Peaks at St.Pancras were the absolute pinnacle of the day at that time for me spotting around London until i started on the depots! Cheers for uploading these splendid memories.
Only spotted two complete sets. The 22 Deltics and the 193 Peaks. Living at Chesterfield helped. I know HSTs now have a cult following but I preferred the Peaks.
Absolutely. Dung dung dung dung, GER dung dung dung dung GER dung dung dung , open regulator, dakkkada dakkada dakkada dakkada. The big sulzers always sounded impressive on those 45s.
Compare these scenes with the same location today. Gas holders are now flats, trains go to Belgium/France, and yet the wires don't go much further than Bedford even today! Progress everywhere except on the Midland mainline! Loved the videos. Excellent camera work!
What adds to this amazing video is the colours of the sky adding my to the atmosphere. I loved riding the Peaks when they were diagrammed to haul the Trans-Pennines services.
On the rebuild issue, I think it's a great. I read somewhere they repainted the old shed in it's original colours? The only sad thing is it coincided with the loss loco haulage, parcels trains and associated shunting, and the new version took away the capacity to reinstate those. Still, it's far better than losing St.Pancras (and Marylebone) altogether which due to Thatcher and 'accountant mentality' could have happened.
Crepello 100. Shouldn’t you be over the road at KX? Lovely that you should appreciate mr Barlow’s great work though. For my two pennorth, I love the fact that the hotel was been so comprehensively restored, I love the restoration , cleaning and repainting of the trainshed roof. I grossly dislike the cutting open of part of the platform deck to the horrible retail undercroft. I regard the destruction of the station approach, removal of gas holders, and cluttering the way with the ‘new works’ as cultural vandalism.
St Pancras must surely get the people's vote for the grandest station in London. I loved the unrebuilt station with its Class 45s. During their last evening runs, in 1988, I and a group of lads, used to travel out of St Pancras every Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday nights for months bashing (Monday and Friday only had one diagram). If two 'required' Peaks were working, you caught the first one to Wellingborough and the second one to Kettering. Then made your way back home, which for me, was across London. If only one was working, you turned back at Wellingborough. In the 1980s, St Pancras had a leaky roof, and her red bricks often could be seen with water damage. It is a shame, when they rebuilt the station they bolted on those ugly turds, rather than extend the magnificent roof. The Victorians cared not about cost, but modern accountants do. But at least, this station, once ear-marked for closure, found a new lease of life with Eurostar, Kent High Speed, Thameslink, and Midland Mainline. So future generations can marvel at it.
Never a truer word spoken Vic....it is an iconic Victorian piece of art and at least on the exterior maintains the Gothic feel and look...just like a lot of people wish it was filled with the old classes of locomotives.....many thanks and best regards....Mark
The original St Pancras was absolutely cavernous and dark , really impressive, that cavernous look has been lost to a degree by the elevation of the platforms, to hear one of those Sulzers rumbling over and over under the roof with a white oil lamp placed on the platform by it was an exciting thing to me, and the smell of the diesel as well, it just spelt…‘travel’..main line travel to me!!!!
The driver of 45133 seems to be having a somewhat heated exchange with another member of staff at 8:50, eventually slamming the cab door with a seemingly bad-tempered flourish. Love to know what all that was about. I'm sure he got over it very quickly and calmed down to give his passengers the smooth ride they expected! However it does serve as a reminder that the inner workings of the railway are largely open to public view and scrutiny (unlike water companies or the BBC!)
Memories😊😢. I’d stopped spotting by this date(I was 27). My main haunt was KX, inevitably saw all the Deltics , Cravens DMUs in/out etc. Occasionally Id pop over to St P back in the late 70s. One Sunday I walked in the dark place and I was virtually the only one there! Took in the booking hall. Then watched the old 117s doing the Bed/Pan runs belching out smoke. There was a departmental generator coach stabled in one of the middle roads . Got a pic somewhere. To see those 16 wheeler beastie peaks again in their home environment is magic but knowing their demise is imminent. Where did the light engine Peaks come/go to? Important footage thanks for sharing. PS cant help thinking the driver of 45133 looks like Ronnie Corbet😊smoking a roll up
Yes what fantastic memories and your description sums up St Pancras so well. The LE's were probably just parked up out of sight awaiting their next turn of duty. Cricklewood recess sidings was mostly where locos would recess I presume. I wish it was possible to have been able to bottle up the smell and taste of the location from that era....Many thanks Alan and my sincere best wishes to you.....Mark
I remember in 1976 catching a "Merrymaker" out of St Pancras which took us to Llandudno via (Leicester) Nuneaton....45 all the way there and back....aaaahh what nostalgia...many thanks for watching....Mark
I Have a Propable Date for this, 45133 Worked the ECS to CW off 1C06 -06.00 Nottingham-St.Pancras,45149/45103 Had Worked 1C06 From Nottingham,Later 45149 Worked 1D54 16.35 St.Pancras-Nottingham and 45103 Worked 1P13 17.35 St.Pancras-Derby,While Next Morning 45133 worked 1P03 00.05 St.Pancras-Derby. Date was 28th November 1986.
You people take the mick out of train spotters, as for me who works at the beautiful st pancras will never say such a thing, look at this video from then to videos now. Very interesting and thanks.
I noticed the first HST arrival was the "wrong way round" -any reason why? Give me a 45 any day, better than a 46 or a 47 [used to make me feel seasick!]
Do you mean first being at the rear? I guess it could have been diverted and come in reverse formation, ie ran Derby, Nottingham then St Pancras, or round the back at Sheffield. The first train to Sheffield runs from Leicester with first at front, the runs back road via Darnall into platform 8 at Sheffield, making first now front of the train to St Pancras. The old way was indeed to have front closer to the entrance/exit but some operators do not do this on every set
@@thedreamtommylees I was at the "new"Heaton Depot from 77 to 91, The East Coast HSTs always ran with the first class at the London end and in those days we could use the bridges at Newcastle to turn a set if it happened to be the "wrong" way round. Would you believe when the HSTs were first introduced the vehicles had to be marshalled in NUMERICAL order.
St Pancras, the most wonderful building in London. Bad news, the euroterminal works detrimental, good news, even the reworked st Pancras a million times better than the possible alternative, demolition by 1970. Ideal St P . The train shed full of jubilees. Just about acceptable alternative, the train shed full of Peaks. OK, still fine alternative, the train shed full of HSTs. Train shed full of Euro electrics......neh, I’ll stick with memories of St P as it was.
Never understood why this train had a nose on it I don't know if the driver could see what was in front of him like the train's you have now you have full vision anyway what was it in the nose piece anyway I am not a Train Spotter I hope somebody's not thinking this is a stupid question if so I am sorry 45133 train number
Not a silly question...In the nose some air equipment and also equipment for the Vacuum system was situated. The headcode panel was in there too and isolating cocks for the air systems . It was actually quite cramped in the nose and draughty also very grubby....I dare say other viewers will know much more.....Many thanks and sincere wishes...Mark
Thank you for subscribing to me but I don't produce any videos whosoever I just love your videos because I remember the old train stations I am originally from Birmingham West Midlands living London@@spompey
Looking at this video you forget what a dump the station was in the 80's - absolutely terrible. No wonder few people travelled by train back then. The station looks a mess tbh - unloved, no attempt to tidy things up or make things abit brighter looking. No imagination at all. But the government of the day weren't interested in making things better at St Pancras. They weren't interested in railways full stop. I don't understand those who say the restoration of the station destroyed its character. Go to the station today, and tell me it's worse than it was back in 1986. Look at the entrance, the concourse, how much cleaner the platforms are, how much lighter everything looks. Go and see the hotel - restored to how it was. It was built to be a hotel, not a junk building for old BR equipment. I'm sorry but I cannot agree with anything Paul Booth says about the station being ruined now. Try taking off those rose-tinted glasses. Railways in the 80's (and 70's for that matter) were as grim as anything. Especially suburban trains, and stations.
Really? I think they've done an awesome job with the Eurostar terminal and finally given it services prestigious enough to be worthy of it. It was rather rundown and far, far bigger than what it was needed for back in BR days. Yes, the Midland mainline services have rather been shoved off into an annex, but still
@@robtyman4281 Opinions differ. St Pancras was a Grade One listed building, and it needed, and should have got, care, maintenance and some restoration. For an example of what you can do to update a magnificent railway station without destroying its character, see the Hauptbahnhoff in Leipzig.
11:40 Lights his cigarette and off we go - a man of his time, driving a classic loco! 🚂👍
Good old boy.....Best wishes Dave and many thanks...Mark
Peaks at St.Pancras were the absolute pinnacle of the day at that time for me spotting around London until i started on the depots! Cheers for uploading these splendid memories.
Yes I too remember when the station was filled with "Peaks" at the head of long rakes of stock heading for the North....Best wishes....Mark
Only spotted two complete sets. The 22 Deltics and the 193 Peaks. Living at Chesterfield helped. I know HSTs now have a cult following but I preferred the Peaks.
Personally I love these unedited videos. There's lots of detail that would otherwise be missed - it's like I'm actually there!
You ain't kidding. Just listening to that Peak was fantastic.
Totally agree
Can't remember a better three minutes on a YT video than listening to that Peak ticking over, waiting time.
Many thanks for your kind comment.....best regards...Mark
Good pair of headphones and max volume!
Absolutely. Dung dung dung dung, GER dung dung dung dung GER dung dung dung , open regulator, dakkkada dakkada dakkada dakkada. The big sulzers always sounded impressive on those 45s.
Great footage. I forgot how rundown St Pancras was at the time!!
It seemed so cavernous....best wishes...Mark
Compare these scenes with the same location today. Gas holders are now flats, trains go to Belgium/France, and yet the wires don't go much further than Bedford even today! Progress everywhere except on the Midland mainline! Loved the videos. Excellent camera work!
many thanks for your kind comment Graham...much appreciated and very true about St.Pancras....Mark
Wires go to Corby and are well in progress to advancing to Market Harbrough. Leicester will soon be electrified then up to Sheffield
@@thedreamtommyleesDream on they have stalled north of Market Harborough
Yeah , another great line ruined
@@thedreamtommylees
What adds to this amazing video is the colours of the sky adding my to the atmosphere. I loved riding the Peaks when they were diagrammed to haul the Trans-Pennines services.
Much appreciated David....Many thanks for the comment and for your interest....Best wishes...Mark
On the rebuild issue, I think it's a great. I read somewhere they repainted the old shed in it's original colours? The only sad thing is it coincided with the loss loco haulage, parcels trains and associated shunting, and the new version took away the capacity to reinstate those. Still, it's far better than losing St.Pancras (and Marylebone) altogether which due to Thatcher and 'accountant mentality' could have happened.
Crepello 100. Shouldn’t you be over the road at KX? Lovely that you should appreciate mr Barlow’s great work though. For my two pennorth, I love the fact that the hotel was been so comprehensively restored, I love the restoration , cleaning and repainting of the trainshed roof. I grossly dislike the cutting open of part of the platform deck to the horrible retail undercroft. I regard the destruction of the station approach, removal of gas holders, and cluttering the way with the ‘new works’ as cultural vandalism.
St Pancras must surely get the people's vote for the grandest station in London. I loved the unrebuilt station with its Class 45s. During their last evening runs, in 1988, I and a group of lads, used to travel out of St Pancras every Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday nights for months bashing (Monday and Friday only had one diagram). If two 'required' Peaks were working, you caught the first one to Wellingborough and the second one to Kettering. Then made your way back home, which for me, was across London. If only one was working, you turned back at Wellingborough.
In the 1980s, St Pancras had a leaky roof, and her red bricks often could be seen with water damage.
It is a shame, when they rebuilt the station they bolted on those ugly turds, rather than extend the magnificent roof. The Victorians cared not about cost, but modern accountants do.
But at least, this station, once ear-marked for closure, found a new lease of life with Eurostar, Kent High Speed, Thameslink, and Midland Mainline. So future generations can marvel at it.
Never a truer word spoken Vic....it is an iconic Victorian piece of art and at least on the exterior maintains the Gothic feel and look...just like a lot of people wish it was filled with the old classes of locomotives.....many thanks and best regards....Mark
The original St Pancras was absolutely cavernous and dark , really impressive, that cavernous look has been lost to a degree by the elevation of the platforms, to hear one of those Sulzers rumbling over and over under the roof with a white oil lamp placed on the platform by it was an exciting thing to me, and the smell of the diesel as well, it just spelt…‘travel’..main line travel to me!!!!
Yes the place and scene had an air of character and nostalgia....Many thanks and best regards.....Mark
The driver of 45133 seems to be having a somewhat heated exchange with another member of staff at 8:50, eventually slamming the cab door with a seemingly bad-tempered flourish. Love to know what all that was about. I'm sure he got over it very quickly and calmed down to give his passengers the smooth ride they expected! However it does serve as a reminder that the inner workings of the railway are largely open to public view and scrutiny (unlike water companies or the BBC!)
It may well have been a guard.....who will ever know.....but Many thanks for your comment and for watching...best wishes...Mark
excellent footage! interesting (for me anyway) to see the blue grey 317s on the line before the 319s arrived.
As long as whatever your interest is I am just appreciative for your interest in the video...Many thanks....best wishes...Mark
Good days, very interesting.
Thanks for posting.
You are most welcome and many thanks....Mark
Memories😊😢. I’d stopped spotting by this date(I was 27). My main haunt was KX, inevitably saw all the Deltics , Cravens DMUs in/out etc. Occasionally Id pop over to St P back in the late 70s. One Sunday I walked in the dark place and I was virtually the only one there! Took in the booking hall. Then watched the old 117s doing the Bed/Pan runs belching out smoke. There was a departmental generator coach stabled in one of the middle roads . Got a pic somewhere. To see those 16 wheeler beastie peaks again in their home environment is magic but knowing their demise is imminent. Where did the light engine Peaks come/go to? Important footage thanks for sharing. PS cant help thinking the driver of 45133 looks like Ronnie Corbet😊smoking a roll up
Yes what fantastic memories and your description sums up St Pancras so well. The LE's were probably just parked up out of sight awaiting their next turn of duty. Cricklewood recess sidings was mostly where locos would recess I presume. I wish it was possible to have been able to bottle up the smell and taste of the location from that era....Many thanks Alan and my sincere best wishes to you.....Mark
Love the peaks big locomotives
I remember in 1976 catching a "Merrymaker" out of St Pancras which took us to Llandudno via (Leicester) Nuneaton....45 all the way there and back....aaaahh what nostalgia...many thanks for watching....Mark
Hated the peaks for ousting the jubilees. Came to love the peaks. That 12 cylinder sulzer throb echoing round the trainshed, wonderful.
@@brianwillson9567Many thanks brian......Mark
Also loved your rendition pf loco sounds....Fabulous.....mark
Brilliant, loved the Peaks . 👍👍
You're most welcome....Many thanks for your comment and for watching...best wishes...Mark
The home of the peaks 😊
Many thanks for your comment and for watching...best wishes...Mark
I Have a Propable Date for this, 45133 Worked the ECS to CW off 1C06 -06.00 Nottingham-St.Pancras,45149/45103 Had Worked 1C06 From Nottingham,Later 45149 Worked 1D54 16.35 St.Pancras-Nottingham and 45103 Worked 1P13 17.35 St.Pancras-Derby,While Next Morning 45133
worked 1P03 00.05 St.Pancras-Derby. Date was 28th November 1986.
Many thanks Graham and best wishes....Mark
Great old footage of the video
You are most welcome and Many thanks for watching and for your comment best regards....Mark
You people take the mick out of train spotters, as for me who works at the beautiful st pancras will never say such a thing, look at this video from then to videos now. Very interesting and thanks.
You're Very welcome Paul......Many thanks and best wishes.......Mark
I'm trying to catch up on the last 3 videos to much to choose from of classic traction,especially St Pancras..
So glad I am at last fulfilling viewers interest....very much appreciated...Mark
I noticed the first HST arrival was the "wrong way round" -any reason why? Give me a 45 any day, better than a 46 or a 47 [used to make me feel seasick!]
Had a cab ride in 45106 in green livery, on one of its last runs out of there, got out at Kettering, used to get away with that in the 80s !
Do you mean first being at the rear? I guess it could have been diverted and come in reverse formation, ie ran Derby, Nottingham then St Pancras, or round the back at Sheffield.
The first train to Sheffield runs from Leicester with first at front, the runs back road via Darnall into platform 8 at Sheffield, making first now front of the train to St Pancras. The old way was indeed to have front closer to the entrance/exit but some operators do not do this on every set
@@thedreamtommylees I was at the "new"Heaton Depot from 77 to 91, The East Coast HSTs always ran with the first class at the London end and in those days we could use the bridges at Newcastle to turn a set if it happened to be the "wrong" way round. Would you believe when the HSTs were first introduced the vehicles had to be marshalled in NUMERICAL order.
Did you ever feel unsafe around there? Kings Cross and St Pancras could be pretty dodgy back then.
Not really, apart from at night maybe, but I found Euston more wary.....best wishes to you...Mark
Crikey the HID wasn't messing about on that Peaky Blinder coming in light (hah) engine.
Many thanks for the comment and best wishes....Mark
Was the 10mph over the bridge just for fun. 😮😮😮
Maybe the speedo was clapped out or out of view....best wishes Malcolm as always....Mark
St Pancras, the most wonderful building in London. Bad news, the euroterminal works detrimental, good news, even the reworked st Pancras a million times better than the possible alternative, demolition by 1970. Ideal St P . The train shed full of jubilees. Just about acceptable alternative, the train shed full of Peaks. OK, still fine alternative, the train shed full of HSTs. Train shed full of Euro electrics......neh, I’ll stick with memories of St P as it was.
You're most welcome Brian...Many thanks for your comment and for watching...best wishes...Mark
It looked then a run down Nobody cares br station in the 80s, what a difference now.
Many thanks for your comment and for watching...best wishes...Mark
Never understood why this train had a nose on it I don't know if the driver could see what was in front of him like the train's you have now you have full vision anyway what was it in the nose piece anyway I am not a Train Spotter I hope somebody's not thinking this is a stupid question if so I am sorry 45133 train number
Not a silly question...In the nose some air equipment and also equipment for the Vacuum system was situated. The headcode panel was in there too and isolating cocks for the air systems . It was actually quite cramped in the nose and draughty also very grubby....I dare say other viewers will know much more.....Many thanks and sincere wishes...Mark
Thank you for subscribing to me but I don't produce any videos whosoever I just love your videos because I remember the old train stations I am originally from Birmingham West Midlands living London@@spompey
@@VICTOR-pf9eg That is fine....Many thanks to you and best wishes...Mark
July 88 was the final month for Peak working, usually as far as Derby only.
Many thanks Duncan.....Mark
I HATE what has been done to this Grade One listed buidling.
Yes I too agree I thought listed buildings could not be altered that much....Many thanks....Mark
Well it was either the present restored building or demolition. Just be happy it exists at all.
Looking at this video you forget what a dump the station was in the 80's - absolutely terrible.
No wonder few people travelled by train back then. The station looks a mess tbh - unloved, no attempt to tidy things up or make things abit brighter looking. No imagination at all. But the government of the day weren't interested in making things better at St Pancras. They weren't interested in railways full stop.
I don't understand those who say the restoration of the station destroyed its character. Go to the station today, and tell me it's worse than it was back in 1986. Look at the entrance, the concourse, how much cleaner the platforms are, how much lighter everything looks. Go and see the hotel - restored to how it was. It was built to be a hotel, not a junk building for old BR equipment.
I'm sorry but I cannot agree with anything Paul Booth says about the station being ruined now. Try taking off those rose-tinted glasses. Railways in the 80's (and 70's for that matter) were as grim as anything. Especially suburban trains, and stations.
Really? I think they've done an awesome job with the Eurostar terminal and finally given it services prestigious enough to be worthy of it. It was rather rundown and far, far bigger than what it was needed for back in BR days. Yes, the Midland mainline services have rather been shoved off into an annex, but still
@@robtyman4281 Opinions differ. St Pancras was a Grade One listed building, and it needed, and should have got, care, maintenance and some restoration. For an example of what you can do to update a magnificent railway station without destroying its character, see the Hauptbahnhoff in Leipzig.
Great footage, although highlights the disgusting state of British Rail at the time 🤔
It does look a little clinical nowadays, but I suppose that is modernisation...Many thanks for watching and best regards....Mark
论辱华车站的昨天
Many thanks....Mark
stop touching her!😂辱华车站😂
Many thanks....mark