Today in the @Heritage_NGOs#SouthernProgress I visited @bluebellrailway along with @HRA_UK colleagues to talk about all things steam. Such an insight into a fascinating & complex site focused both on visitors and preservation. 2nd largest landowners in Sussex. Come for a look 👇
There are 4 stations each along the stretch of the @bluebellrailway (each set up for a different era) - first station to be preserved is Sheffield Park. This is 1880s & houses some great things to see. This station was also featured in Box of Delights. Still has gas lights!
At Sheffield Park there is Steamworks including some great education resources & hands on exhibits funded by @HeritageFundUK
Here also is Stepney, inspiration for Rev Awdry creator of Thomas the Tank.
On site there is a hugely dedicated volunteer force (the trust & membership organisation are both completely voluntarily run) and the Bluebell plc has a mix of volunteers, apprentices & staff - between them they are passing on skills & constantly repairing & restoring.
Also on site at Sheffield Park is the museum covering the history of the Bluebell & with a rescued & restored signal box.
Our first leg was in a 1950s carriage (various trips over the day show different parts of the collection). The line has only run to East Grinstead since 2013 as a part of the line had to be restored. A cutting had been filled with rubble & lines taken up. This took £5m.
Here’s the project to cut through to East Grinstead. This latest stretch enables people to also reach the end of the @bluebellrailway line by train from London.
Heading back up the line, here’s the beautiful 50s style restoration at Kingscote bluebell-railway.com/the-stations/k… which is the third of the 4 stations between Sheffield Park & East Grinstead.
We stepped off the train at the larger @bluebellrailway Horsted Keynes station to have a look at the restoration works. This station is 1920s/30s and is often used as a film set including for the Woman in Black & Downton Abbey
There’s a miniature railways & some great historical interpretation spaces at the station.
Also at Horsted Keynes is an @ace_national funded play area for small children housed in an old circus van and decorated beautifully along the theme.
The listed arts & crafts station buildings at both Horsted Keynes & Sheffield Park are exquisite and at Horsted it is currently undergoing specialist restoration work.
At Horsted we also had the privilege of seeing restoration work underway. There’s several sheds & conservation areas here. This carriage is being restored after (like many of its type) it was sold for housing. These wonderful photos show how they were transported to a beach.
Restoring and painting these carriages is a particular skill & work at sites like the bluebell ensures it is not lost and is passed down through volunteers and staff. These carriages are currently receiving undercoats. The latter will be restored to distinctive ‘blood & custard’
These metropolitan line carriages are stunners. They were also particularly useful during Covid as they are separate compartments & could be run as distinct spaces for family/household groups while rules were in place.
One of the most exciting areas was the new conservation lab for ‘Trimming’ - a specialist skill for re-upholstery of the carriage seats. Only 2 people had the skill & they passed this on at @bluebellrailway and now there is a volunteer force trimming here for other sites too.
On our return journey this 30s carriage was my favourite. Beautiful spaces, reminiscent of period dramas of my childhood. It’s the Box of Delights, Swallows & Amazons… with big pre-war windows making travel a real viewing experience.
It was such an enlightening experience to get out on the @bluebellrailway & hear about the opportunities & challenges even for a large steam attraction. Cost of living crisis affects visitors & volunteer travel, coal availability is critical with the final Welsh mine at risk.
These sites are putting in climate change adaptations e.g. ground source heat pumps & looking at solar panels. Coal emissions are minimal (cleaner coal has to be used but needs to be sourced). Tourism benefit is huge. These sites are complex heritage landscapes not just engines.
Fiscal interventions such as 0% on VAT for repair & maintenance, support with climate adaptations would help with restoration. The #CultureRecoveryFund was crucial (thank you @DCMS) but emerging from the crisis the landscape is more complex with energy crisis & fuel availability.
Day one of this week’s @Heritage_NGOs#SouthernProgress in Sussex and I had the chance to return to the wonderful @WealddownMuseum for the first time since the pandemic. Great to catch up with @heritage_notes & chat to volunteers. Here’s a little tour 👇
Firstly big ups to the education team @WealddownMuseum - some great & engaging activities around the site. This week there’s a model railway & chance to create mini medieval buildings, vintage hobby activities & games. Activities vary each week. More here wealddown.co.uk/whats-on/famil…
It’s a working site where visitors can try their hand at traditional techniques & the team farm, cook Tudor meals & use the environment to provide materials (such as for the stove). I love that @WealddownMuseum is a place where traditional skills are practiced & passed on.
Today’s @Heritage_NGOs#NorthernProgress I’m heading into Manchester past the sad sight of Hartford Mill, almost completely dismantled. Just a couple of towers left. manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/greater-m… A sad example of a lack of creativity & environmental awareness of impact of demolition.
I’ve just left the incredible, bustling & unique Georgian @ThePieceHall where I’ve had the privilege of spending the day. Thanks to Steve for the fascinating tour & @NickyChanThomDL & @gary_rae for a great lunch meeting. Here’s a tour… #NorthernProgress
The Grade I listed @PieceHall, Halifax is the only remaining Georgian cloth hall in the world, the sole survivor of the great 18thC northern cloth halls, showing the importance of the trade in wool & hand woven textiles to the pre-industrial economy of West Yorkshire
Originally built as a 2nd cloth hall for Halifax @ThePieceHall (cleverly built to benefit businessman John Caygill) opened New Year’s Day, 1779. The opening, involved “much fanfare and public ceremony”. A large crowd participated in the opening celebrations.
It’s #YorkshireDay & I’m appropriately here to see members for the first day of my @Heritage_NGOs#NorthernProgress Over the Saddleworth Moors we spotted a Triumph Herald Convertible for the mobile gang & a tower built as part of the nuclear early warning comms from Cold War era.
Great to wander this morning round @fountainsabbey with @JustinScullyNT & talk about the site. Studley Royal Water Gardens is a #WorldHeritageSite - an important 18thC surviving landscape (for a time it wasn’t invested in & made fashionable so it survived in original state 😮💨)
Elizabeth Frood talks about the colourisation process of Tutankhamun in Colour & creation myths flagged by @photograph_tut in retellings of the discovery. Nothing surpasses an encounter with the objects themselves - & there are so many stories we will explore today #PerformingTut
Next @RichardParkins5 talks about @bodleianlibs#ExcavatingtheArchive exhibition - moving beyond imperial nostalgia & the ‘Downton Abbey’ popular gold approach. Looking at the archives. Shifting the paradigm from treasure to a much more complex historical process. #PerformingTut
Nice project for someone here - 36 acres in the Lakes, £795k - a site in need of a saviour. @SAVEBrit
Hearing about the work on heritage at risk in Somerset West & Taunton. Interesting to hear that the Wellington Monument, removed from the at risk list last year, is the world’s largest 3 sided obelisk. @SAVEBrit