Things of which I have posted in previous threads on Railway History and Nostalgia -- anyway: born in 1948, lived for first decade of my life in Spalding, Lincolnshire: convergence-point then, of three secondary (? tertiary) cross-country routes. Plus, a number of holidays staying with relatives in the Chester area: a fair amount of train travel in both these venues, and between them (using the Harwich -- Manchester boat express). In my early years, all this
was busily in use, and all-steam: which I found enchanting. It got me hooked on the rail scene; which passion has lasted -- though for me, end of steam and demise of majority of the most delightful parts of the system, have turned that real-life scene in Britain, pretty dull and bleak -- if I'd been born only ten or a dozen years later, suspect that I would not have been a railway enthusiast.
My parents were not notably "into" railways -- though my father, a mechanical engineer, had a certain degree of interest in all powered transport; but they were supportive of my rail passion. Also, in the earlier 1950s we didn't have a reliable family car: hence, as above, a goodly quantity of train travel. Think it likely that my first-ever train journey -- the experience remembered only fragmentarily, but cherished -- was a return excursion (not an "enthusiast" thing -- for "real people" who wanted a day at the seaside) Spalding -- Hunstanton via Sutton Bridge and "the Lynns" -- motive power deduced as highly probably, an Ivatt 4MT 2-6-0. (This was a special, happening on a Sunday -- thus, no regular services running on the Midland & Great Northern Joint system on that day.)
Despite the overall era, loco-number-spotting passed me by; I was a somewhat solitary kid -- am also borderline innumerate: was never able to see point or interest in the numbers-collecting thing. Was, even, decidedly slow in getting much of a "handle" on the different steam classes. Am content to reckon myself in the same category here, as my hero Bryan Morgan: loving the romance of the overall railway -- especially for me, steam -- "thing"; but very un-technically-minded, and not much concerned, re self, with that side of the subject.