It always strikes me how unobtrusive the railways where(are) compared to roads, and how little impact they have on the countryside. Thanks for another great video
That's not exactly true ask any pilot. You can follow many long gone railway lines from the air, especially where the old boundaries have been left in place. If you're not a pilot you can do this on Google maps satellite view. Railways were a scar on the landsacpe until they stopped keeping the embankments clear of trees, leading to the problems every autumn with leaves on the line.
Shockingly, many including myself are calling apon the government to reinstate the line. Not only would it drastically decrease traffic on the A149, but would also help those get to places such as Cambridge or London.
East Anglia has suffered significant economic and cultural decline over the last six decades due to the loss of a number of key lines; the Wisbech-March route being but one ( having attended Wisbech Grammar School in the 1970s, I know full well). Had the sky-rocketing billions wasted on HS2 been put into a countrywide network restoration programme, the entire country would be far better off and road traffic reduced. These characterful far reaches of East Anglia would certainly enjoy a much-needed resurrection.
@@VickersDoorter In due time, both can and should be achieved. It is equally important to reopen these lost railways as it is to build a modern High Speed Line to alleviate capacity and increase journey times between the natiions biggest cities and thus increasing service frequency to many of the smaller towns that still have stations. We shouldn't be calling for a cancellation of HS2 at this point but additional investment on top of it.
@@lordgemini2376 They can't simply be "reopened", they have to be rebuilt, and the land often has to be repurchased at modern-day prices. and there's no longer the supply of plentiful/disposable Irish slave labour to do all the spade work for next to nothing.
Having retired to Kings Lynn 4 years ago and worked on the railways for 30 years this was so informative, just like all the other videos you have done, and long may they continue.
When I stayed with my Granny in Rosebery Avenue, Gaywood, Kings Lynn, during the War, she and I used often to go by bus to Kings Lynn and get a train to Hunstan. We always called it that for that was what all the locals called it. It was the nearest Holiday town from Kings Lynn and was very popular. Sometimes we went by double-decker bus - but that was quite scary going round 'Onion Corner' - where a double-decker bus had overturned a little time before! Where the bus came in to Hunstan at the top end of the town there is what seemed to me a vertiginous drop down to the Station, the cliff top and beach. One popular past-time was digging up Cockles on the beach and shrimping in the many pools there. The tall cliffs are very colourful - pity you didn't swing your camera around to shew the stripey red and white tall cliffs! Also the beach is strewn with huge boulders broken from the cliffs, which accounted for the many pools there. It's a huge beach when the tide is out - but beware! when the tide comes in again it does so with amazing rapidity! There used to be a Pier at Hunstan and from it one could gaze across the Wash (where King Charles lost his Jewels) and see the 'Boston Stump' - the tower of the church in Boston. Long gone are the huge tangles of barbed wire from the war-time, along with the Pier and, sadly, the Railway. It should never have closed.
"...replaced with this less elegant structure." now theres an understatement lol. Excellent stuff yet again. Many thanks. That was just the ticket after a very long day at work. Excellent music also, although I must admit I do prefer the Wendy Carlos version.
Having spent a lot of my childhood at my Grandparents house, Crossing Keepers house at Wolferton. I have great memories of the railway. My Grandfather worked the signalbox at Wolferton as it closed. Thank you for the wonderful film, which i'm sure I shall come back to frequently.
Having known someone who retired to Heacham, and being a lifelong steam railway enthusiast, I have spent many happy days exploring the stations and sights of the Kings Lynn to Hunstanton railway back in the late 1980's and early 90's. Your film is a lovely reminder of those days - thank you ever so much!
Great video of a lost and well loved line. My family moved to Heacham from London in 1963 and I regularly used the railway to Lynn and Huns'ton. In the summer there were some steam trains with 12 carriages, full of holidaymakers coming to the caravan parks in Heacham. Every two weeks they would go home and a new influx would arrive. Diesel traction soon took over and in the winter months DMU's took me to and from college in King's Lynn. From our house I could see the train coming from Sunny Hunny and would sprint to the station to catch it just in time. The steam trains were just magical. It was a tragedy when we lost this railway. Old Norfolk people tend to ignore the middle consonant of a place name thus Huns'ton, Snett'sam, Ingle'sthorpe and Ders'nam. However, conversely, they will call someone by their middle name rather than their first. I still don't quite understand this nor why this beautiful line was closed in 1969.
One of the goods bays including a wooden buffer stop still remains at Hunstanton as does the old refreshment and waiting room which is now a pub. There is also a small museum and piece of track and a signal have been erected with info boards.
So good! As someone that has lived in the Lynn area for many many years I'm glad that you found remnants (like those nice fence posts) that even I have never seen. Keep up your fantastic work!
Abit of a sad one. Puts me in mind of the Mumbles railway. Thankfully it's overshadowed by how well done you're videos are. I very much like how elegantly you narrate them. I look forward to more. Also I wouldn't worry to much about how locals call a place vs how emmits do it. There's never a right answer. Haha
You can help me ever so much by giving the film a *like* by hitting *subscribe* and by *sharing* it widely. Might you consider supporting my channel even more? www.buymeacoffee.com/rediscovering *HunSTAN* vs *HunSTANton* - Like many, I always thought it was Hun-STAN-ton and I know that this pronunciation is, today, most common. According to this website, the town is also 'known locally as "Hunston"' (www.visitwestnorfolk.com/plac... - moreover, this is how John Betjeman pronounces it in his marvellous film concerning this line, which you should watch as it inspired me (tinyurl.com/ybry2pff). So there we are. May I suggest we lighten up and move on? After all, this channel is happy to share the sentiment of Hunstanton's motto: "Alios delectare juvat"
I've never heard Hunstanton be called Hun'ston before. I've known many people from there and have always heard it called Hun-stan-ton for decades, as well as on the local news and radio.
Thanks for posting. The locals always pronounce Norfolk place names in that way, but in this case it had never occurred to me. Such a shame to see so much of the old line gone, but a lovely video. Have a great Christmas yourself.
What a superb video! Thanks so much for making it with such loving care and thorough research. It meant a lot to me as I occasionally travelled with my mother on that line in the 1940s, when visiting my father - a soldier in World War II, who was among those guarding the coast near Hunstanton.
Another lovely piece of work - much as we now expect - and nice to hear the music of Purcell making a solemn and regal appearance. Most suitable for a defunct railway!
first time hearing the use of chains as a measurement before.... i guess you learn something new every day.... still one hell of a great vid to watch and i look forward to more
@@RediscoveringLostRailways 22 yards or roughly 20 meters. It is the length of a cricket pitch and is still used on the UK railways as a unit of measure
Network Rail still uses chains as a unit of measurement. Take a look at any railway bridge and you’ll see a plate attached to it stating the distance to the line’s terminus as ‘32 M 23 Ch’ for example.
Great memories. I recall around1950 attending a one week Boy Scout Jamboree at the Sandringham estate. We boarded our train at great Chesterford with much stuff going into the guards van and then heading off for kings Lynn.. and then on to Sandringham station where a large contingent of boy scouts disembarked along with many tents, tent poles, pots and pans. etc. Once we had been organised into some semblance of a scout troop, we then proceeded to march to Sandringham, no doubt singing all the way. The weather in July was just perfect. Great Vlog.
Great vid - THANKS. Wolferton station is a delight to visit. You can drop in and walk around (sensitively, private residences). Get chatting with the guy who looks after it, and he’ll show you his workshop (amazing!) and scrap books (showing photos of numerous Victorian and Edwardian royalty being met at the station and escorted by mounted cavalry up the road to Sandringham.
A well researched and presented video, thank you. On 8th September 2022, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth 2nd passed away peacefully at her private residence Balmoral, Aberdeenshire. She was 96 & had reigned for 70 years, the longest of any British monarch. Rest In Peace your Majesty, reunited with Philip & forever in our thoughts. Thank you Ma'am ...thank you for everything.
We used to go to Hunstanton on holiday when I was vert young and I remember the wonderful hotel at the end of the line. It was horrible to visit later and see that hideous building that replaced it.
It's lovely seeing Wolferton! My Great-Grandad Barrett used to walk the line and roll out the red carpet for the royals, my Great Uncle used to Chauffeur them too. I remember going to see Mr Skillings in the station masters house in the 70's after the line had been shut.
I went to Hunstanton, by train, in the summer of 1953 and stayed on a caravan site near the Gasworks and had to cross the line via a Level Crossing in order to reach the sea. However my biggest lasting memory of that holiday was seeing railway carriages lying on there sides in some windings just before the station as a result of the nude East Cost floods earlier that year.
My grandad took me to Wolferton on our way up to Blakney on Boxing day 2018. I seem to remember a sign saying "Private Residence, No Entry", am i mistaken? Or has it since become a museum? Wikipedia seems to indicate that it was once a museum, but became a private building after the owner died and his son no-longer wished to continue the failing business. It was a really nice lasting relic of what once was, sitting at the edge of the fields in the shadow of the woods, a stones-throw away from Sandringham.
This was a trip down memory lane. Two days shy of my 9th birthday along with about 250 others I traveled on the last scheduled passenger train from Hunstanton to Kings Lynn with my grandad. I’ve still got the ticket and press cutting from the Lynn News and Advertiser with an article and photo of the event.
Your video popped up as a suggestion on my home page this morning and I couldn’t resist having a look. What a delightful way to start the day! Wonderful pictures and superb commentary. Have subscribed and look forward to seeing your other videos. Fantastic research. Always read the comments when I watch any videos, just a shame others don’t before they have to add their own. Happy Christmas and a better 2021 to you.
I'm so glad that you have found my channel and thank you so much for your kind words and subscription. Please have a rummage through my films and let me know what you think. Agreed RE: people's comments - they see these as opportunities to broadcast rather than converse. Thank you again!
You do a super job with these. Excellent research. Narrative is interesting. Pulling the past together with the present. As a third generation Canadian Railroader I find the parallels in railway history between the UK and Canada fascinating.
Thankyou for this video. I remember as a boy in the 1960's going through Kings Lynn from Wisbech Station and then to Hunstanton. I also remember as a Boy Scout, camping at Wolverton. My parents had a holiday caravan based at the Snettisham Caravan Park. Many of my happiest days were spent in this whole area.This video brought me to tears. Thankyou so much for making it available. Oh, by the way, I have never heard Hunstanton, spoken as Hunston.
The pronunciation was news to me too (see my pinned comment). Really glad you enjoyed the film and that it stirred some remarkable memories. A number of people on here have commented with regards to the scout meetings at Wolferton, so I imagine some of your contemporaries have seen this film also! Thanks again for your kind words.
Thank you for your reply I hope to see a video on the branch in the future. Passenger services ceased in 1951, but goods continued until 1966 and the branch was I believe used for some film and tv work.
Good to see this much-lamented line join the rolling stock of your definitive videos. A shame relatively little remains of it, aside from the gems like Wolferton. Some good natural habitat in former cuttings etc though, as at 11:33. A little silver lining, at least!
Yet another polished film. Thank you. I've watched the excellent 'John Betjemen Takes the Train' many times and have explored much of this line whist staying at Heacham station old waiting room! Indeed, how sad to see Hunstanton as it now is.
Thank you for a wonderful production. I was born in Kings Lynn and my brother and I have often talked about the old railway to Sunny Hunny though I never got chance to travel on the line. All the best.
I historically accurate and informative video on this lost railway. I did watch an older video on this line that was done back in 2007 when the signal box at North Wootton was still in it's original place. It was located on the other side of the road and the land of a local scout group.
what a superb film sad as the line would save us being stuck in tailbacks on a visit to the seaside in the summer and would im sure have a been a viable concern as the poopy line is from Holt to Sheringham now
Excellent and very interesting film. I was born in Lynn and lived in Heacham until I was 10. I have memories of walking along the former railway lines, which could be accessed by the playing field. My nan used to live on Station Road in a strange wooden house, which was partly comprised of a couple of old railway carriages. I remember being thoroughly confused by this as a child 😂! The way in which Hunstanton and Snettisham were pronounced made me smile, as that's how my dad does it, albeit in a slightly ironic way as it's relatively rare now. I hope you do a film on the branch from Heacham to Wells. I went to school in Wells and the cross-country course started at the old cutting in the grounds of the school.
Oh it breaks my heart to see this line closed…shame it was never saved for a tourist line as they did in Paignton Dartmouth line..it would make a wonderful attraction….gone but not forgotten.thank you
I'm so glad you enjoyed the film, vthough I would submit that John Betjemen's film (see the pinned comment) is the superior product! Do subscribe if you've not already done so and enjoy my other films in the series.
Well done your pronunciation of local villages is perfect. Did you live in the region? I recall as a small child rushing up the bank at Heacham to see the steam train en route to Hunstanton. My family had strong links to Snettisham until the 1980s . Thanks for the enjoyable memories!
Thank you! I've come in for a lot of flak for the pronunciation, but I took my cue from John Betjemen whose film about this line inspired me. Really glad it stirred some happy memories!
Very enjoyable, if a little sad at the end. Good to see the railway and station buildings still standing with their heritage still intact. Your comment at Hunstanton about the hotel being ""replaced with this less elegant structure" is a masterclass in understatement!
You should! Though as the video says, huge portions of it are on private land, so one can only walk portions of it at a time, but there is still much to see and enjoy.
If you ever get to journey north, there's an old railway that went from Aberdeen up the Dee valley. When i lived near Banchory i used to walk the old track bed through the woods to go to the town's centre. This is over 20 years ago, and by that time already several houses had been build on part of the track closer to the town. I have no idea how much of it still remains. The royal family used to travel the railway on the way to Balmoral. It's a shame so many railways got taken out when no one could forsee their demand returning in these times.
Thank you. Travelled the line once (in each direction) in the early 1960s on the way to and from Scout Camp at Thornham. Steam hauled from Liverpool Street to Kings Lynn and DMU to 'Sunny Hunny.' Those were the days!
A well-researched and enjoyable video of one of the most sad losses to the British railway scene. This line should never have closed. Alas I was only 3 years old when it closed, and my parents never took me on it.
@@RediscoveringLostRailways I have heard wild pipe dreams of this line reopening, but I think the improved A149 road is on part of the old trackbed. It would have made sense with the road traffic, as you say, to keep the line, especially in the holiday periods, and for royal train traffic. Even if it was worked as a heritage line with volunteer staff. Sadly back then, they never had a PSO (Public Service Obligation) Grant for rural routes to stay open on hardship / environmental grounds. Plus Beeching, Marples, Barbara Castle etc. never counted the fares TO the branch lines they closed, just the fares generated ON the branch itself. If counting all the tickets sold from say, London, hardly any railway would have shut, even on economic grounds. But the objective was to close lines, and BR obeyed their political masters, who held the purse strings. I think of those that died during construction of these abandoned railways, the lives ruined by loss of employment and loss of public transport. Only 50 years later, when our roads are total gridlock, do people have regrets. Well done for highlighting what we are missing.
Beautiful railway architecture - and no trains. Same old story. Once again, thank you so much for your hard work - and hard slog in walking the line. I live in Toronto and so I can not see myself visiting this line...
Not from the area, but that's how John Betjemen pronounces them in his film of this line... And that's good enough for me! Many thanks for your comment and kind words about my film.
I walked the path beside the old track bed from Dersingham to Snettisham and was amazed at the pains the builders took to maintain the old station at Dersingham. Not so in Snettisham where not much of the old station remains. Except for the granary where I had a well earned cuppa. Apparently they had to move the signal from the line to behind the granary so it shouldn't "spoil" someone's back yard. Now if I had a signal in my garden... Many thanks for a great vid!
Having just found your channel from the Southwold line video I was intrigued to see this one covering another of my favourite destinations. I'm usually at Hunstanton for two long weekends every year and never realised that the railway actually ran through where the holiday park we stay at is nowadays. In fact, looking at the area on Google maps it's not much more than a stone's throw from where the station would have been. Must take a little diversion next time that I drive up there to have a look at Wolferton station. Thanks for another excellent video, subscribed.
Having watched this excellent video my finger hovered over the subscribe button not sure whether to press or not. This was no reflection on the video, rather that the video left me so sad, sad at the waste and short sightedness of previous generations in destroying this line and I knew that by watching more of your videos I would experience the same. Anyway I pressed it because this was quite the best one on the subject that I have seen so thank you and I look forward to viewing the rest. Happy new year.
I'm really glad you decided to join - thank you. Yes, some of these films can be rather sombre, but I hope that isn't always a deterrent! once again, many thanks.
Brilliant video again. Thoroughly enjoyed it. Really well filmed and narrated👍 I live on the site of a former railway. Actually its 4 railways... A complex interwoven mass of lines.. Hardly any of it remains now. Blows my mind each time I compare the old OS maps against today.. Such a waste.
@@RediscoveringLostRailways Springs branch area nr Wigan. The area was once a busy, concentrated mix of lines, mainly serving coal mining, iron works, cotton mills etc.. Wigan also once had 3 stations in the town centre. As I live in the area I've found it really interesting trying to locate the old routes on the ground, comparing todays images to how it used to look.
Thank you for this excellent video. One of my first memories as a child is taking the train to Hunstanton to go on a summer holiday with my parents. For one reason or another, and despite an interest in British Railways I’d never read much about the line. Your video helped me a great deal.
Another enjoyable production thank you. Have you ever considered producing a video on the Hertford and Welwyn Junction Railway opened in 1858? Just a suggestion.
This popped into my recommended file, for whatever reason I don't know. I'm glad it did; it was informative, interesting, albeit a little sad -- that line SHOULD be recreated. Others have stated that it would alleviate traffic congestion, and also for its history as the "shortcut" to Sandringham. Kudos to all involved from Illinois, USA.
I'm so glad you enjoyed my film and thank you for your comments and thoughtful remarks. Always happy to hear from an American cousin! Do consider subscribing and enjoy my other films in the series 🙂
Thanks - I must book a stay at the holiday home in Heacham now you've given them a free plug! I try to visit East Anglia once a year to visit my cousins in Lowestoft, only missing this year due to lock-down, and am always looking for somewhere new to stay en route. By the way, in Hunstanton there's a small café on a corner, and if you want a cake with your coffee, you go to the bakers' shop next door and order your cake. It is then placed on a plate and passed through a mysterious hatch into the café! I love these little quirks of life.
Thank you again RLR; a lovely way to round off xmas day (well, actually boxing day as it's almost 3.30am!) Really appreciate the quality photography, editing, soundtrack and your commitment to local history by way of our (once) extensive railway network. Looking forward to more :-)
I always have a hobby alternate history projects involving trouist railroads made out of abandoned railroads here in the US. Your videos inspired me to do likewise with British routes, and the one in this video is one I can definitely envision as a successful heritage railway.
Another wonderful video. So relaxing to watch, and so sad that so much of the railways have gone. Im glad some of the buildings survived on this line but the ending where its just a car park, how depressing. Holiday makers parking up will have no idea of the history beneath their feet.
I have come across this video for the first time. I found it absolutely wonderful especially with a nice narration. We are a modern country but by golly we should have kept some of those classic Victorian buildings. Car parks, caravan parks and what have you. Ruined by government and councils. I look forward to more of your videos. Thank you.
I'm so glad you enjoyed the film and very kind of you to say such nice things about it. I agree with your sentiments regarding the lost architecture etc. Do subscribe if you've not already done so and enjoy my other films in the series!
@@RediscoveringLostRailways Actually, I had stayed in King's Lynn in Sep 1980 - August 1982; for my A levels at NORCAT but nowadays its called College of West Anglia so used to travel to London Liverpool Street from Kings Lynn. That time the train service is called British Rail. Among other stations I had went to include Sheffield, Edinburgh Waverly Station and Glasgow. Stations which i had remembered i passed through not went to were Ely, Downham Market, Cambridge, Doncaster, York, Newcastle. It was a great experience for me. Down memory lane.
One of the best documentaries of this forgotten line. How sad it was closed. Summer traffic would be so much easier if it was still there. Great work and look forward to your next work. I think the fog actually helped to provide a suitable back drop. Merry Christmas. Steve
That's so very kind of you to say so. Agreed, summer traffic would be taken off the roads to a great extent, but I wonder if the railway would pay for itself during the rest of the year? Thank you so much again.
Your videos get better and better, thank you for taking the time and the care - it really does make a difference. Add to that the great subject matter. I'm looking forward to watching many again through the Christmas break.
Please let me your thoughts on each one - my earlier films featured music only with text on screen, the move to narration was more recent - keep in touch and Merry Christmas!
@@RediscoveringLostRailways Happy to! I think both your music only videos and the more recent (and more in depth) productions are eminently watchable. My impatience means I often watch your (and others) videos as soon as they become available and often have to do so with the sound off, using only subtitles - so both formats of video work the same. I would say, though, that your narrated videos - with the sound on - do work very well. At the risk of sounding patronising, your script and voice are well matched to the content and sound as good as they look!
It always strikes me how unobtrusive the railways where(are) compared to roads, and how little impact they have on the countryside. Thanks for another great video
I totally agree - railways always seem like part of the landscape, whereas roads feel like a blight on it!
That's not exactly true ask any pilot. You can follow many long gone railway lines from the air, especially where the old boundaries have been left in place. If you're not a pilot you can do this on Google maps satellite view.
Railways were a scar on the landsacpe until they stopped keeping the embankments clear of trees, leading to the problems every autumn with leaves on the line.
13:44 “Today there is nothing”
the narration is always great on these videos but that one really hit home
I must admit I was quite deliberate in trying to convey the railway's desolation in Hunstanton!
This railway needs to be reinstated now
Shockingly, many including myself are calling apon the government to reinstate the line. Not only would it drastically decrease traffic on the A149, but would also help those get to places such as Cambridge or London.
I've heard of this worthy campaign - best of luck to you!
East Anglia has suffered significant economic and cultural decline over the last six decades due to the loss of a number of key lines; the Wisbech-March route being but one ( having attended Wisbech Grammar School in the 1970s, I know full well). Had the sky-rocketing billions wasted on HS2 been put into a countrywide network restoration programme, the entire country would be far better off and road traffic reduced. These characterful far reaches of East Anglia would certainly enjoy a much-needed resurrection.
@@VickersDoorter In due time, both can and should be achieved. It is equally important to reopen these lost railways as it is to build a modern High Speed Line to alleviate capacity and increase journey times between the natiions biggest cities and thus increasing service frequency to many of the smaller towns that still have stations. We shouldn't be calling for a cancellation of HS2 at this point but additional investment on top of it.
@@lordgemini2376 They can't simply be "reopened", they have to be rebuilt, and the land often has to be repurchased at modern-day prices. and there's no longer the supply of plentiful/disposable Irish slave labour to do all the spade work for next to nothing.
Great to learn about the Kings lynn to Hunstanton railway line. But its a pity the narrator kept on saying Hunstan line instead of Hunstanton
Glad you enjoyed the film, could I urge you to read the pinned comment RE: pronunciation, which explains things
Having retired to Kings Lynn 4 years ago and worked on the railways for 30 years this was so informative, just like all the other videos you have done, and long may they continue.
Always happy to get the approval of a former railway man, thank you ever so much!
I enjoyed this a lot. The drab car park in Hunstanton that replaced a busy station and an attractive hotel was sad to see.
Really glad you liked the film - and yes, it is a dispiriting sight to see the situation today!
When I stayed with my Granny in Rosebery Avenue, Gaywood, Kings Lynn, during the War, she and I used often to go by bus to Kings Lynn and get a train to Hunstan. We always called it that for that was what all the locals called it. It was the nearest Holiday town from Kings Lynn and was very popular. Sometimes we went by double-decker bus - but that was quite scary going round 'Onion Corner' - where a double-decker bus had overturned a little time before! Where the bus came in to Hunstan at the top end of the town there is what seemed to me a vertiginous drop down to the Station, the cliff top and beach. One popular past-time was digging up Cockles on the beach and shrimping in the many pools there. The tall cliffs are very colourful - pity you didn't swing your camera around to shew the stripey red and white tall cliffs! Also the beach is strewn with huge boulders broken from the cliffs, which accounted for the many pools there. It's a huge beach when the tide is out - but beware! when the tide comes in again it does so with amazing rapidity! There used to be a Pier at Hunstan and from it one could gaze across the Wash (where King Charles lost his Jewels) and see the 'Boston Stump' - the tower of the church in Boston. Long gone are the huge tangles of barbed wire from the war-time, along with the Pier and, sadly, the Railway. It should never have closed.
Thank you for your remarks which brought the past back to life in a way my films never can.
I believe you mean King John, not Charles.
"...replaced with this less elegant structure." now theres an understatement lol. Excellent stuff yet again. Many thanks. That was just the ticket after a very long day at work. Excellent music also, although I must admit I do prefer the Wendy Carlos version.
Glad you enjoyed it - I had her version in mind and lines from A Clockwork Orange throughout the making of this one! So glad you enjoyed the film.
Love you've used the local pronunciation and missed the tan out of Hunstanton
Happy memories of my childhood of day trips from Cambridge
Thank you - yes this was how John Betjemen pronounced it and that was good enough for me!
Having spent a lot of my childhood at my Grandparents house, Crossing Keepers house at Wolferton. I have great memories of the railway. My Grandfather worked the signalbox at Wolferton as it closed. Thank you for the wonderful film, which i'm sure I shall come back to frequently.
I'm so pleased that you enjoyed the film and that it stirred those wonderful memories!
Having known someone who retired to Heacham, and being a lifelong steam railway enthusiast, I have spent many happy days exploring the stations and sights of the Kings Lynn to Hunstanton railway back in the late 1980's and early 90's. Your film is a lovely reminder of those days - thank you ever so much!
I'm so glad this film brought back so many happy memories!
This is the kind of History Class I like.
Happy to be of service!
Great video of a lost and well loved line. My family moved to Heacham from London in 1963 and I regularly used the railway to Lynn and Huns'ton. In the summer there were some steam trains with 12 carriages, full of holidaymakers coming to the caravan parks in Heacham. Every two weeks they would go home and a new influx would arrive. Diesel traction soon took over and in the winter months DMU's took me to and from college in King's Lynn. From our house I could see the train coming from Sunny Hunny and would sprint to the station to catch it just in time. The steam trains were just magical. It was a tragedy when we lost this railway. Old Norfolk people tend to ignore the middle consonant of a place name thus Huns'ton, Snett'sam, Ingle'sthorpe and Ders'nam. However, conversely, they will call someone by their middle name rather than their first. I still don't quite understand this nor why this beautiful line was closed in 1969.
Thank you for sharing your vivid memories of this line, wonderful!
You are very welcome and thank you for posting it.
That was great, nicely shot & the silence save for the wind & whistles really helped add the feeling that it is all gone now.
Thank you - yes, the quiet really helps with the atmosphere! Really glad you enjoyed the film.
One of the goods bays including a wooden buffer stop still remains at Hunstanton as does the old refreshment and waiting room which is now a pub. There is also a small museum and piece of track and a signal have been erected with info boards.
I think I saw some of these when I visited - many thanks for the tip!
Beautifully filmed, wonderfully narrated. I enjoyed this. Thank you very much.
Glad you enjoyed it Andrew! You know how I value your opinion on my films, so I'm happy it didn't disappoint - wishing you a Merry Christmas!
Absolutley brilliant. Thank you so very much for making this remarkable film. Superb camera work and a wonderful commentary.
So very kind of you to say so, thank you. Have a very Merry Christmas and a happy New year.
So good! As someone that has lived in the Lynn area for many many years I'm glad that you found remnants (like those nice fence posts) that even I have never seen. Keep up your fantastic work!
Thank you so much! I missed a platelayer's hut between Snettisham and Hunstanton, which I'm kicking myself over!
Abit of a sad one. Puts me in mind of the Mumbles railway. Thankfully it's overshadowed by how well done you're videos are. I very much like how elegantly you narrate them. I look forward to more.
Also I wouldn't worry to much about how locals call a place vs how emmits do it. There's never a right answer. Haha
Thank you for your kind words and reassurance! So glad you enjoyed the film!
You can help me ever so much by giving the film a *like* by hitting *subscribe* and by *sharing* it widely. Might you consider supporting my channel even more? www.buymeacoffee.com/rediscovering *HunSTAN* vs *HunSTANton* - Like many, I always thought it was Hun-STAN-ton and I know that this pronunciation is, today, most common. According to this website, the town is also 'known locally as "Hunston"' (www.visitwestnorfolk.com/plac... - moreover, this is how John Betjeman pronounces it in his marvellous film concerning this line, which you should watch as it inspired me (tinyurl.com/ybry2pff).
So there we are. May I suggest we lighten up and move on? After all, this channel is happy to share the sentiment of Hunstanton's motto: "Alios delectare juvat"
People asked me where did you go
To school hunstan in my Norfolk accent mate.or sunny hunny 😂😉
Norfolk is full of place names that are pronounced differently to how they're spelt. Case in point - Happisburgh!
I've never heard Hunstanton be called Hun'ston before.
I've known many people from there and have always heard it called Hun-stan-ton for decades, as well as on the local news and radio.
Thank you for the explanation. I was wondering.
Thanks for posting. The locals always pronounce Norfolk place names in that way, but in this case it had never occurred to me. Such a shame to see so much of the old line gone, but a lovely video. Have a great Christmas yourself.
Sadly; not only have we lost the railway; we’ve lost the Queen. RIP 2022.
What a superb video! Thanks so much for making it with such loving care and thorough research. It meant a lot to me as I occasionally travelled with my mother on that line in the 1940s, when visiting my father - a soldier in World War II, who was among those guarding the coast near Hunstanton.
I'm so pleased that you enjoyed the film and that it stirred some remarkable memories - thank you for your kind words
Another exceptional film, proving that even with modern technology, there are those who excel with delivery, accuracy and content.
That's really very kind of you to pay my films this compliment - it means a lot. Wishing you a Merry Christmas.
Another very interesting video. While I think its unlikely to reopen, at least it seems like not to much of the trackbed has been built on.
Many thanks indeed!
Another lovely piece of work - much as we now expect - and nice to hear the music of Purcell making a solemn and regal appearance. Most suitable for a defunct railway!
I had the piece in mind when making the film and its worked rather well! Thanks for your ongoing support and wishing you a very happy Christmas.
A wonderful virtual ramble through the countryside!
I'm so pleased you enjoyed the film - thank you for your kind words
What a wonderful video! Love how they preserve the old stations)
Yes, a rare thing to have so many in such a good state!
first time hearing the use of chains as a measurement before.... i guess you learn something new every day.... still one hell of a great vid to watch and i look forward to more
Yes, I must admit I don't know how long a chain is!!
@@RediscoveringLostRailways 22 yards or roughly 20 meters. It is the length of a cricket pitch and is still used on the UK railways as a unit of measure
@@johnhewlett4872 Wonderful! Thank you so much for clearing that up! Most kind.
Our local cricket club and I suspect many others still use a 22 yard chain to mark out the pitches at the start of the season.
Network Rail still uses chains as a unit of measurement. Take a look at any railway bridge and you’ll see a plate attached to it stating the distance to the line’s terminus as ‘32 M 23 Ch’ for example.
As always, superb photography, narration, music and research. 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
Have a good Christmas & New year. 🙂
I always welcome the opinion of my subscribers especially those who have been with me for some time - thank you and same to you!
Great memories. I recall around1950 attending a one week Boy Scout Jamboree at the Sandringham estate. We boarded our train at great Chesterford with much stuff going into the guards van and then heading off for kings Lynn.. and then on to Sandringham station where a large contingent of boy scouts disembarked along with many tents, tent poles, pots and pans. etc. Once we had been organised into some semblance of a scout troop, we then proceeded to march to Sandringham, no doubt singing all the way. The weather in July was just perfect. Great Vlog.
What wonderfully evocative memories of a time gone by - thank you for sharing them
Great vid - THANKS. Wolferton station is a delight to visit. You can drop in and walk around (sensitively, private residences). Get chatting with the guy who looks after it, and he’ll show you his workshop (amazing!) and scrap books (showing photos of numerous Victorian and Edwardian royalty being met at the station and escorted by mounted cavalry up the road to Sandringham.
I'll be up there like a shot once the weather is good again - thanks so much for your kind words about my film!
A well researched and presented video, thank you.
On 8th September 2022, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth 2nd passed away peacefully at her private residence Balmoral, Aberdeenshire. She was 96 & had reigned for 70 years, the longest of any British monarch.
Rest In Peace your Majesty, reunited with Philip & forever in our thoughts. Thank you Ma'am ...thank you for everything.
Thank you and hear hear 🙏
We used to go to Hunstanton on holiday when I was vert young and I remember the wonderful hotel at the end of the line. It was horrible to visit later and see that hideous building that replaced it.
Wonderful memories. Yes the new building where the hotel once was is such a carbuncle.
It's lovely seeing Wolferton! My Great-Grandad Barrett used to walk the line and roll out the red carpet for the royals, my Great Uncle used to Chauffeur them too. I remember going to see Mr Skillings in the station masters house in the 70's after the line had been shut.
Wonderfully evocative memories! How splendid to have such a close personal connection to the goings on at this remarkable station!
Wonderful as usual. Really look forward to these films you do..
Many thanks! So pleased it didn't disappoint - wishing you a very Merry Christmas!
I went to Hunstanton, by train, in the summer of 1953 and stayed on a caravan site near the Gasworks and had to cross the line via a Level Crossing in order to reach the sea. However my biggest lasting memory of that holiday was seeing railway carriages lying on there sides in some windings just before the station as a result of the nude East Cost floods earlier that year.
Those are some very striking memories, no wonder they remain with you, thanks so much for sharing!
Yep another great upload ,nice to see so many of the station buildings still standing as well
Most kind of you - thank you! It is pleasing to see them still standing isn't it - it makes a rare change! Wishing you a very Merry Christmas!
My grandad took me to Wolferton on our way up to Blakney on Boxing day 2018. I seem to remember a sign saying "Private Residence, No Entry", am i mistaken? Or has it since become a museum? Wikipedia seems to indicate that it was once a museum, but became a private building after the owner died and his son no-longer wished to continue the failing business.
It was a really nice lasting relic of what once was, sitting at the edge of the fields in the shadow of the woods, a stones-throw away from Sandringham.
Yes someone else mentioned that the museum might well have closed. What a shame this would be and I'm sorry I was too late to visit!
This was a trip down memory lane. Two days shy of my 9th birthday along with about 250 others I traveled on the last scheduled passenger train from Hunstanton to Kings Lynn with my grandad. I’ve still got the ticket and press cutting from the Lynn News and Advertiser with an article and photo of the event.
I'm so pleased my film complemented your remarkable memories of this line and its last day. Many thanks for taking the time to comment.
Your video popped up as a suggestion on my home page this morning and I couldn’t resist having a look. What a delightful way to start the day! Wonderful pictures and superb commentary. Have subscribed and look forward to seeing your other videos. Fantastic research. Always read the comments when I watch any videos, just a shame others don’t before they have to add their own. Happy Christmas and a better 2021 to you.
I'm so glad that you have found my channel and thank you so much for your kind words and subscription. Please have a rummage through my films and let me know what you think. Agreed RE: people's comments - they see these as opportunities to broadcast rather than converse. Thank you again!
Excellent as always, and also the foggy weather was a perfect fit for this documentary. Enjoyed it very much!
So pleased you enjoyed the film (and the weather!)
What an absolutely beautiful video massive fan of your work 👏 👌 🙌
That's really very kind of you to say so, thank you. Have you subscribed? If not there's more to enjoy!
You do a super job with these. Excellent research. Narrative is interesting. Pulling the past together with the present. As a third generation Canadian Railroader I find the parallels in railway history between the UK and Canada fascinating.
Thank you kindly! To get the approval of a railway insider is all the more flattering. Thank you again.
I would love to see the line pass through Wolferton.... On the same alignment
Thankyou for this video. I remember as a boy in the 1960's going through Kings Lynn from Wisbech Station and then to Hunstanton. I also remember as a Boy Scout, camping at Wolverton. My parents had a holiday caravan based at the Snettisham Caravan Park. Many of my happiest days were spent in this whole area.This video brought me to tears. Thankyou so much for making it available. Oh, by the way, I have never heard Hunstanton, spoken as Hunston.
The pronunciation was news to me too (see my pinned comment). Really glad you enjoyed the film and that it stirred some remarkable memories. A number of people on here have commented with regards to the scout meetings at Wolferton, so I imagine some of your contemporaries have seen this film also! Thanks again for your kind words.
Thank you for your reply I hope to see a video on the branch in the future. Passenger services ceased in 1951, but goods continued until 1966 and the branch was I believe used for some film and tv work.
Many thanks indeed!
Can't believe I didn't realise I was on a former station site the many times I've visited Hunstanton.
Glad to be of service, though given how there's next to nothing left, don't reproach yourself!
My nan has a carvan a bit further up j never new therr was this much history to this littil railway
Glad this video helped to fill you in!
Good to see this much-lamented line join the rolling stock of your definitive videos. A shame relatively little remains of it, aside from the gems like Wolferton. Some good natural habitat in former cuttings etc though, as at 11:33. A little silver lining, at least!
Many thanks for your comment and kind words about my film!
Yet another polished film. Thank you.
I've watched the excellent 'John Betjemen Takes the Train' many times and have explored much of this line whist staying at Heacham station old waiting room! Indeed, how sad to see Hunstanton as it now is.
Many thanks indeed for your thoughts and kind words about my film 😀
Fantastic that some of these stations have been preserved.
Some real gems still to be found, for sure!
I went to Wolverton its lovely I go there once a year
It's a fine place to visit - well worth the visit (as well you know!). All the best.
This is just tragic.
It is a shame to be sure
Thank you for a wonderful production.
I was born in Kings Lynn and my brother and I have often talked about the old railway to Sunny Hunny though I never got chance to travel on the line.
All the best.
My pleasure - thanks for your kind words about my film!
I historically accurate and informative video on this lost railway. I did watch an older video on this line that was done back in 2007 when the signal box at North Wootton was still in it's original place. It was located on the other side of the road and the land of a local scout group.
Really glad you enjoyed the film - I should have liked to have seen that signal box, but I'm glad it found a new home!
what a superb film sad as the line would save us being stuck in tailbacks on a visit to the seaside in the summer and would im sure have a been a viable concern as the poopy line is from Holt to Sheringham now
Really glad you liked it - and agreed - the traffic it could take off the roads in the summer months would be considerable!
Excellent and very interesting film. I was born in Lynn and lived in Heacham until I was 10. I have memories of walking along the former railway lines, which could be accessed by the playing field. My nan used to live on Station Road in a strange wooden house, which was partly comprised of a couple of old railway carriages. I remember being thoroughly confused by this as a child 😂!
The way in which Hunstanton and Snettisham were pronounced made me smile, as that's how my dad does it, albeit in a slightly ironic way as it's relatively rare now.
I hope you do a film on the branch from Heacham to Wells. I went to school in Wells and the cross-country course started at the old cutting in the grounds of the school.
I'm so glad you enjoyed the film and thank you for sharing your wonderful memories - particularly intrigued by the house made of carriages!
Another moving, sensitive look at the past/present. Brilliant - very well done indeed. Thank you for your care and attention to detail.
Glad you enjoyed it Many thanks for saying so!
Another superb film !
Many thanks indeed!
Oh it breaks my heart to see this line closed…shame it was never saved for a tourist line as they did in Paignton Dartmouth line..it would make a wonderful attraction….gone but not forgotten.thank you
I agree with you, this would be well used in the summer months!
A superbly made video, very enjoyable. Thank You.
Many thanks indeed - wishing you a very Merry Christmas!
Have just discovered the video...Wonderful architecture and a superb narration....so sad to see what was the back bone of English life......thank you.
So pleased you enjoyed the film, do subscribe if you've not already done so and enjoy my other films in the series!
The best video I've seen so far on this lost railway. Professionally produced and very informative. Well done.
I'm so glad you enjoyed the film, vthough I would submit that John Betjemen's film (see the pinned comment) is the superior product! Do subscribe if you've not already done so and enjoy my other films in the series.
What a delight,and most informative are all your program's keep up the good work.
Thank you, will do!
Absolutely marvelous.... I wish it were still there...
Many thanks indeed!
Well done your pronunciation of local villages is perfect. Did you live in the region? I recall as a small child rushing up the bank at Heacham to see the steam train en route to Hunstanton. My family had strong links to Snettisham until the 1980s . Thanks for the enjoyable memories!
Thank you! I've come in for a lot of flak for the pronunciation, but I took my cue from John Betjemen whose film about this line inspired me. Really glad it stirred some happy memories!
Always look forward to your vids, and again not disappointed.
Thank you
So very kind of you to say so - thank you. Wishing you a very Merry Christmas indeed!
You too, have a good christmas friend.
Very enjoyable, if a little sad at the end. Good to see the railway and station buildings still standing with their heritage still intact. Your comment at Hunstanton about the hotel being ""replaced with this less elegant structure" is a masterclass in understatement!
Glad you enjoyed it - thank you for taking the time to comment. Yes, I think tact is the best policy in these situations!
Well done. I love videos like this even though they always make me sad. What once was, is no more.
Thanks so much for your comment! Do subscribe if you've not already done so and enjoy my other films in the series.
I can't wait to visit to see this line myself looks amazing
You should! Though as the video says, huge portions of it are on private land, so one can only walk portions of it at a time, but there is still much to see and enjoy.
Yes I can imagine it is, and I noticed a holiday park, what is the name of the holiday park??
If you ever get to journey north, there's an old railway that went from Aberdeen up the Dee valley. When i lived near Banchory i used to walk the old track bed through the woods to go to the town's centre. This is over 20 years ago, and by that time already several houses had been build on part of the track closer to the town. I have no idea how much of it still remains. The royal family used to travel the railway on the way to Balmoral.
It's a shame so many railways got taken out when no one could forsee their demand returning in these times.
I'd be delighted to check this one out (Scotland is my favourite place to holiday!).
Thank you. Travelled the line once (in each direction) in the early 1960s on the way to and from Scout Camp at Thornham. Steam hauled from Liverpool Street to Kings Lynn and DMU to 'Sunny Hunny.' Those were the days!
Sounds magical! Thanks for sharing 🙂
A well-researched and enjoyable video of one of the most sad losses to the British railway scene. This line should never have closed. Alas I was only 3 years old when it closed, and my parents never took me on it.
Many thanks indeed - great shame this one closed!
@@RediscoveringLostRailways I have heard wild pipe dreams of this line reopening, but I think the improved A149 road is on part of the old trackbed. It would have made sense with the road traffic, as you say, to keep the line, especially in the holiday periods, and for royal train traffic. Even if it was worked as a heritage line with volunteer staff. Sadly back then, they never had a PSO (Public Service Obligation) Grant for rural routes to stay open on hardship / environmental grounds. Plus Beeching, Marples, Barbara Castle etc. never counted the fares TO the branch lines they closed, just the fares generated ON the branch itself. If counting all the tickets sold from say, London, hardly any railway would have shut, even on economic grounds. But the objective was to close lines, and BR obeyed their political masters, who held the purse strings. I think of those that died during construction of these abandoned railways, the lives ruined by loss of employment and loss of public transport. Only 50 years later, when our roads are total gridlock, do people have regrets. Well done for highlighting what we are missing.
Excellent video
Many thanks indeed
Nice video!!
As usual
Greetings from Stockholm 🙂
Mange tak! With best wishes
Oi you Scandinavians keep your eyes off our precious East Anglian lands!
King Edmund will not be forgotten!
:P
Thank you for another Great Video, packed with interesting details
Glad you enjoyed it - thank you for supporting my channel - Merry Christmas to you!
Thank you very much for this delight. A fascinating presentation
Very kind of you to say so! Do subscribe if you've not already done so and enjoy my other films in the series!
You’ll think I’m lying but my great great grandad drove George VI down to London, so glad this was on my page this was so good 👍
No cause to believe you're lying, I think that is a really remarkable connection to have - thanks for sharing and I'm glad you enjoyed the film!
Beautiful railway architecture - and no trains. Same old story. Once again, thank you so much for your hard work - and hard slog in walking the line. I live in Toronto and so I can not see myself visiting this line...
Many thanks indeed and no slog at all :) I'm glad you can enjoy these trips from the comfort of your fine country.
Very good and I am not sure where you are from but well done for getting the correct pronunciations of the place names!
Not from the area, but that's how John Betjemen pronounces them in his film of this line... And that's good enough for me! Many thanks for your comment and kind words about my film.
I walked the path beside the old track bed from Dersingham to Snettisham and was amazed at the pains the builders took to maintain the old station at Dersingham. Not so in Snettisham where not much of the old station remains. Except for the granary where I had a well earned cuppa. Apparently they had to move the signal from the line to behind the granary so it shouldn't "spoil" someone's back yard. Now if I had a signal in my garden... Many thanks for a great vid!
A lovely walk - and agreed about the signal and Dersingham station! Thanks ever so much for your comment!
Having just found your channel from the Southwold line video I was intrigued to see this one covering another of my favourite destinations. I'm usually at Hunstanton for two long weekends every year and never realised that the railway actually ran through where the holiday park we stay at is nowadays. In fact, looking at the area on Google maps it's not much more than a stone's throw from where the station would have been. Must take a little diversion next time that I drive up there to have a look at Wolferton station. Thanks for another excellent video, subscribed.
Thank you so much for your subscription and I absolutely endorse the idea of exploring parts of this wonderful line!
Beautiful. Thank you.
My pleasure, thank you
Thank you. Wonderful video - I’ve enjoyed all of them
Very kind of you to say so, thank you
Having watched this excellent video my finger hovered over the subscribe button not sure whether to press or not. This was no reflection on the video, rather that the video left me so sad, sad at the waste and short sightedness of previous generations in destroying this line and I knew that by watching more of your videos I would experience the same. Anyway I pressed it because this was quite the best one on the subject that I have seen so thank you and I look forward to viewing the rest. Happy new year.
I'm really glad you decided to join - thank you. Yes, some of these films can be rather sombre, but I hope that isn't always a deterrent! once again, many thanks.
Brilliant video again. Thoroughly enjoyed it. Really well filmed and narrated👍
I live on the site of a former railway. Actually its 4 railways... A complex interwoven mass of lines.. Hardly any of it remains now. Blows my mind each time I compare the old OS maps against today.. Such a waste.
Whereabouts are you? sounds fascinating!
@@RediscoveringLostRailways
Springs branch area nr Wigan.
The area was once a busy, concentrated mix of lines, mainly serving coal mining, iron works, cotton mills etc..
Wigan also once had 3 stations in the town centre.
As I live in the area I've found it really interesting trying to locate the old routes on the ground, comparing todays images to how it used to look.
Thank you for this excellent video. One of my first memories as a child is taking the train to Hunstanton to go on a summer holiday with my parents. For one reason or another, and despite an interest in British Railways I’d never read much about the line. Your video helped me a great deal.
I'm so glad this film was helpful and that it stirred those wonderful memories!
Another enjoyable production thank you. Have you ever considered producing a video on the Hertford and Welwyn Junction Railway opened in 1858? Just a suggestion.
Recommendations are always most welcome. I live not a million miles from there and could easily make that - I'll add it to my to do list!
This popped into my recommended file, for whatever reason I don't know. I'm glad it did; it was informative, interesting, albeit a little sad -- that line SHOULD be recreated. Others have stated that it would alleviate traffic congestion, and also for its history as the "shortcut" to Sandringham. Kudos to all involved from Illinois, USA.
I'm so glad you enjoyed my film and thank you for your comments and thoughtful remarks. Always happy to hear from an American cousin! Do consider subscribing and enjoy my other films in the series 🙂
Thanks - I must book a stay at the holiday home in Heacham now you've given them a free plug! I try to visit East Anglia once a year to visit my cousins in Lowestoft, only missing this year due to lock-down, and am always looking for somewhere new to stay en route. By the way, in Hunstanton there's a small café on a corner, and if you want a cake with your coffee, you go to the bakers' shop next door and order your cake. It is then placed on a plate and passed through a mysterious hatch into the café! I love these little quirks of life.
Glad to be of service - I swear I saw the B&B up for sale recently, though I could be mistaken...
@@RediscoveringLostRailways I found their website -really good. Hopefully I can base myself there for a few days in 2021!
www.oldstationheacham.com/
Kinda sad....
But I enjoyed it 👌
Many thanks indeed for you comment!
Enjoyed that. My birth place to my first holiday destination.
Wonderful! Glad you enjoyed it!
Once again another excellent film! I really enjoy watching these, thanks!
I'm so pleased that you enjoyed the film, thank you for your kind kind words. Wishing you a very happy Christmas.
@@RediscoveringLostRailways Merry Christmas to you too!
Thank you again RLR; a lovely way to round off xmas day (well, actually boxing day as it's almost 3.30am!) Really appreciate the quality photography, editing, soundtrack and your commitment to local history by way of our (once) extensive railway network. Looking forward to more :-)
My pleasure and thank you for taking the time to say such nice things about my work 🙂
I always have a hobby alternate history projects involving trouist railroads made out of abandoned railroads here in the US.
Your videos inspired me to do likewise with British routes, and the one in this video is one I can definitely envision as a successful heritage railway.
So pleased that you found my film, enjoyed it and that it has offered some inspiration! Many thanks indeed!
@@RediscoveringLostRailways On that front, you even gave me an idea to have the Great Central Main Line used as a freight-only route.
The Sandringham Hotel was "replaced by a less elegant structure". A very polite way of putting it. :)
Thank you! 😁
Another wonderful video. So relaxing to watch, and so sad that so much of the railways have gone. Im glad some of the buildings survived on this line but the ending where its just a car park, how depressing. Holiday makers parking up will have no idea of the history beneath their feet.
Thank you indeed! Yes there's little left to determine the railway's whwreabin Hunstanton...
I have come across this video for the first time. I found it absolutely wonderful especially with a nice narration. We are a modern country but by golly we should have kept some of those classic Victorian buildings. Car parks, caravan parks and what have you. Ruined by government and councils. I look forward to more of your videos. Thank you.
I'm so glad you enjoyed the film and very kind of you to say such nice things about it. I agree with your sentiments regarding the lost architecture etc. Do subscribe if you've not already done so and enjoy my other films in the series!
Hello, a well documented and excellent video and photos. Thank you for sharing.
🏆🥇⭐👍
Very kind of you to say so, thank you - so glad you enjoyed the film!
@@RediscoveringLostRailways
Actually, I had stayed in King's Lynn in Sep 1980 - August 1982; for my A levels at NORCAT but nowadays its called College of West Anglia
so used to travel to London Liverpool Street from Kings Lynn. That time the train service is called British Rail. Among other stations I had went to include Sheffield, Edinburgh Waverly Station and Glasgow.
Stations which i had remembered i passed through not went to were Ely, Downham Market, Cambridge, Doncaster, York, Newcastle. It was a great experience for me. Down memory lane.
One of the best documentaries of this forgotten line. How sad it was closed. Summer traffic would be so much easier if it was still there. Great work and look forward to your next work. I think the fog actually helped to provide a suitable back drop. Merry Christmas. Steve
That's so very kind of you to say so. Agreed, summer traffic would be taken off the roads to a great extent, but I wonder if the railway would pay for itself during the rest of the year? Thank you so much again.
Your videos get better and better, thank you for taking the time and the care - it really does make a difference. Add to that the great subject matter. I'm looking forward to watching many again through the Christmas break.
Please let me your thoughts on each one - my earlier films featured music only with text on screen, the move to narration was more recent - keep in touch and Merry Christmas!
@@RediscoveringLostRailways Happy to! I think both your music only videos and the more recent (and more in depth) productions are eminently watchable. My impatience means I often watch your (and others) videos as soon as they become available and often have to do so with the sound off, using only subtitles - so both formats of video work the same. I would say, though, that your narrated videos - with the sound on - do work very well. At the risk of sounding patronising, your script and voice are well matched to the content and sound as good as they look!
@@RediscoveringLostRailways Oh, and a Happy Christmas to you too!