Showing posts with label Itchen Abbas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Itchen Abbas. Show all posts

Sunday, 5 February 2023

50 Years Later - the Winchester to Alton railway


It's unusual for people to remember something that happened exactly 50 years ago, but sometimes as railway enthusiasts we do!

The Winchester-Alton 'Watercress Line' closed on 5 February 1973. I was there on the last day (the 4th) as it was a line quite close to me.

I first travelled on the line a few years earlier, in 1970, to actually visit another line. We were staying in Winchester were we had relatives, and me and my brother took the train from Winchester to Alton, changing there to continue to Bentley. From Bentley we planned to travel to Bordon by bus to visit the Longmoor Military Railway, which had closed the previous year. First problem was it was a bank holiday and the buses were running a Sunday service, which meant NO buses! So we had to walk to Bordon! We found the Longmoor Military Railway there but just an empty trackbed, they'd already lifted the line which was a shame.

This was BC, Before Camera, so no pictures and just vague memories unfortunately. My first photo was taken on 9.7.1971, about a year later.

I then made another trip on a rover ticket AC (after camera) and took a few very misty shots, but I think they captured the gloomy atmosphere of a soon to be closed line very well.



(Two above Alresford 4.1.1973 Copyright Steve Sainsbury/Rail Thing)


(Winchester Junction 4.1.1973 copyright Steve Sainsbury/Rail Thing)


                         (Medstead and Four Marks 4.1.1973 Copyright Steve Sainsbury/Rail Thing)

On the final day I only travelled to Itchen Abbas, to get some photos there. I felt a built guilty as I couldn't book a ticket directly from Littlehampton to Itchen Abbas, I had to rebook at Winchester but didn't have time to do that as I'd have missed the Alton train! I got some surprisingly good quality photos there on a cheap camera. The light must have been good.


















                                         (All copyright Steve Sainsbury/Rail Thing 4.2.1973)

I visited Itchen Abbas a few years later, the station was intact but the line had been lifted. I was on a motorbike back then which was an easy way to visit railways after they'd closed.




                                                      (All copyright Steve Sainsbury 1976)

Medstead and Four Marks, further east, was a wreck with track lifted and junk everywhere. A sadder sight than Itchen Abbas in a way.



                        (Medstead and Four Marks 24.6.1976 Copyright Steve Sainsbury/Rail Thing)

I visited Alresford a few years later after it had become the site of a heritage railway, track down, steam locos and rolling stock in the platforms and yard. A sign that things were turning round at last. 

I travelled on to Ropley which with track down but no activity was more a haven for wildlife than railway fans!






                                 (All Ropley 24.6.1976 copyright Steve Sainsbury/Rail Thing)

Now of course the Alresford to Alton stretch is a busy heritage line, a premier league one at that. It's inevitably lost a lot of the atmosphere both the BR line and the deep closure line had, but it's doing a job now and providing a fair amount of employment locally.



                                    (Ropley 18.7.2015 Copyright Steve Sainsbury/Rail Thing)

The stretch beyond Alresford via Itchen Abbas to Winchester Junction is still lost and although a Winchester connection would tap into possible extra custom from the Southampton area coming up the main line, in reality, at least for now, most visitors come by car anyway, although the Network link at Alton is well used. And there would be the issue of shared track for a couple of kilometres at Winchester not to mention the need for extra capacity at Winchester station. It may well become a hot issue in future decades but for now that part of the line is in deep sleep.


Saturday, 10 January 2015

Itchen Abbas 4.2.1973 (part 2)












(All copyright Steve Sainsbury/Rail Thing 4.2.1973)


A few more shots from my trip to Itchen Abbas on the last day of the Mid Hants Watercress line.
I still feel guilty to this day that I never actually paid for this journey! I had a ticket to Eastleigh but tight connections meant I couldn't get to the ticket office there to pay for the onward journey! Of course from that point the train was so packed that there was no chance of buying a ticket on board.

It was one of those dull February days which, back in 1973, pretty much guaranteed that your photos would come out overexposed or hazy or generally flat. For some reason these seem to have captured the sombre atmosphere of the day and didn't come out too bad either, so 42 years on I'm still quite proud of them as I'd only been taking pics for about 18 months and was just 16.

Itchen Abbas must miss its railway, and look jealously at Ropley and Medstead and Alresford that still have trains, albeit steam ones. I do think this piece of the route will eventually reopen, it's far too valuable a route to lose and it certainly would never have closed had it lasted a few years longer. But for now it's a backwater, stuck in a sort of transport limbo for a while longer.


A few years later - 24.6.1976 (copyright Steve Sainsbury/Rail Thing)

Thursday, 8 January 2015

Itchen Abbas 4.2.1973









(All copyright Steve Sainsbury/Rail Thing 4.2.1973)


A late (and stupid) closure was Winchester to Alton, which missed electrification, provided an excellent (if difficult) alternative route, served the large town of Alresford and a lot of commuters, yet still was sacrificed as late as 1973.

I'd travelled on this lovely line a couple of times before closure, once to continue on to Bentley from Alton for a long walk down to the remains of the Longmoor Military Railway, which in 1970 was still in situ (but at 14 I didn't own a camera!)

So on the last day rather than travel the whole line again I decided to get off at Itchen Abbas, the first station on the line. It was a good choice as the station wasn't crowded with enthusiasts so I could get some decent shots - albeit square format and on a very cheap camera - without having to nudge my way through. The trains were strengthened for the last day.

We didn't know then of course that most of the line would later be saved, but Itchen Abbas, at the moment is still on the 'lost' stretch of route, and hasn't seen a train (other than demolition trains) for almost 42 years now.