s called progress.

  • @trooperstravelstherawmarsh4457
    @trooperstravelstherawmarsh4457 Год назад +4

    I used to as a kid climb the iron bridge climbing up the rivets.great memories and thanks for visiting

    • @philipatkinson7039
      @philipatkinson7039 Год назад +1

      Me too ✋️ pal and fishing the three corner pond's. Great times indeed pal 👍 👌.

  • @janetdods71
    @janetdods71 Год назад +4

    once again a fantastic look into an amazing history on a once vibrant industry well done

  • @michaelhollingworth1536
    @michaelhollingworth1536 Год назад +8

    Worked many a train via the junction,from where you could see the colliery tips and headstocks,but never worked any trains over the branch,so thanks for educating us with what it was like,yet again we’ll narrated,and nice to see what’s left.Just another closed line,made by reckless decisions,and now paying for it,thanks to countless governments.

  • @tunflin6805
    @tunflin6805 Год назад +5

    😀 Thanks for showing us Ant 😀 it does wonders for us (almost) housebound "oldies" to take a wander around the sort of places that we'd have played in in our misspent youth.

  • @apexqc04
    @apexqc04 Год назад +3

    Awesome archive train pictures help bring the history to life. Excellent little trek.

  • @simonballard6413
    @simonballard6413 Год назад +5

    Really liked this video - particularly the River Don bridge. Loved the piggies, too! Well done again, Ant. Keep them coming!

  • @craigy_baby
    @craigy_baby Год назад +4

    Great video Ant. Closest one to me yet! The dismantled railway at the start of the clip headed off towards Maltby and Thurcroft. I remember watching them dismantle one of the bridges over the road near Maltby with my dad in the very early 70's. They did it on a Sunday. The abutments still remain. It went close to Thurcroft & Dinnington collieries.
    Whinney Hill is still affectionately known as Whinney Hill to the older end in this area.

  • @fhwolthuis
    @fhwolthuis Год назад +5

    Very interesting, Ant. I love these explorations for old railway relics 😀❤️

  • @bobingram6912
    @bobingram6912 Год назад +7

    As usual Ant that was worth the wait. Glad you're doing the half and half map overlays they're really helpful and interesting. Some great finds, that cast concrete marker was intriguing.👍👍👍👍👍

  • @ffrancrogowski2192
    @ffrancrogowski2192 Год назад +3

    This colliery and it's associated rail connection, must have been quite a busy place in its day, Ant. Amazing to see how many concrete sleepers were left behind after the closure of the place, in 1994. I suppose that they'll just remain there. It's interesting to see the coal sector class 56 locomotives on the merry-go-round trains in the photographs, they were Toton based, but I wonder if it was Tinsley depot that provided the traincrews. The bridge with the recesses in it, I've never seen them before, and that bridge over the river Don is a spectacle. Many thanks for this video showing, a great job done.

  • @benGBRf
    @benGBRf Год назад +2

    Very interesting video Ant. Sad to see these old collieries go and even more now we are in this so called energy crisis.

  • @user-nk2ir8hk3k
    @user-nk2ir8hk3k 9 месяцев назад

    i used t0 work in the steelworks that you pass{thrybergh bar mill 1976-1979} i worked in an outside portakabin type office next to what was called z bay.i worked a three shift system and used to regularly see locos pulling up the incline towards silverwood at all times of the day i seem to recall seeing class 37's and class 20's. happy days in what we reffered to as "thrybitz"

  • @carlrushtonwillie5478
    @carlrushtonwillie5478 Год назад +4

    Great vlog. Got my tablet out and followed your walk on google maps 👍👍

  • @Daniel-yd6vi
    @Daniel-yd6vi Год назад +5

    I remember playing down there as a child before the tracks were lifted. Must have been shortly after the pit closed as I don't remember any traffic. Really cool to see how it is now. Great video!

  • @shirleylynch7529
    @shirleylynch7529 Год назад +2

    Fab explore as always. Beautiful scenery.amazing iron bridge. Always marvel at the workmanship that went into all those tunnels and bridges. Thank you for taking us there. Much appreciated.

  • @lindamccaughey6669
    @lindamccaughey6669 Год назад +2

    Wow how fantastic was that. That was a long walk, all those railway bits and pieces. Those bridges were the icing on the cake. What beautiful stonework and of course the old iron one. I so enjoyed that. Thanks for taking me along. Please stay safe and take care

  • @mrsgenehunt48
    @mrsgenehunt48 Год назад +2

    Fascinating trek, loved it. Thanks

  • @philipatkinson7039
    @philipatkinson7039 Год назад +1

    Spent many happy days playing around that bridge which everyone knows as the iron bridge. There's another one not very far from it for the steelworks and we called that the yellow bridge.

  • @brianfearn4246
    @brianfearn4246 Год назад +7

    Fabulous video, quite a lot of railway sleepers were manufactured by a firm called costain I remember when our local merseyrail line was converted from wooden to concrete sleepers around fifty years ago but the costain name is still visible... I know costain had a depot on Barlow Lane in Fazakerley Liverpool but that closed many years ago.

  • @simonbooth6662
    @simonbooth6662 8 месяцев назад

    I played on the sidings as a kid,where the line goes under Doncaster road,it was known locally as the Shittys

  • @jontownsend8090
    @jontownsend8090 Год назад +1

    Captured perfectly. A decayed former colliery line in amongst the decay of autumn.

  • @markeilo5065
    @markeilo5065 Год назад +2

    thoroughly enjoyable video ty

  • @thetingle3114
    @thetingle3114 Год назад

    Catching up with all your videos, fantastic, another couple of disused lines, from meadowhall sheffield it's now part of the TPT and goes all the way up to Tankersley Barnsley, a steady gradient all the way up thru woodland with a couple of old stations now houses and old collieries. The other is from Thurgoland going through one of the best acoustic tunnels in the UK all the way to the woodhead tunnels this is a walk and a half, this was covered by a BBC series, walking Britain's railways.

  • @keithdarley3900
    @keithdarley3900 Год назад +3

    Its pronounced locally as Thryborough, it was quite a steep incline from the pit to that iron bridge. I have worked the line when I was a secondman on the railway from Wath yard. Some loose coupled trains did actually run away in bad weather coming down the incline if the guard had not pinned enough brakes down on the wagons. The loose coupled trains used to stop on the iron bridge over the river to pin up the wagon brakes before going onto the main line.

  • @janepatricia8779
    @janepatricia8779 Год назад +1

    Another brilliant video Ant, fancy finding little pigs😀,lovely Autumn colours too.keep the videos coming 😀 xx

  • @martinmarsola6477
    @martinmarsola6477 Год назад +2

    Thank you Ant, for the well planned trip today. A great tour, and beautiful scenery. Your the best! Keep in touch. See you on the next! Cheers Ant!

  • @christinecrockford1654
    @christinecrockford1654 Год назад +1

    Aaaw another nice video from u Mr nice fit man. Xx

  • @showmanpete2805
    @showmanpete2805 Год назад +1

    great vid..there was something special about industrial britain....sadly there is nothing left

  • @Soggybudgie
    @Soggybudgie Год назад +3

    Waiting for you to explore the Dearne Valley line that separates Goldthorpe from Bolton on Dearne in places.

  • @fatladreviews3887
    @fatladreviews3887 Год назад

    Great video it's a great walk around silverwood

  • @davidw2942
    @davidw2942 7 месяцев назад

    Hi there Have recently subscribed to your channel and just wanted to say how much I have enjoyed your videos so far.
    Thank you, wonderful stuff!!
    All the best.
    David.

  • @mcmarky1985
    @mcmarky1985 Год назад +2

    As always a fantastic explore made even better by the Autumn colours!
    Superb bridge at the end was really great you could get on it and can't believe how many sleepers are still present!

  • @baxtermarrison5361
    @baxtermarrison5361 Год назад +2

    I find these videos both interesting and saddening. Whilst a railway is a tool, once the reason for its existence vanishes then so does the line, but as far as romanticising the railways it is sad to see remains rather than a still active line.
    I would be interested to see if there is anything remaining of the Brodsworth pit, on the outskirts of north-west Doncaster, and attendant railway infrastructure. My grandparents lived near by and as a child in the early 1970s remember seeing the marshaling yards in action.

  • @UsualmikeTelevision
    @UsualmikeTelevision Год назад +1

    Fantastic video, what an lovely place to explore!

  • @chrisbayly5457
    @chrisbayly5457 Год назад +1

    Great video as always, very interesting....

  • @johnmakin178
    @johnmakin178 Год назад +1

    Superb video as always Ant .Thank you.

  • @williamroche9025
    @williamroche9025 Год назад

    Just came over from Martin's page...love what I'm seeing so far.

  • @malcolmrichardson3881
    @malcolmrichardson3881 Год назад +1

    Another great walk, with the best bit coming at the end and that fine piece of railway engineering spanning the Don. Very enjoyable. Well done!

  • @anthonydefreitas6006
    @anthonydefreitas6006 Год назад +1

    Outstanding video Ant, the bridge was an excellent find 👍

  • @micklebring
    @micklebring Год назад +1

    An oft forgotten traffic flow to the lower end of the line was treated sewage waste from Meadowbank sewage works to a tip in Thrybergh beside the river.

  • @stevenstopford9847
    @stevenstopford9847 Год назад +1

    Absolutely brilliant video many thanks 👍

  • @christopherforster6555
    @christopherforster6555 Год назад +1

    Lovely video thanks.

  • @trevorbirch797
    @trevorbirch797 10 месяцев назад

    Great video and nice music Ant. Top class production

  • @xboxcrazee
    @xboxcrazee Год назад +1

    Nice work.👍. Reminds me of an old junction investigation down in cornwall I did a few years back.Plenty of old slag around suggested it hadn’t been used since steam days. Found a shovel propped against a tree. No doubt also had been there many years. Soon as I touched it it crumbled like something out of raiders of the lost arc. Habe pics somewhere..

  • @andrewnorth170
    @andrewnorth170 Год назад +1

    Hi, I still find it crazy how all these sleepers are left behind and then the big bridge at the end. Great video.

    • @TrekkingExploration
      @TrekkingExploration  Год назад

      The bridge at the end was a great finish to the walk. Thank you 🙂

    • @markwebster7128
      @markwebster7128 Год назад

      What's the exact location please.
      Did comment but no response

  • @philliphammond399
    @philliphammond399 Год назад +1

    Hi Ant, really enjoyed the video, especially that iron bridge. Nobody wants concrete sleepers, not like timber. The map overlays were a great help as well. Thank you.

  • @tomhowarth31
    @tomhowarth31 8 месяцев назад

    Thanks for this. I moved here in 2018 and walk my dog on this route a few times a week and have always wanted to know more about how it was back in the day.

  • @michaelmiller641
    @michaelmiller641 Год назад +1

    Another good'n Ant!

  • @lilchris26
    @lilchris26 Год назад +1

    Another nice video Ant, you have plenty work into these informative videos. You seem to be getting farther and farther away from home , but that bridge was worth it what a superb structure. Chris

  • @simonrichards6739
    @simonrichards6739 Год назад +1

    God I feel old now, Loadhaul 56’s! 😂

  • @damedavidfrith55
    @damedavidfrith55 Год назад +1

    Thanks very well put together and interesting 😊

  • @Richard_Barnes
    @Richard_Barnes Год назад

    "That bridge! "What a fantastic structure" indeed Ant. 😮 Brilliant stuff, thx 👍🏻

  • @suesmith4366
    @suesmith4366 Год назад

    Love this too amazing 😎

  • @andrewmaurer6267
    @andrewmaurer6267 Год назад +1

    Top man fantastic as always keep them coming very best regards

  • @Jimyjames73
    @Jimyjames73 Год назад +1

    Hiya Ant - Be careful @ 4:15 - A bridge going over nothing!!! @9:48 Interesting how they leave the sleepers but take away the track!!! Thank you for Sharing 🙂🚂🚂🚂

  • @grahamkent2868
    @grahamkent2868 Год назад +1

    Great video!

  • @regcotterill7332
    @regcotterill7332 8 месяцев назад

    Took a look at this video today (21.11.23) again after viewing it when you first released it. I lived at Maltby for 40 years until 2021 and have driven past the Silverwood pit site and over the bridges you have described in this video many times. The actual pit shaft and the pit head baths were on opposite sides of the road and have witnessed the shift change and seen the miners crossing the road from one to the other. Learned lots of new stuff even though I 've lived around here since birth. A good video and hope you keep doing what you're doing.

  • @pete.i7057
    @pete.i7057 Год назад

    Another quality presentation. Thank you for taking the time to research and document our industrial heritage and for presenting it in such an enjoyable program.

  • @johnlaw3323
    @johnlaw3323 Год назад +1

    Great vlog Ant many thanks for sharing.

  • @blw896
    @blw896 Год назад +3

    Top video Ant and just goes to show what our country run by absolute 🛎 ends over the years has ended up like this
    Derelict abandoned and totally forgot about
    Tell one day it all might hit home
    But I doubt it 👍👍🤔

  • @malcolmfoster2937
    @malcolmfoster2937 Год назад +1

    Great video as always. Keep up the good work and stay safe. 🙂

  • @iantwigg6983
    @iantwigg6983 Год назад +3

    As always Ant, great Vid and please keep the side by side, map fades etc coming as they really do allow the mind to wander into yesteryear when this once great country had some balls and did everything for the greater good.
    Love the stone bridges too - they’ve been there a 100 years and they’ll look exactly the same in a 100 more. Amazing how so many sleepers were still there too.
    Keep up the great work 👍

    • @TrekkingExploration
      @TrekkingExploration  Год назад +1

      Thank you very much Ian. The maps make a great addition and I'm pleased I tried them out a few videos ago 🙂

  • @TeriWilde
    @TeriWilde Год назад +1

    Great videos, I do like these British Industry history vids... and 10/10 for pronouncing Rov'rum correctly 👍

    • @TrekkingExploration
      @TrekkingExploration  Год назад +2

      Ha brilliant thank you. I just need to get Thrybergh correct for when I go back for something else 🙂

  • @dr.t.
    @dr.t. Год назад

    Fantastic channel 👏👏👏

  • @Carolb66
    @Carolb66 10 месяцев назад

    Hi Anthony, just a thank you for this very interesting video about Dilverwood pit, itsvlocal to me I live about 3 miles away & remember it well the rail traffic & the many buses taking the miners to work, the community thrived on this bring here. It looks totally different know with the country park & all the landscaping but like you if you look there are still traces of the pit & railway. I'm so glad I found this channel. Thank you. ❤😊

  • @SMILEVIDEOTRAINS
    @SMILEVIDEOTRAINS 3 месяца назад

    excellent presentation

  • @jamesrichards7644
    @jamesrichards7644 Год назад +1

    Thanks for that ant I know I kept asking you to in other videos just where you started your video where it was filled in bit further down enormous concrete blocks with iron still in which must have been for some sort of iron tower

  • @ExploringWithEmAndStu
    @ExploringWithEmAndStu Год назад

    Brilliant! Love a good abandoned railway explore.. thoroughly enjoyed watching 👍

  • @Boyracer2983
    @Boyracer2983 Год назад

    Amazing video, thanks for taking the time to document it. ❤❤✌✌☮☮

  • @DesigntowinLew
    @DesigntowinLew Год назад +2

    Fascinating walk Ant is just amazing the way the lines were lifted for the rails to be sold as scrap but just left the sleepers . In all your colliery visits never fails to amaze me how the pits are totally obliterated , just wiped off the face of the earth . The bridge at the end was stunning , pleased you could get on .
    Look forward to the next vid .
    One question for you or anyone reading this , why do disused railways /sidings have so many silver birch trees ?

    • @EarlX99
      @EarlX99 Год назад +2

      Silver birch trees colonise very easily, they produce a massive amounts of seeds so any disturbed land allows for the seeds to self plant and new trees grow and they are a very quick growing tree so seem to sprout up everywhere.

  • @dr.t.
    @dr.t. Год назад

    I take my dog for a walk in the woods there and there's all sorts of concrete foundations and previous structures in the woods, all very interesting but I've never seen this which i shall be walking, thank you 👏

  • @SuperCmorris
    @SuperCmorris 4 месяца назад

    Have you followed up to kilnhurst pit railway ? Love your videos, very informative, love the history of bygone eras ,

  • @HaroldRoad
    @HaroldRoad Год назад +3

    This has to be one of the best videos you have done Ant, I really enjoy all your former railway Colliery walks esp the ones that closed recently, putting the pictures in as well really gives an idea on what everything looked like when the lines were active...another thing I love is the fact you say the road names on each bridge so its easy to follow on Google maps...when are you returning to Clipstone/Mansfield Con sidings?? Been a while since your last visit, id love to see an updated video down those former lines, keep up the great work....regards, John

    • @TrekkingExploration
      @TrekkingExploration  Год назад +1

      Thanks Jon. I've been absent from railway walks most of the summer and then the autumn, blame Ladybower for that one 😂 I've done an updated version of thoresby, I'm waiting for the brambles and weeds around clipstone

    • @HaroldRoad
      @HaroldRoad Год назад

      @@TrekkingExploration I look forward to seeing any modern railway colliery walks you do...your old Thoresby video was excellent, just keep doing what you do...I'm sure one day some TV company will see what you do and commission your superb work, I got on channel 5 with Rob Bell on the former M&GN at Melton Constable, so I'm sure you will get your break soon...all the best mate

  • @jameswalker4766
    @jameswalker4766 Год назад

    Sounds like fryber. Enjoyed the video went to school just up the road from there

  • @robincurwood
    @robincurwood Год назад

    Hi Ant,I reckon that you could make a bit of money if you made a book of some of your travels, especially the railway tracks that may be easier to travel? Keep up the good work.

  • @gustavfenk4021
    @gustavfenk4021 Год назад +2

    That line didn’t just carry coal from Silverwood pit. From the 1940s to the late 1960s the “s*#t train” used to bring sludge from Blackburn Meadows sewage works in Sheffield to be dumped at Thrybergh tip.

    • @philipatkinson7039
      @philipatkinson7039 Год назад

      That's correct and we used to say we are going over the shit beds on our motorbikes 🏍.

  • @robertbush6652
    @robertbush6652 Год назад +1

    Well done Ant great vlog as usual.

  • @poo7481
    @poo7481 Год назад +1

    Get urself to Rother vally sheffield. Park at back entrance free. So much of this!

    • @TrekkingExploration
      @TrekkingExploration  Год назад

      I'm working my way down that way I've just done Arkwright to Staveley last week. Thanks very much for watching

  • @WayneHinchliffe
    @WayneHinchliffe Год назад +5

    Locally, it's pronounced Thry-Ber. I had a friend that lived just off Oldgate Lane from 1999-2001 & whenever I visited him we would play on the lines. Even as recently as 2001, the tracks between Doncaster Road & Park Lane were fully intact

  • @gardenogauge
    @gardenogauge Год назад +1

    FYI - All the steelworks are still there alongside the line and operational

  • @shingerz
    @shingerz 2 месяца назад

    Good stuff 👍

  • @markjosephbudgieridgard
    @markjosephbudgieridgard Год назад

    Wow that was amazing very interesting I always wonder why they rip the tracks up ... Just leave them and let nature take over ....

  • @stevecallachor
    @stevecallachor Год назад +1

    The concrete sleepers are much more recent than the colliery operations. Wooden sleepers , and other weird substitutes, were implemented probably in the 1970/80s.
    Stavros

  • @Spike20101000
    @Spike20101000 Год назад

    28 minutes in and the River Don bridge, the river course has clearly changed a lot. Whether naturally might be up for debate.

  • @Anthony-vm1jc
    @Anthony-vm1jc Год назад +1

    Imagine what you could build with all them sleepers in other lands every one would have houses walls n sheds for miles around 😂👍✌️

  • @b4mouse
    @b4mouse Год назад +2

    The highlight of the Class 37 going over the bridge was surpassed by the Pigs, were they wild or had they escaped?

  • @David-hi9rp
    @David-hi9rp Год назад

    Just goes to show how nature takes it back and maybe in 20 years time there will be no trace of the tracks at all

  • @keyrone77
    @keyrone77 Год назад

    It’s a silent g in thrybergh 👍🏼 also whinny hill is still ‘known as’ whinny hill it’s just part of the A road to Doncaster

  • @chrismccartney8668
    @chrismccartney8668 Год назад +32

    Odd we now buy coal from kazakstan to save the world somehow ?. Andvwe now pay a huge price for the few coal powered power station to run having decided to throw it all away, pay thru the nose costing more than we mined it for !!

    • @andywilliams949
      @andywilliams949 Год назад

      Yes it was called thatcherism.she was the communist tory leader of Britain in the 1980s and shut most of the collieries.and sold off everything british.what an awful woman she was and her government.and this government is still the same today just a bunch of t___s.

    • @barrybristow4646
      @barrybristow4646 2 месяца назад

      So true , like so in Australia.

  • @suzyqualcast6269
    @suzyqualcast6269 Год назад +1

    What was the one in Nottm, offov the A610, bigun, pub in front, Silvertown ?

  • @margaretsmallallan28
    @margaretsmallallan28 6 месяцев назад

    An excellent video, and the colours of nature are vivid with autumn foilage throughout. My only problem is the speed of the camera when turning round, to show where other interests have been. It is likely old age (me ) and I felt a bit sea-sick!

    • @TrekkingExploration
      @TrekkingExploration  6 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks for watching Margaret. Its my favourite time of the year for colours. I feel ive slowed that down since this was made

    • @margaretsmallallan28
      @margaretsmallallan28 6 месяцев назад

      @@TrekkingExploration Thankyou. I do enjoy seeing all the "retired" railways, and wonder if you'll do a few in Scotland?

  • @MrJoffster
    @MrJoffster Год назад +1

    Could those sleepers be the access for the locomotive and equipment used for lifting the rest of the tracks and sleepers from the sidings and when the sidings were all lifted they lifted the track as they left the site hence those sleepers were left behind 😉

  • @angelamccaw8656
    @angelamccaw8656 5 месяцев назад

    So very interesting. Thank you. Have you done any videos on Doncaster railways and pits please?

    • @TrekkingExploration
      @TrekkingExploration  5 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you. I've done very little in the area but it's on the horizon. I've done Conisbrough

    • @angelamccaw8656
      @angelamccaw8656 5 месяцев назад

      @@TrekkingExploration watching Conisboro now. Thank you. Scary but great😇

  • @julianlane8313
    @julianlane8313 Год назад +1

    Great vid as always Ant thank you. Thinking back to your video around Ollerton during lockdown I was wondering if you knew which other line into Ollerton apart from the Network Rail test line. When I used the Newark road going out of Ollerton I went over another railway bridge but cant find any information on it. Any ideas? Cheers Julian.

  • @dylancarter1831
    @dylancarter1831 6 месяцев назад

    I can hear the voices of our Victorian ancestor shouting at us what have we done to the infrastructure they left us, lol. Seriously, if they saw what we done, they'll be turning in their graves.

  • @colinbrooks228
    @colinbrooks228 Год назад +1

    wenth there on a charter train in 1994 see if i can find the pictures i took on the branch

    • @strobopug
      @strobopug Год назад

      Was that the Doncaster Open Day charter? I was on that and seem to remember a pair of 37s (694 & 698 I think) hauling it to Silverwood. Can't remember what was on the other end to haul it back to Doncaster though. I suspect a 56 or 58.

  • @markwebster7128
    @markwebster7128 Год назад +1

    15.31 those 2 lines.was it a r/r point at the dead end of the colliery