Introduction - If we could turn the clock back and revisit Ulster's railways in the 1960s, we would see a very different scene compared with that of today. The railways were then operated by the Ulster Transport Authority on infrastructure which largely dated back to the Victorian and Edwardian eras. Despite the widespread introduction of diesel railcars in the 1950s, steam still had an important, although decreasing, role to play. The Ulster Transport Authority was created on 1 October 1948, taking over responsibility for the Belfast and County Down Railway and the already state-owned Northern Ireland Road Transport Board. After a brief sojourn with the British Transport Commission, the former lines of the Northern Counties Committee of the London Midland and Scottish Railway became part of the UTA on 1 April 1949. The cross-border railway companies, most notably the Great Northern Railway of Ireland, remained independent. However, financial crisis soon led to the two Governments in Ireland jointly taking over the GNR(I) and running it through the Great Northern Railway Board, with effect from 1953.The 1950s saw an unprecedented programme of railway closures on both the UTA and GNRB systems.In 1958, the GNRB was dissolved and its remaining lines in Northern Ireland transferred to the UTA. Then followed a brief period of stability until publication of the Benson report in 1963. It recommended more severe cuts in the railway network including both lines to Londonderry. In the event the closures were not quite as severe as they might have been and the former NCC line to Derry survived. The decade ended with rail services being taken over by a new Governmentowned company, Northern Ireland Railways, in 1968. It was against this background that a small group of railway enthusiasts-cum-photographers set out to record as much as they could of Ulster's railway network before there were any more closures and before steam locomotives finally disappeared from the scene. One such photographer was Richard Whitford. Richard was brought up in Ballyclare where the family home backed onto the broad gauge branch off the NCC main line.By standing on the dining room table he could see trains on the narrow gauge line which still operated between the paper mills outside Ballyclare and Larne Harbour!Richard began his railway photography at Woodenbridge in County Wicklow in 1955 using a box camera. In 1960 he began photographing Northern Ireland's railway network in earnest and soon expanded his interests to include buses, trams and trolleybuses, here and further afield. Travelling to the chosen location usually meant going by train or bus, but a lineside permit issued by the UTA meant that access was possible to areas not open to the general public. Another important factor was knowing which trains would be operated by steam. The working timetables and weekly notices were a useful guide, but a chat with a friendly railwayman often brought more enlightened information about late changes or extra specials. Photography in those days was not a cheap hobby. Great care had to be taken to get the photograph right the first time and to avoid wasting expensive film.Lighting was also a major concern; the films were not very suitable for use in low light, but if Richard had waited for the sun to come out then most would never have been taken!Fortunately Richard did take those photographs and, thanks to his efforts, we can turn the clock back forty or more years and relive those days of UTA steam in the 1960s.
- ISBN13 9781904242833
- Publish Date 31 October 2007
- Publish Status Out of Print
- Out of Print 21 July 2021
- Publish Country GB
- Publisher Colourpoint Creative Ltd
- Imprint Colourpoint Books
- Format Paperback
- Pages 64
- Language English