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Whether you're on the Orient Express or the Inverness to Wick and Thurso route traversing some of the wildest country in Britain, train travel affords a vision of the world like no other. From the modest line through North Yorkshire's Esk Valley to the Trans-Siberian; from a narrow-gauge web of lines in the Harz Mountains to the coast-tocoast journey through the mountains of Corsica, acclaimed travel writer Anthony Lambert presents an unmissable selection for any traveller who loves the journey as much as the destination. Here is a carefully chosen, wide-ranging selection of train journeys with character, sublime scenery and a real sense of history.
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GREATEST
TRAIN JOURNEYS
OF THE WORLD
IN ASSOCIATION WITH
TIMPSON
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GREATEST
TRAIN JOURNEYS
OF THE WORLD
ANTHONY LAMBERT
Published in the UK in 2015 by
Icon Books Ltd, Omnibus Business Centre, 39–41 North Road, London N7 9DP
email: [email protected]
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ISBN: 978-178578-065-3
Book People edition: 978-178578-088-2
Text copyright © 2016 Anthony Lambert
The author has asserted his moral rights.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Anthony Lambert has written fifteen books about railways and railway travel, including Switzerland without a Car, the Insight Guide to Great Railway Journeys of Europe and Lambert’s Railway Miscellany. He has also written on railway journeys and travel for such publications as the Daily Telegraph, The New York Times, The Sunday Times, Wanderlust and Orient-Express Magazine. He was consultant editor to the nine-volume part work The World of Trains, and has travelled on the railways of over 55 countries. He has talked to a wide range of audiences about railways and travel, including the Royal Geographical Society, of which he is a Fellow.
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
THE 50 GREATEST TRAIN JOURNEYS
United Kingdom
Train to Skye
The Far North
The Road to the Isles
Settle & Carlisle
Belfast–Londonderry
The Esk Valley (Whitby–Pickering)
Ffestiniog and Welsh Highland Railways
The Heart of Wales Line (Shrewsbury–Swansea)
The Cambrian Coast (Shrewsbury–Aberystwyth/Pwllheli)
London–Penzance
Belmond’s trains (southern England)
Eurostar (London–Paris)
Mainland Europe
Bergen–Oslo (Norway)
The Harz Mountains (Germany)
Cologne–Frankfurt via Koblenz or Neuwied (Germany)
Nîmes–Clermont-Ferrand (France)
Through the Drac Gorge to La Mure (France)
To Istanbul by Orient Express (France–Turkey)
To the roof of Europe (Switzerland)
The Glacier Express (Switzerland)
Spiez–Brig via Kandersteg (Switzerland)
The Bernina Express (Switzerland–Italy)
Centovalli (Switzerland–Italy)
Bastia–Ajaccio (Corsica)
El Transcantabrico (Spain)
Al Andalus (Spain)
Golden Eagle Danube Express (Balkans and Eastern Europe)
Africa
Rovos Rail (Pretoria–Cape Town)
Asia
Golden Eagle Trans-Siberian Express (Russia)
The world’s highest passenger service (China)
New Jalpaiguri–Darjeeling (India)
The Maharajas’ Express (India)
The Eastern & Oriental Express (Singapore–Thailand)
Tokyo–Nagano–Yudanaka (Japan)
Alishan Forest Railway (Taiwan)
Australasia
The Ghan (Adelaide–Darwin)
Zig Zag Railway (Blue Mountains, NSW)
The Indian Pacific (Sydney–Perth)
TranzAlpine (Christchurch–Greymouth)
The Americas
The Canadian (Toronto–Vancouver)
Alaska Railroad (Anchorage–Fairbanks)
Rocky Mountaineer (Vancouver–Jasper/Banff)
Coast Starlight (Seattle–Los Angeles)
California Zephyr (Chicago–San Francisco)
Narrow gauge in Colorado
Sunset Limited (Orlando–Los Angeles)
Copper Canyon (Mexico)
Tren Crucero (Ecuador)
Lima–Huancayo (Peru)
Train to the Clouds (Argentina–Chile)
APPENDIX: Tickets and Information
INTRODUCTION
Thousands of writers, film-makers, composers, painters and admen have recognised and celebrated the romance of the railway and train travel. Whole anthologies of railway poetry have been published. Who looks at motorways and sees anything but aesthetic blight and pollution? Once written off by politicians lacking prescience, railways have entered a second age. They are being seen as a solution to some of the problems facing an overcrowded and endangered planet, and are experiencing a remarkable increase in passengers where services are competently managed.
Railways are democratic, inclusive, outward-looking, sociable (if sometimes too much so). Who cannot recall engrossing or even life-changing conversations as a result of a chance encounter on a train? The way they transformed the interaction of people in an unprecedented way was recognised by artists who portrayed the new phenomenon in pictures, such as The Railway Station by William Powell Frith and First Class – The Meeting by Abraham Solomon. As Simon Bradley notes in The Railways, ‘By 1900 or 1914, [Britons] were much readier than their grandparents had been to set these [social] divisions aside when the time came to travel.’
Train travel affords a vision of the world that seems so much more interesting than road journeys; somehow you hardly ever see anything interesting from a motorway. A character in one of R.C. Sherriff’s novels hangs out of the train window, watching ‘a hundred fascinating things’. As John Betjeman remarked, ‘you need never be bored in a train’.
Train travel is liberating in the time it affords for oneself – to read, write, think, dream. Trollope designed a portable writing desk so that he could work during his innumerable train journeys when he was in the employ of the Post Office. John le Carré started writing the Smiley novels on the train between Great Missenden and London. Harry Potter was born on a train to Manchester. Even the idea for her Calcutta charity came to Mother Teresa on a train.
Robert Louis Stevenson captured the way train travel induces flights of fancy: ‘while the body is borne forward in the flying chain of carriages, the thoughts alight, as the humour moves them, at unfrequented stations; they make haste up the popular alley that leads towards town, they are left behind with the signalman as, shading his eyes with his hand, he watches the long train sweep away into the golden distance.’
Eric Newby, writing about the Trans-Siberian journey before the Iron Curtain came down, put his finger on one of the most engaging attractions of train travel when he said that ‘so many questions … have to remain forever unanswered when one travels by train’. Almost every scene from the window poses questions in one’s mind and sets it wandering in a way unmatched by any other mode of travel.
Today few have the luxury of being able to take pleasure in slow travel, and anyway rail is generally faster than the alternatives up to 300–400 miles. In 1920 A.A. Milne thought he ‘would much sooner go by wagonlits from Calais to Monte Carlo in twenty hours than by magic carpet in twenty seconds’.
And one senses that Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch, writing in 1944, rather enjoyed a dawdling journey he once took to see an old church: ‘That we halted at every station goes without saying. Few sidings – however inconsiderable, or as might seem, fortuitous, escaped the flattery of our prolonged sojourn. We ambled, we paused, almost we dallied with the butterflies lazily afloat over the meadow-sweet and cow-parsley beside the line; we exchanged gossip with stationmasters, and received the congratulations of signalmen on the extraordinary spell of fine weather. It did not matter. Three market-women, a pedlar, and a local policeman made up with me the train’s complement of passengers. I gathered that their business could wait; and as for mine – well, a Norman porch is by this time accustomed to waiting.’
Quite apart from the intrinsic attractions of train travel, part of the explanation for its revival must be disenchantment with the alternatives. Except for those few able to turn left on boarding a plane, air travel, ‘that agent of superficiality’ as Peter Fleming put it, has lost any lustre it may have had, and the significant decline in driving-licence holders among twenty- and thirty-somethings in countries as affluent as Britain and Switzerland suggests a generation that has fallen out of love with the motor car.
This book is for those in harmony with all these sentiments and who choose to take the train whenever feasible. The choice of the 50 journeys is inevitably personal, and some may be surprised at their inclusion and disappointed by the omission of others. Some have been chosen for the stories they tell as well as the appeal of what passes by the window.
THE 50 GREATEST TRAIN JOURNEYS
UNITED KINGDOM
TRAIN TO SKYE
At the end of one of his television series, Michael Palin was pictured heading home with a sign from the euphoniously named Kyle of Lochalsh station, the terminus opposite Skye where trains from Inverness meet the sea. To reach it, they traverse largely empty country once Dingwall is left behind, with only the occasional hamlet on the wind-swept moors.
The only centre of significant population was Strathpeffer, and the spa town came to be a textbook example of what happened when railway promoters encountered landed obduracy. Sir William MacKenzie of Coul owned large areas of land to the east on the obvious route for the line through the town. He demanded such costly works to camouflage the line that the Dingwall & Skye Railway was forced into building a northerly route bypassing the town. It entailed a steep gradient to the detriment of coal consumption and reduced the benefit of the railway to the town’s prosperity.
As far as Dingwall, trains to Kyle share the same track as Wick and Thurso services (see page 21). Light and airy Inverness station is unusual in having platforms on two arms of a triangle of lines, one for trains to Aberdeen and Perth, the other for Kyle and the north. The latter almost immediately cross the River Ness, which drains the famous loch.
Slowing to walking pace, the train inches across Clachnaharry swing bridge at the northern end of Thomas Telford’s Caledonian Canal, built between 1803 and 1822. The scale of the task called for such innovations as the use of two steam bucket dredgers built by the Butterley ironworks in Derbyshire. The train skirts the waters of Beauly Firth, with the Black Isle on the far side, so named because in winter snow seldom settled there and it looked black against the surrounding white.
TRAIN TO SKYE
Photo © Optimist on the run, 2006
Past Muir of Ord, the railway joins the Conon Valley, where a new station was opened in 2013. As the train approaches Dingwall, a square stone tower erected in 1907 on Mitchell Hill comes into view; it commemorates the stonemason’s son who rose through merit to become Major General Sir Hector Archibald MacDonald, who played a key role in the victory at Omdurman. A later conflict is recalled by a brass plaque on the station in tribute to the Ross & Cromarty Branch of the Red Cross Society, whose members doled out tea to 134,864 sailors and soldiers on their way to bases further north between 20 September 1915 and 12 April 1919.
Leaving Dingwall station the train crosses the short Telford-engineered Dingwall Canal and veers west away from the Far North line. A sudden turn to the north marks the site of Fodderty Junction, where a line to Strathpeffer once continued west to the spa town. Opened in 1885 after the grim reaper had carried off Sir William MacKenzie, and his son had reversed his father’s opposition to the railway, the Strathpeffer branch once enjoyed through carriages from London King’s Cross and later Euston. The Highland Railway was in the vanguard of railway publicity; even nabobs in Bombay were encouraged by the Times of India to consider Strathpeffer for their next home leave.
Forest thinning has opened up spectacular views to the west as the train grinds up to the dramatic defile of Raven’s Rock and the site of Achterneed station, which for 15 years had to masquerade as the stop for Strathpeffer. Crofts around Achterneed had been given to veterans of the Highland Corps who had fought in the American War of Independence.
Delightful views across Loch Garve precede arrival at Garve station, followed by a steep climb towards the next summit at Corriemuillie and its nearby shooting lodge. Rather like the Ffestiniog Railway, the Kyle line had to be relaid at a higher level in the 1950s to allow construction of a hydro-electric project at Loch Luichart, drowning the old station of Lochluichart.
Desolate and dramatic moorland flanks the line. After the train describes a sweeping S-curve between two small lochs near Achanalt, it bowls along Strath Bran with an occasional ruined croft to recall one of the darkest episodes of Highland history when crofters were turned out of their homes to make way for sheep.
It’s hard to imagine the day in 1877 when a patterned carpet of Hunting Stuart tartan was laid on the platform at Achnasheen for the arrival of Queen Victoria and her onward journey by royal carriage for a week at the Loch Maree Hotel. In the 1930s, the most complicated shunting procedure at Achnasheen took place, when restaurant cars were exchanged between The Lewisman and The Hebridean, sometimes complicated further by the presence of a goods train.
The line climbs again, past Loch Gowan, to the highest point on the line at Luib Summit at 197 metres (646 feet). A steep descent past impressive peaks and corries and the Monroe of Moruisg is followed by the sight of a beautiful wooded glen, a remnant of the Caledonian Forest, before Achnashellach. The Prince of Wales, staying at the lodge here in 1870, failed to hit one of the 500 deer driven towards his gun.
Following the River Carron, the line reaches Strathcarron station, which marks the transition from wild moorland to sea loch. For the entire 18 miles (29 kilometres) along the southern shore of Loch Carron, the train seldom ventures more than a stone’s throw from the water, edged with pink sea thrift and seaweed.
For 27 years Strome Ferry was the western terminus of the line, with a pier on the loch and an overall station roof. During a weekend in 1883 an unruly congregation of Sabbatarian ‘Wee Frees’ physically prevented a fish train for London being loaded until midnight on the Sunday. Suppression of their protest required first a detachment of six constables to be dispatched from Dingwall followed by a much larger force, and troops on standby at Fort George.
To combat the threat to western isle traffic from the railway extension to Mallaig (see page 27), the Highland Railway with the help of a government grant decided to press on with the original plan for a terminus at Kyle of Lochalsh. The cost per mile of the 10.5 miles (17 kilometres) was five times as much as the rest of the line from Dingwall. Every foot was hard won: the railway burrows through cuttings of Torridonian sandstone, weaves in and out of coves and slices through headlands of gneiss and quartzite.
The platform of Duncraig serves Duncraig Castle, which was built in 1866 by Sir Alexander Matheson after he acquired in the Far East a fortune large enough to allow him to retire at the age of 36.
Plockton is one of the prettiest villages on the west coast and even has palms along the high street and a church by Thomas Telford. The station houses a restaurant, and the faux signal-box is a bunkhouse. In the loch near the whitewashed village is Heron Island, with its heronry among dense Scots pine; J.M. Barrie passed the island many times when travelling by train to Kyle on his way to the Outer Hebrides and it is credited with inspiring the setting for the island of the Lost Boys in Peter Pan.
Journey’s end on the pier at Kyle has lost something since the road bridge across Kyleakin was opened in 1995, and not only the rationale behind the Skye Boat Song. But the railway holds its best views till last: where Loch Carron meets the Inner Sound, Skye’s Cuillin Mountains, the Applecross peninsula and the island of Raasay form a panorama that can be literally as well as figuratively breathtaking.
How long: 2 hours 30 minutes
THE FAR NORTH
The journey from Inverness to Britain’s most northerly town, Thurso, is overlooked in favour of better-known Highland lines further south. Yet from the moment the train clatters over the Caledonian Canal on leaving Inverness, the journey is full of interest and takes in some of Scotland’s most beautiful scenery. In winter especially you would be unlucky not to see deer, and raptors can be seen in the Flow Country of Sutherland.
The section as far as Dingwall is shared with Kyle of Lochalsh trains (see page 16). From the junction just north of Dingwall station, the Far North line heads north-east through Easter Ross farmland, passing largely 18th-century Foulis Castle, seat of Clan Munro, to the west. The line joins the shore of Cromarty Firth, where bottlenose dolphins can be seen breaching, no longer disturbed by the flying boats that used the sheltered Firth as a base during the Second World War.
THE FAR NORTH
Photo: Rob Faulkner
After passing Alness and the town’s Dalmore distillery, the train arrives at Invergordon, which during the First World War was one of the three major Scottish naval bases as well as an American base for minelaying. The Highland Railway (HR) became the conduit for men and matériel to Invergordon and Scapa Flow in the Orkneys. From February 1917 there was a daily naval special between London Euston and Thurso with stops on the Highland at Inverness for rations, Alness and Invergordon. These trains became known as ‘Jellicoe Specials’ after the Admiral of the Fleet. However, the dry steam coal from the Rhondda Valley and its environs on which the fleet relied was delivered by sea from ports in southern Scotland; the volumes would have overwhelmed the largely single-track HR. Invergordon was the scene of a good-natured mutiny in 1931 following a Depression-era pay cut.
Invergordon intends to emulate the success of Chemainus in British Columbia by becoming known as ‘the mural town’, and the station has an example entitled ‘The Long Goodbye’, recalling servicemen leaving for war in 1914 and 1939.
Passengers have the last views of the Black Isle to the south as the train turns north-west at Fearn and reaches the mouth of Dornoch Firth and Scotland’s oldest royal borough, Tain, which received its charter in 1066. The unstaffed station building has been converted into the Platform 1864 restaurant.
The railway climbs beside the Kyle of Sutherland, passing Bonar Bridge, whose first road bridge across the Kyle was built in 1812 following a ferry disaster that claimed 99 lives. In the woods above the station at Culrain is Carbisdale Castle, built in 1907–17 by the widow of the 3rd Duke of Sutherland and the refuge of the Norwegian royal family during the Second World War. Subsequently a youth hostel, it was sold in 2015 to developers planning a five-star hotel.
The train crosses the Kyle on the high lattice girders of the Grade A listed Oykel Viaduct, opened in 1868, and passes Invershin station – at just 706 metres (772 yards) from Culrain station, this is one of the shortest distances between stations in Britain. The climb inland continues to Lairg, railhead and centre of sheep sales for a vast swathe of the north-west Highlands. Nowhere else in Europe can match the one-day sheep sales, and the HR devised double-deck sheep vans to increase capacity. On 17 August 1949, for example, 26,000 Cheviot sheep were sold, and as many as five trainloads would be dispatched south.
Bleak moorland scenery with few trees and the occasional whitewashed cottage pass by as the train descends Strath Fleet through Rogart back to the sea at the former junction of The Mound. Here a branch to the royal burgh of Dornoch went off across Telford’s great embankment of 1813–16. The railway skirts Loch Fleet, with the Skibo Castle estate visible on the south shore. Dating from the 12th century, the castle was bought by the fabulously wealthy Andrew Carnegie in 1897 and encased in a vast baronial pile; it is now a hotel and club grand enough for Madonna’s second wedding in 2000.
Golspie and Dunrobin stations are both associated with the 3rd Duke of Sutherland, whose Scottish seat was Dunrobin Castle. The contribution made by the 3rd Duke to the construction of the Far North line and economic enterprises in the region cannot be overestimated. Perhaps in penance, or at least out of a sense of righting a wrong for the Highland Clearances carried out in the name of his grandfather, the 3rd Duke spent the colossal sum of £322,064 on shares in Highland railway schemes such as the Duke of Sutherland’s Railway between Golspie and Helmsdale and the Sutherland & Caithness Railway, which built the rest of the line north to Wick and Thurso.
Moreover, the 3rd Duke was passionate about things mechanical. There are stories of him and the Prince of Wales following steam-powered fire engines to a blaze when in London, but it was on the HR that he was able to indulge himself. He had Kitson of Leeds build a tank engine, named Dunrobin, to operate his railway until the HR took over the line, after which the locomotive continued to be kept at Brora to haul the Duke over the 86 miles (138 kilometres) to Inverness for board meetings.
The 4th Duke inherited something of his father’s partiality for mechanical matters and had a handsome tank engine built in Glasgow. Also named Dunrobin, it was kept in a shed at Golspie. The cab of Dunrobin incorporated some panels that had been removed from the earlier locomotive, on which distinguished guests continued the tradition of signing their names; they included Queen Alexandra, George V, Kaiser Wilhelm II, Edward VII and Neville Chamberlain. Also kept at Golspie was a small four-wheel day saloon to take the Duke to Inverness and other places on the HR. A much grander saloon running on bogies was built in 1899 at Wolverton in Buckinghamshire, with overnight accommodation for longer journeys south from Inverness; the coach was kept in a shed at Dunrobin station and can be admired today at the National Railway Museum in York.
Thanks to the Dukes of Sutherland, Brora had several industries, besides Britain’s most northerly colliery: the 1st Duke founded the Clynelish distillery, and there was a woollen mill and a brick and tile works. The section on to Helmsdale is delightful, running beside the North Sea. The station at the fishing port of Helmsdale has been converted to provide self-catering holiday accommodation. The line again turns inland and heads up the enchanting Strath of Kildonan, scene of the most unlikely of gold rushes in 1868 and 1896. The line follows the west bank of the River Helmsdale’s steep-sided valley, crossing the water to reach the lonely station at Kinbrace.
High mountains rise above the moorland as the almost treeless landscape becomes progressively wilder. In the tree-sheltered station building at Forsinard, the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds has established its Flows visitor centre with trails over the peat bogs where dipper, dunlin, golden plovers and hen harriers can be seen. During the First World War, sphagnum moss was dispatched by train from Forsinard, for use in dressing wounds.
Red deer can often be seen from the train, especially in winter, as it sets off across the most barren and desolate part of the journey, across the Flow Country. The station at Altnabreac served a lonely shooting lodge, but not until Scotscalder is there likely to be a sign of life. The train descends through Caithness’s farming belt to Britain’s most northerly junction, Georgemas, where passengers for Thurso get the upper hand: a separate Thurso branch train used to provide a connection, while the Wick train continued south, but the importance of Thurso rose with the creation of Dounreay nuclear power station, and today the train reverses to Thurso before retracing its steps to Georgemas and on to Wick.
Thurso was the destination of ‘Jellicoes’ from April 1940 as well as during the First World War. Like Lairg, Thurso has been a centre for sheep sales and generated substantial rail traffic; in a four-day sale in 1949, for example, eleven trains carrying 29,650 sheep were dispatched. Neither town would be a tourist destination but for the impressive coastline and John o’ Groats, ferries to the Orkneys and Faroes, and the late Queen Mother’s home at the Castle and Gardens of Mey.
How long: 4 hours
THE ROAD TO THE ISLES
Unquestionably one of the world’s finest railway journeys, the line from Glasgow to Fort William and on to Mallaig traverses some of Britain’s loneliest landscapes: ‘a wearier looking desert man never saw’ was how the hero of Robert Louis Stevenson’s Kidnapped described Rannoch Moor. The stupendous scenery is enlivened on weekdays until early October, and at August weekends, by the bark of steam locomotives working the Jacobite Steam Train between Fort William and Mallaig.
Besides trains from Glasgow Queen Street, the line is also traversed by the Caledonian Sleeper from London Euston. There are few greater contrasts in British train travel than pulling up the covers in the dark of the Home Counties and waking up to Scottish moorland and mountains.
The journey starts under the 1880 wrought-iron roof of Glasgow Queen Street; the station was built on the site of a sandstone quarry and it still has a subterranean feel, exacerbated by the climb in tunnel and trench out of the station up a 1 in 42 gradient that was beyond the power of early steam locomotion. Consequently, until August 1909, trains had to be winched up Cowlairs Incline by stationary steam engines.
The train winds through the Glasgow suburbs, passing Singer station to remind one of the factory where almost 7,000 workers made 13,000 of the eponymous sewing machines each week, and of a time when there wasn’t much that Britain didn’t manufacture. Today the train passes soulless sheds simply selling stuff. The railway comes close to the Clyde at Bowling before Dumbarton and its volcanic crag and castle. There are fine views over the estuary, but little shipping disturbs its waters compared with a century ago when railway-owned paddle steamers frothed the water between many a Clyde and island pier, besides innumerable cargo ships.
The 100-mile (161-kilometre) West Highland Railway begins at Craigendoran Junction, where the train turns abruptly north along a ledge with broadening views over Gare Loch. The diesel engines growl up the bank through leafy Helensburgh, while ships ride at anchor in the estuary, before disappearing behind loch-side woods of birch and oak. Churchill departed on three of his four wartime visits to see President Roosevelt from Gare Loch’s Admiralty port of Faslane.
From Garelochhead there is a spectacular view back along the narrow loch to the south before one of those almost theatrical transitions that punctuate the route. The train burrows through a fern-clad cutting and emerges to a panorama over Loch Long, where it is joined by Loch Goil. Arrochar & Tarbet station, which once supplied breakfast baskets to northbound passengers, lies between lochs Long and Lomond on a strip of land used as a portage in 1263 by King Haakon IV of Norway as he sought more places to raid.
The views along Loch Lomond are some of the finest of the journey, the railway running along a shelf cut into the hillside above a dense canopy of trees. A summer ferry links Inveruglas with the idyllically situated Inversnaid Hotel on the opposite shore. Near the hotel is Rob Roy’s cave, where the red-headed fugitive Jacobite, much romanticised by Sir Walter Scott, is said to have holed up. Perhaps one day the largest vessel built for a British inland waterway, the paddlesteamer Maid of the Loch, may again churn the loch’s waters. Launched in 1953, she is moored at Balloch at the south end of the loch and welcomes visitors while fundraising continues for full restoration.
THE ROAD TO THE ISLES
Photo: 96 tommy
The country becomes wilder as the train starts the long climb up Glen Falloch beside the birch-fringed river. After heavy rain, not unusual hereabouts, waterfalls can be seen scoring a ribbon of white against the dark rock; this was the valley Wordsworth described as ‘the vale of awful sound’. The climb ends at the meeting of three glens and the junction for Oban at Crianlarich, where the train usually divides. Though the West Highland line once boasted dining-cars, the refreshment room at Crianlarich used to dispense wicker luncheon baskets, and a tea-room still serves passing travellers.
The climb continues up a V-shaped valley to County March summit at 312 metres (1,024 feet), and snow posts on the adjacent A82 must have made many a passenger thankful they were not travelling along it. One of the most dramatic features of the railway is heralded by cone-shaped Ben Doran; the railway leaves the River Orchy to turn east into a great horseshoe curve on embankment and viaduct to reach the lower flank of the mountain and continue up Glen Orchy, sharing the valley with the river, road and an old military road now part of the West Highland Way footpath.
North of the lonely station at Bridge of Orchy, the railway passes Loch Tulla, and for the next 32 miles (51 kilometres) nothing more than a track is seen again. The wilderness of Rannoch Moor is majestic, one of those rare places in Britain that feels truly wild, and it was home for families at some of the most remote railway postings in Britain where passing loops were created, at Gorton, Rannoch and Corrour.
For many years the two shifts at Gorton were covered by a signalman and his daughter. There was no public station there, but the early morning train stopped specially to pick up the children of railway workers living in the few cottages to take them to school at Rannoch, a timetabled station though a desolate spot in the middle of the moor made famous by Robert Louis Stevenson in Kidnapped. Children living in lineside cottages further north were picked up by a morning train and taken to school in Fort William. After Easter 1938, however, the school at Rannoch became overcrowded, and so the railway company set up a school at Gorton in an old railway carriage on the platform, and Argyll County Council provided a teacher from Bridge of Orchy to instruct the pupils, who once reached eleven in number.
Saplings were planted around the moorland cottages to act as windbreaks, and clumps of trees became railway landmarks in the desolate landscape. The water on Rannoch is unsafe, so the first train of the day stopped to deliver twelve buckets of water from the locomotive tender to the cottages. After dieselisation it was brought from Fort William in more hygienic containers. If emergency medical help were needed, a locomotive would take a doctor from Fort William or Tulloch. This was an unenviable assignment, because it meant running tender-first for many miles on the return journey, there being no means of turning a locomotive. Tender-first running on the West Highland was avoided at all costs, and on one occasion the three men were so chilled that the fireman could hardly hold the shovel.
When railwaymen from these places went on holiday, a rather particular breed of relief man was required: a portable bed, cooking apparatus, fishing rod and a snare wire were necessary accoutrements. Sometimes the same train delivering the relief man picked up the family he was replacing, so there was time for only a brief exchange. One man found a note for him in the kitchen detailing not railway matters but instructions on how to look after the poultry, cats, dog and three goats.
To the north west of Gorton are the remains of trenches dug by ‘Butcher’ Cumberland’s troops during the 1745 Jacobite Rebellion. The pause at Rannoch station usually sees a few well-equipped walkers alight, enough to support a tea-room in summer and the adjacent Moor of Rannoch Hotel. At the end of the platform is a boulder with a profile of James H. Renton cut into it; capital provided by this director of the North British Railway came to the rescue when the moor was swallowing money as well as all attempts at laying a foundation on the bog. It was eventually floated on layers of turf and brushwood, using methods used by George Stephenson in crossing Chat Moss on the Liverpool & Manchester Railway in the late 1820s.
North of Rannoch station at Cruach is a shed covering the line to protect the track from drifting snow which is unique in Britain. Corrour is the summit of the line at 411 metres (1,348 feet) and shot to fame for a sequence filmed at the station in Danny Boyle’s 1996 film Trainspotting. It was built as a private station for the estate of Sir William Stirling-Maxwell, a founder member of the National Trust for Scotland and whose wealth helped fund the building for Glasgow’s Burrell Collection.
The treeless undulating peat bog continues, with lonely Loch Treig below the line to the west, until Tulloch station, which has been converted into Station Lodge bunkhouse. Turning abruptly west, the railway is joined by the road from Kingussie to Fort William. The railway follows the River Spean, which can become a foaming cataract through the Monessie Gorge.