Jump to content
 

wagonman

Members
  • Posts

    2,460
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by wagonman

  1. The Mendip limestone was particularly hard and non-friable – hence its popularity for roadstone and railway ballast uses. "Granite", however, it was not, though Wainwright's quarry at Moons Hill works a basaltic intrusion, the Andesite produced being very hard. Richard
  2. Yesterday it reached 37° here on the north Norfolk coast – it got progressively hotter as you moved west as a colleague with an appointment in King's Lynn found out. I've experienced higher temperatures but only inside a sauna.
  3. I'm not sure we can assume the non-local-merchant's wagons only made a single appearance. If there was a local user with a regular order from a particular source it is possible for the same wagon to have made multiple trips, particularly if it was operated by one of the smaller factors. This probably doesn't account for all of your missing 50, but it starts to nibble around the edges.
  4. Bread and circuses – or more accurately Empire, Royalty, the Flag, and hatred of foreigners – has been the Tory ploy to keep the proles on-side since at least the time of the 3rd Reform Act. Alas, it seems it still works, though now it's Brexit, 'illegal' migrants, and 'benefit scroungers'.
  5. Someone once observed that if a thousand economists were laid end to end, they wouldn't reach ... a conclusion.
  6. Do you actually know what Momentum's agenda is? The 2017 Manifesto seemed pretty popular. The position now is such that anyone daring to say anything as self-evidently sensible as "progressive income tax is fair, that you only get the social services you pay for, and that one single loophole-exploiting billionaire costs this country more than all of the 'benefit scroungers' put together?" is likely to be dismissed as a rabid Leftie. I very much doubt you will hear anything like that from the Labour Party; Greens, perhaps. See below on Overton Window... :-) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overton_window
  7. Apart from the music... The upside of the '70s was the relative lack of inequality; towards the end of the decade the Gini coefficient for the UK reached its lowest value ever – and has been rising steadily ever since. Now we live in what is touted as the 5th richest country, though it's probably more like 7th by now thanks to Brexit, yet we have 14.5 million (22%) officially classed as in poverty (source: JRF). This is not an accident.
  8. In case you hadn't noticed, Labour is already a party of the Centre Right having ruthlessly stamped on any remaining hint of democratic Socialism. Effectively, it is the left wing of the Tory Party. If you want evidence, the recent order to abstain in the vote on feeding hungry children, and the announcement that he will do nothing to remove the private sector from the NHS should give you a clue. And that's just the last few days. Every time Rachel Reeves opens her mouth you can hear Thatcher applauding from her grave. This country is crying out for meaningful change but Starmer & Co won't give it to them. Please adjust your Overton Window...
  9. I too have met La Truss. Vapid is the word that springs most readily to mind.
  10. Having lived through both, I'd much rather be back in the '70s than the '50s.
  11. Surely you've heard of her before – if only as the worst, most supine Attorney General in history.
  12. Apropos nothing very much – progress perhaps – while researching Devon coal merchants I came across a local press report into a meeting of the Primrose League shortly after the start of Lord Salisbury's government in 1895 where the delegates were rejoicing to think there would be no more time wasted on debating the abolition of the House of Lords. What goes around...
  13. As one who had the misfortune to live through the 1950s (which lasted until the mid-60s) I can assure you it was every bit as dismal, nasty as you would expect. So nasty that no one in their right mind would want to return.
  14. I agree – the Leave vote was in essence a mandate to leave the 21st Century. The campaign played shamelessly to the nostalgia and racism of the uneducated, elderly white working class which duly delivered the result the vulture capitalists wanted. As Andy said, if you invert the categories in the poll so that Multiculturalism becomes racism (or some slightly more acceptable euphemism), feminism becomes misogyny, and so on you would find a very different result. Basically these are not very nice people!
  15. It's hard to escape the feeling that any Johnson replacement (a D1ldo in other words) will be just as nasty and incompetent, but lack the 'charm' and the skill at dressing up.
  16. The thing about Corbyn was that he reached out to voters – the educated young in particular – who are turned off by the 'politics as usual' crowd. It was they who propelled him to the best result Labour had had in the 21st century. Of course the Establishment and its hangers-on, which includes much of the PLP, like to rewrite history so Corbyn has to be denigrated as a no-hoper, a crank etc. If at the next election Labour manage to defeat the Tories – and it is by no means certain they will – it'll be because more Tory voters stayed at home in despair than Labour ones. "Vote for Us, we're slightly less crap than the other lot" is not going to stir the passions of voters, young or old.
  17. I think that is self-evidently true – and the same can be said for the health system where our rulers are usually able to opt out and are therefore happy to see the public provision wither on the vine. Universality of provision is an important principle if we are to maintain decent public services. Alas neither of our main parties seem in the least bit interested in principles...
  18. You need to remove the redundant V hanger from this side. The brake shaft inner support was a single 'post' just inboard of the brakes. Sorry, terrible description – look for a photo!
  19. This should be available by the middle of the month so start saving your pennies...
  20. From memory Kodak was one, and Crystalate billiard balls was another I think. The wagons were owned and operated by Wallace Spiers & Co.
  21. I don't know how the Southern managed but live animals were still being transported in passenger trains in the early '60s on the WR. I have personal memory of seeing a young calf in a sack with just its head poking out, tethered to the platform railings at Lavington waiting for the down train to Westbury. It would have been carried in the guard's compartment.
  22. Is this what they called a 'swinger'? Other definitions are available...
  23. To answer Stephen's point, the Lightmoor Press series have to focus on the locally based wagons as to try to include all the visiting wagons from out of area would be an impossible task – if for no other reason than that there is no obvious source of data. In the Somerset book I did allude to both Renwick Wilton and G Bryer Ash as they had a considerable presence in the county, likewise the Forest of Dean collieries that were connected with Sully of Bridgwater (expanded in the Addendum). I will be looking in much greater detail at Renwick Wilton in the Devon & Cornwall volume, if I ever get it finished! Meanwhile a look at Len Tavender's Coal Trade Wagons will give some fascinating analysis of the reach of certain Midlands collieries – even into Sussex. Simon Turner's book on the LBSCR area PO wagons is currently at the printers. I will definitely be buying a copy! Richard
×
×
  • Create New...