Thanks, John ... that's very much what I took overall from the timetables. One train every two hours on Cardiff / Portsmouth, on the Cotswold line, on Avonmouth at some times of day, calling at Chippenham and a just one train a day from north of Birmingham to Bournemouth ... but then Oxford - Cambridge, Bridport, Minehead, Tavistock, Ilfracome, south from Stratford, Kingswear and others - some of which were running more frequently that the services that have survived and thrived - are all gone at least in their 1960s form. I wonder where they would have been now had they survived the low point of rail.
These journeys were still made and are still done today, we need to thank our parents and grandparents generation for their eagerness to buy cars and hit the open road, there is now several generations where car travel is the norm and train travel are "Santa Specials"
I've mentioned before on this forum that the rest of my household do
not share my interest in railways - indeed, they are vocal in their disapproval of the amount of time I spend here
- but each Christmas they nevertheless surprise me by offering an absolutely brilliant railway-related gift. This year was no exception: I was given a 3 disc boxed set of DVDs on 'Beeching's Legacy' - three and a half hours of fascinating history for me to savour (provided I can find the time, obviously).
This looks like giving some food for thought, along the lines of grahame's original post:
CfN Easy to knock Beeching he was one of a many who had a hand in closing railways this is an interesting read
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Holding-Line-Britains-Railways-Saved/dp/0860936473 Lines were being closed back in the days of the Big Four and the then
BR▸ closed lots of branch lines in the 1950's way before Beeching and of course Barbara Castle perpetuated the formula with BR and successive Governments continued right into the 1980's then there was the Seprpal report
Its a great book worth are read