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LSWR carriage found inside house
 
LSWR carriage found inside house
Posted by Marlburian at 17:30, 1st July 2021
 
Last Thursday I re-visited the sites of some of the military railways in the Amesbury-Bulford area and passed the Stonehenge Inn between Larkhill and Bulford. In its garden I noticed what appeared to be an old railway carriage - and so it proved to be:

The Sun article

Re: LSWR carriage found inside house
Posted by stuving at 19:43, 1st July 2021
 
The use of railway carriages for housing was actually quite common between the wars. I guess this one was already in use, and then "extended" into a proper house. I had a look for newspaper references, and found quite a few "railway carriage bungalows", though none in Wiltshire. They were mainly along the south coast, and in some places were seen as a problem by officialdom. Here's an example, from the Chichester Observer of 30 November 1932:


Re: LSWR carriage found inside house
Posted by eightonedee at 20:26, 1st July 2021
 
There was an example of this at Purley on Thames. In the 1920s or 1930s a field near Mapledurham Lock was acquired at auction by a speculator who divided into plots and sold it for cheap holiday homes - mostly old railway carriages, caravans, huts and similar. Many were bought by Londoners, who then moved into them permanently, especially after the Blitz began. The "Purley Park River Estate" came into being.

After the 1960s a process of gentrification, encouraged by the local planners began and helped by the fact that many of the residents were getting old. Plots were consolidated and redeveloped and most of the badly rutted gravel roads made up to highway standards and taken over by the highway authority.

One of the converted carriages was rescued and is now at Didcot - see https://didcotrailwaycentre.org.uk/article.php/145/no-2511-dean-6-wheel-family-saloon

Re: LSWR carriage found inside house
Posted by Marlburian at 20:33, 1st July 2021
 
More about the Purley Park River Estate here

There are still two or three modest and ramshackle buildings among the modern up-market houses.

Re: LSWR carriage found inside house
Posted by broadgage at 21:22, 1st July 2021
 
Peacehaven in Sussex was also noted for cheap and improvised dwellings. Railway carriages might have been a bit upmarket for Peacehaven, old horse drawn caravans, and garden sheds featured, also war surplus huts, FIRST war of course.

The pre war founding of Peacehaven was regarded as a scandal by some and it is alleged that the Town and country planning acts were introduced to prevent a repeat.

Jaywick in Essex is a bit similar with a lot of cheap and low quality housing. Portahuts of various types feature, I wonder if any pacers will end up in Jaywick ?

Re: LSWR carriage found inside house
Posted by Marlburian at 13:33, 3rd July 2021
 
Reverting (albeit a little clumsily) to Bulford, here's a clip (starting at 04.09) of New Zealander troops entraining at Bulford during the Great War.

Note the extra large canopy added at the request of the War Office to provide more shelter for troops.

Pity that most of the track-bed (now a right-of-way) is almost impossible to walk because of very deep ruts caused in part by civilian off-road vehicles.

Re: LSWR carriage found inside house
Posted by Marlburian at 15:01, 15th September 2025
 
I think that the carriage in this pic may also have been ex LSWR. One window has "AME" painted above it right on the margin of the print, leading to the assumption that this was a scene at Amesbury in Wiltshire and a railhead for Salisbury Plain.

I couldn't recognise the roof tops beyond the carriage as being at that station, nor at Bulford, the civilian terminus of the  branch off the Basingstoke-Salisbury line. I enlarged the image to examine the magazines on display. One was Popular Mechanics, an American magazine. Below the bottom of the window with "AME" above it was painted "MAGA", so I concluded that this signified that the stall was selling American magazines. But obviously a scene at a British station.

(No jokes needed about this being an early manifestation of Trump's MAGA, please!)

Re: LSWR carriage found inside house
Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 15:54, 15th September 2025
 
The soldier in the middle appears to be Canadian, noting the maple leaves on his collar.

 
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