renegademaster
Established Member
Did you have to give an essential reason? Was it something that was part of the ration books?
The 'Is your journey really necessary?' posters would suggest that you were discouraged rather than restricted.Did you have to give an essential reason? Was it something that was part of the ration books?
Your post makes me wonder what the arrangements would have been in terms of taking a train into a 'Restricted area' - those areas where unless you lived there people were not if I understand it correctly, permitted to travel into, or perhaps had to have v good reason to go into the areas concerned - eg chunks of the south coast ahead of the invasion of Europe I think were designated restricted areas. No doubt other places too.
Thanks for this helpful explanation. It would have been restricted area No 2 that my grandparents would have been telling me about then, as they lived on the south coast overlooking the Solent / Isle of White. I did wonder how easy it would be to manage a restricted area with such a large population, but for only a few months as you say I can see that it would have been achievable.As far as travelling to a restricted area went, there were checks at ’border’ stations to ensure that travellers were either local residents or had business in the area, for which they would have to show suitable documentation. I believe that there were checks at Inverness and Fort William stations as the whole area north and west of the Firth of Lorn and the Great Glen was a restricted area. As far as the south was concerned, Restricted Area (No 2) was a ten mile strip that ran from Lands End to the Wash, but it was only in force for a few months around D-Day. I believe that there were also restrictions on travel to the Isle of Wight, but that would have been easy to police.
My maternal grandparents were billeted at Hilsea for a while during WW2 (grandfather was a Major). A few years ago, my parents visited my family. I drove them over Portsdown Hill (it overlooks Portsmouth and the IoW), my mother recalled where her parents had been stationed.It would have been restricted area No 2 that my grandparents would have been telling me about then, as they lived on the south coast overlooking the Solent / Isle of White.
I regret not asking more relatives about train travel during the war when I would have had the chance.My Mum told me that her and her mother went to Whitby by train a couple of time (she was evacuated there) and my grandfather was stationed there.
Generally the trains were for troops.
She told me she once saw a soldier stood up with backpack fast asleep.
When they travelled up from London to Whitby it was direct and she slept across soldiers laps.
On one occasion her and her Mum arrived at Whitby and a Sargent met them off the train and instructed two soldiers to take their luggage to the accommodation my Grandfather had obtained for them.
Apparently regular commuting was quite possible (subject to air raids, etc). As all fans of Dad's Army will know, "Mr Brown goes off to Town on the 8.21......"
I always heard it that he drove there on the A21 !
The song's lyrics, as performed by Bud Flanagan, weren't actually penned until the late 1960's, so hardly definitive.As all fans of Dad's Army will know, "Mr Brown goes off to Town on the 8.21......"
I can believe that. Soldiers will sleep anywhere and anytime they can.She told me she once saw a soldier stood up with backpack fast asleep.
Fascinating. So nice you still have the diaries and letters. I've read some war time diaries. Very interesting to read what day to day life was like.During the War my mother's family divided their time between London (my grandfather worked at the Woolwich Arsenal) and a village near Okehampton (where my mother and her siblings had moved to live with their aunt for most the duration, attending the local grammar school). My grandmother in particular shuttled back and forth between her husband and her children fairly regularly, but there were also occasional family gatherings in the London house, for Christmas for example. My aunt's comprehensive diary of the period, supported by frequent letters back and forth, never mentioned any legal restrictions on travel (although there were physical problems, like when a wheel fell off the school bus, which had seen better days).
In particular, although most family members took the direct Southern Railway train from Waterloo to Okehampton, there appeared to be no problem with my uncle, then in his early teens, travelling by his favourite Great Western. Nor did he have to get any special permit to do a grand tour of Devon's railways on the eve of his 14th birthday (the last day to take advantage of child fares). My aunt even has an account of his mystification at the strange apparition at the head of the train on one occasion when he was prevailed upon to travel by Southern to help his mother with the luggage. This was, I suspect, one of the first Bulleid Pacifics.
Going back to the timetables. When I look through my Bradshaw from April 1944, it doesn't feel like many trains were removed.
To be fair, no pun intended, this is the April 1944 Bradshaw, so even without the war it wasn't summer time.Pretty well all the summer dated and extra trains disappeared, as did many rush-hour only ones. The basic need for people to go to work and basic living purposes continued, but going off for other purposes was much more difficult. Holiday destinations were largely full of servicemen doing their training, evacuees or workers from offices and factories that had been dispersed: even if you got a room, you probably couldn’t get on the beach as it was wired off. Similarly, large scale entertainments and events did not occur, so there was not the heavy flows that these required. (Yes, no football: how did we survive.)
D L Smith records that, by 1940, the number of troops stationed in Northern Ireland meant that the regular passenger services to Stranraer were inadequate to cope with the numbers going on leave. To cope with this, an additional return service was provided daily to both London and Cardiff. Apparently both trains were made up to 16 coaches and each had a buffet car. Due to lack of siding accommodation at Stranraer, one of these mammoth trains was worked daily through to Ayr for servicing (approximately a 100 mile round trip ECS). Presumably private passengers had to make do with the timetabled services with the extra trains being reserved just for military personnel.My dad was an army conscript from 1943 and was billeted all over the country. From what he told me, nobody would have wanted to travel during the war unless the journey was really necessary. Trains were slower to save fuel, and could get extremely crowded: he was once late getting back to one depot because he couldn't get across the compartment to the door on the platform side and had to travel to the next station to alight. On the other hand, he did travel on lines he'd never been on before, including Carlisle > Stranraer and lines in Northern Ireland. He managed to get a ticket from Castlewellan in Northern Ireland to Margate; the ticket collector at the destination was rather surprised when he saw it.
Off topic but I believe the first known train spotter was a girl who recorded details of trains on Brunel's then new line out of Paddington.that extremely rare bird, a genuine female railway enthusiast;