It is easy 50 years on to criticises Beeching, it was quite simple at the time the British public had found an new modern way to travel .......... the car and the open motorway. The bad person in this of course was Ernest Marples the Transport Minister and the fact his wife "owned"
Marples - Ridgeway the builds or the M1 had no effect on the task he set Beeching.
Just to flesh out Electric train's remark about the British public having found a new way to travel. At the end of 1950 there were 1,979,000
million cars on the road. By 1955 this had risen to 3,109,000, in 1960 to 4,900,000. By 2005 the number exceeded 26,000,000.
In the ten years to the Beeching report the number of cars on the road had much more than doubled. It was not surprising that local passenger traffic vanished; only the lack of motorways stopped this happening on the inter-city routes as well.
The Minister of Transport could have been called Joe Bloggs rather than Ernest Marples - the growth in the number of cars shows why the motorways would still have been built.
Most of the Modernisation Plan money was ill-spent - the one outstanding success was the purchase of the English Electric 'Deltics' for the East Coast main line which from 1962 showed there was a market for high speed, long distance traffic. This was the psychological turning point for the passenger business - underlined four years later by the Euston-Manchester and Liverpool electric service.
Oops! There weren't that many cars on the road^!