Since finding out about a certain Mr Marples, my opinion of Dr Beeching is that he was really a pawn and Mr Marples was the real villian. I think I know even less about Mr Major than the other two, but my perception of him in terms of railways is probably somewhere between the Marples and Beeching.
This view of Marples is common - but inaccurate. He was admittedly a rogue but if Marples hadn't been Minister of Transport then someone else would have been
and very similar changes would have taken place. It was not just Marples who thought cars were the future. Most people did so too - which is why they bought cars. The number of cars on the road doubled in just 10 years - from 4.9 million in 1960 to 9.97 million in 1970 - so it's hardly surprising that there was pressure for new or re-built roads.
This demand had nothing whatsoever to do with personalities or politics and everything to do with car manufacturers gaining the cost savings of larger production volumes. And this increase in the number of cars played merry hell with passenger numbers, especially on the branch lines and shorter distance main line journeys.
Trains were perceived to be, and often were, old-fashioned and dirty. Many people's memories were still coloured by horrendous journeys during the war or going on holiday - one summer Saturday in 1957 some 80 long distance trains ran through Newton Abbot on their way west and
all of them were more than TWO HOURS late. People decided never to use the train again. And they told their friends. Steam traction was still being used and passengers got smuts in their eyes and dirty shirts. Many coaches were pre-war and frequently taps didn't work or the sliding windows jammed. The upholstery was often caked in dust and dirt.
Stations were grimy places - some of them hadn't seen a paint brush since, ooh, 1938. Even the new diesel locomotives were covered in dirt and oil after a few weeks use and scarely seemed a good advertisement for the Modernisation Plan. They also kept breaking down - including one embarrassing time on the Royal Train.
Cars were clean - and yours. They went when you wanted, where you wanted and on the route you wanted. You never 'missed' your car and it wasn't necessary to get a bus to the station first.
People voted against the railway. The closures had little or nothing to do with Marples' business interests or personality, but everything to do with a fall in demand and a collapse in receipts.
And Beeching was no pawn, he was a director of Imperial Chemical Industries.
Edit note: Quote marks fixed, for clarity. CfN.