Guide Bridge, Fairfield, Gorton works, Ashburys, Ardwick, Manchester London Road. Woodhead Rly pt 4.

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  • Опубликовано: 18 янв 2025

Комментарии • 36

  • @haroldhorseposture9435
    @haroldhorseposture9435 Год назад +2

    At 17.55 , the building with the nasty cladding, was not Belle Vue shed , that was behind it, a bit closer to the junction at Ashburys. It was pulled down , I think , in the late '90's or early 2000's. The cladded building was , since at least the early '70's , the heavy maintenance shop for the B.R. road vehicles. I used to visit it in the mid '70's delivering and collecting vehicle wheels for tyre service, before starting on the railway at Guide bridge as a guard , ending up mdoing just over 40 years as a driver. All this is my neck o' the woods, being born and raised in spitting distance of Gorton shed. Did you spot , whilst filming on Railway street , the foundations of the birdcage footbridge that survive to this day? Always got a parental bollocking if it came out I'd been around there ! Spent much time on the pilots at Ashburys and Ardwick , in fact , that's where I was sent for a week to train meself on 350 shunts. Happy days. 'Up the Cheshire' !!

  • @Sameoldfitup
    @Sameoldfitup 3 года назад +3

    Well done 🇬🇧

  • @tomhiggins4124
    @tomhiggins4124 2 года назад +1

    Cool film !!!!! So sad to see whot was there and now ,old days anytime .

  • @bertcert991
    @bertcert991 Год назад +2

    I worked as a second man at guide bridge in the 70s a driver wanted to take his car to Dewsnap where his shift ended asked me to take the loco a shunter from Longsight to Dewsnap it was the only time in my brief career that I drove a train alone on the main line a truly unforgettable experience had I made one mistake the main line would be blocked and we would both have been sacked luckily I made it without mishap

  • @marklastname5656
    @marklastname5656 2 года назад +2

    I worked in Ashburys signal box around 88-89. I loved it. I sometimes walked across the lines towards Ashton old road to get bacon butties, and I walked through a giant railway building that was derelict, it had an huge old metal marroon BR sign that read "NO SMOKING" on the wall. I loved working in the box, I have some old photos somewhere. I wish I'd have stayed on the operations side. I then went in to work all over east Manchester RDR and GPR man. There was some grim places to get a shift, I disliked working at guide bridge, Glossop (they always gave me Rick's shift, the guy who was a tramp with a face full of blackheads), and, Marple, Romiley and Gorton stations. I often think about all the people I worked with and the paths they took.

    • @marklastname5656
      @marklastname5656 2 года назад

      Oh, at 23:20. When I worked at Ashburys that engineering plant was Rolls Royce, and they regularly test ran ships engines outside, and had them running for days on end.

    • @onemanc
      @onemanc  2 года назад

      Bet you ran into a good mate of mine, Colin butterworth, unfortunately he’s no longer with us, but he was bit of a character

    • @marklastname5656
      @marklastname5656 2 года назад

      Sorry his name doesn't ring a bell. I knew so many people, but I only remember a hand full of names. My grandad was Eric Harrison, and when I started on BR the manager I had was also called Eric Harrison, lovely guy, he always asked how my grandad was doing

  • @stevenstopford9847
    @stevenstopford9847 3 года назад +3

    Absolutely brilliant video many thanks for your hard work👍

  • @TamesideCitizen
    @TamesideCitizen 3 года назад +3

    Brilliant video. Well done. It's hard to imagine what an important junction Guide Bridge once was.

  • @pjorgensen1661
    @pjorgensen1661 3 года назад +2

    Nice video 🙂
    Thanks!!

  • @grumpyoldman47
    @grumpyoldman47 3 года назад +2

    Really makes me feel old seeing something like this
    The steam train hauled by the Stanier tank at 10:10 is probably the North Country Continental from Liverpool to Parkeston Quay; it reversed at Central and then was always hauled by an ex LMS 2-6-4T as far as Guide Bridge whenever I travelled on it in the early 1960s, where it was then swopped for an EM2
    I noticed the 323s passed through stations without stopping; whenever I travelled on an EMU out towards Glossop/Hadfield during the same period they always used the fast lines AND stopped at all stations. In 1966/7 I travelled on the Woodhead regularly between Manchester and Sheffield (and back), and I can never remember seeing a passenger train on the slow lines at all
    Ashburys Carriage & Wagon Works was nothing to do with Gorton; it was a separate company which built carriages and wagons for a multitude of railway companies; the Ffestiniog Railway still has a couple, together with a replica of a 4-wheeler originally built by Ashburys in 1868
    In about 1980, the Nottingham - Glasgow service used the line between Ashburys and Park, stopping at Victoria
    Finally, won't HS2 emerge from tunnel somewhere in the Ashburys/Ardwick area?

  • @johnhudghton3535
    @johnhudghton3535 2 года назад +1

    I'm glad I came accross this. My Dad once worked - in fact did his apprenticeship in the Iron Foundry at Peacocks in Gorton. I also had a neighbour; who I knew when I was a nipper who was an old engine driver. He worked both the Steam and the DC locos on the Woodhead line. I can still remember him telling me as to how the trains running down hill could generate power and feed it back into the system. I agree with you that it is a pity its all gone now.

  • @samueljackson683
    @samueljackson683 2 года назад +1

    Just come across your videos and they really are great, I have many more to watch by the looks of it, I am from guide bridge and the wooden bridge that went across I will remember forever as a young kid getting a train to Manchester and then off to hols somewhere.
    If my memory serves me right I think there was a really bad fire at guide bridge and what still stands was lucky to still be there that may be where the bridge went.

  • @Design2winLew
    @Design2winLew 3 года назад +2

    Fascinating video , thank you . Is good to see how things were . Was always intrigued by the woodhead route as it was totally unique , sadly never had the chance to travel on it , just a bit too young . Much like the Great Central .

  • @itsonlyme9938
    @itsonlyme9938 2 года назад +1

    You mention London road / Piccadilly station I have discovered that it was called Store Street station when it was built and the original entrance was in Store Street with a stair case leading up to the fore court above came out in front of the old station buildings
    Store Street entrance is still there. but boarded up would be very interesting to have a look inside.

  • @Platform-7a
    @Platform-7a 3 года назад +1

    another great video, how about Barnsley Junction - Wath ?

  • @rechnin6680
    @rechnin6680 2 года назад +1

    Well, at least the fox looked happy with things.

  • @jodiwilson7299
    @jodiwilson7299 Год назад +1

    Double line that curves left just outside Guide Bridge, I used to take it to Stockport on the way to Crewe. I remember it as double line. The station has been demolished 😭😭 heartbreaking

  • @seany84uk
    @seany84uk 3 года назад +4

    Its amazing how much this route has been cut back in terms of scale. So many communities. today would benefit if everything was to get re opened as it would mean less travelling in and out of the city to make connections which would in turn reduce congestion into the city stations.

  • @jammy_dodger449
    @jammy_dodger449 3 года назад +2

    Wahay the final part! Cheers for these videos, they really do brighten my day. Did the electrics run to Ashton moss as the overhead catenary can be seen along the line. I’m not sure if it was used.
    All the best!

  • @mirvids5036
    @mirvids5036 2 года назад +1

    The old overhead gantries and posts seem to be the old DC stuff reused. Is that the case ?
    I have quite a few photos of Guide Bridge when on a Railtour. If I remember rightly, you could walk to the end of the platform where your vid stops and there were locos galore there.

  • @graemehannam3950
    @graemehannam3950 3 года назад +1

    The woodhead museum at guide bridge has now bought the signal gantry from the dewsnap sidings, bought it last year I think it was last year

  • @rayrandall5680
    @rayrandall5680 2 года назад +1

    For fascinating reading,get a copy of Woodhead,the electric railway by E.M.Johnson,it`s a Foxline/Booklaw publication,also Steam over Woodhead by the same author,shows all the route in photos.

  • @barrywilliams9376
    @barrywilliams9376 3 года назад +1

    The Woodhead Museum at Guide Bridge will be in the single storey building on the Glossop platform. The big building that is on the main road is used by Northern. Also the bit under the bridge has now been transformed by the Friends of Guide Bridge Station group. Well worth a look at if you are ever a Guide Bridge.

    • @ianwarriner8193
      @ianwarriner8193 3 года назад

      Do yourself a favour and buy a copy of Gorton Tank , by DAVID GOSLING , you'll learn a lot about the tank .

  • @clivebroadhead4381
    @clivebroadhead4381 10 месяцев назад +1

    All the investment in the rail network and associated facilities were squandered in the chaotic transformation from manufacturing to the services based in London.

  • @adriankelly483
    @adriankelly483 3 года назад +1

    Did a person get killed by a train at Fairfield station years ago? On the Fallowfield line. If so would know what year would it of been.

  • @stewartbennett6837
    @stewartbennett6837 3 года назад +1

    London Road station had unusual platform notation. The Great Central

    • @stewartbennett6837
      @stewartbennett6837 3 года назад

      The Great Central, now 1,2,3 were A,B, and C. LMS were numbers.

  • @ianwarriner8193
    @ianwarriner8193 3 года назад +2

    Do yourself a favour and buy a copy of Gorton Tank , by David Gosling . 🙂

    • @onemanc
      @onemanc  3 года назад

      I will check it out thx.

  • @maedero05
    @maedero05 Год назад +1

    Predescesor 50th 60th dated, diesel and electric way forward, Dr Beeching stipped lots of commercial traffic. Very sad, modern railways will never be of any old historic value celebrating. Traveling from A to B only what counts. People, denied their past !well being

  • @MM0IMC
    @MM0IMC 3 года назад +2

    Industrial vandalism, I hate it!

  • @NeilSaunders-o5d
    @NeilSaunders-o5d 4 месяца назад

    That v so rubbish this country

    • @NeilSaunders-o5d
      @NeilSaunders-o5d 4 месяца назад

      That's Y this gone rubbish this country use be great this uk