Waverley (passenger train)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Thames-Forth Express
This diagram is a guide; not all stations
shown were served in all years of operation
LUECKE
WBRÜCKE
River Forth
xABZfg HBHF STRlg
Edinburgh Waverley
exSTR LUECKE
East Coast Main Line
exHST
Galashiels
exHST
Melrose
exHST
St Boswells
exSTR
Waverley Line
exHST
Hawick
exHST
Newcastleton
LUECKE exSTR
Thames-Clyde Express
STRlf xABZlg
diverges to Glasgow
GRENZE
Anglo - Scottish Border
BHF
Carlisle
HST
Appleby
STR
Settle and Carlisle Railway
HST
Settle
HST
Hellifield
HST
Skipton
ABZfg BHFl
Leeds
HST
Wakefield Westgate
BHF
Sheffield
HST
Chesterfield
STR
Midland Main Line
BHF
Nottingham
STR
STR
INTe
London St Pancras
For the paddle steamer Waverley, see PS Waverley.

The Waverley, originally called the Thames Forth Express, is the name of an express passenger train operating on British Railways' Midland Main Line from London St Pancras to Edinburgh Waverley and which ceased operations 1968.

The Thames Forth Express was and was renamed The Waverley in 1957. The original name was given to the morning departure from London by the London Midland & Scottish Railway in September 1927. Its sister train to Glasgow, which departed an hour later, was named the Thames-Clyde Express.

The Waverley travelled by the scenic Settle-Carlisle route, but could not compete on speed to Scotland with the trains travelling on the East Coast Main Line via York. Its route was longer and steeper, and Midland expresses could not ignore major population centres en route. As a result, few travellers after the 1920s travelled the full length of the route.

The Thames-Forth lost its title at the outbreak of World War II in common with almost all named trains in the UK. It was not restored – this time as The Waverley – until June 1957.

However the effect of regional division, mining subsidence along part of the route, and underpowered locomotives meant that its performance was actually inferior in time to that achieved in 1939.

In 1962, the train left London at 09.15. It used a now freight only Leicester avoiding route (see Oakham to Kettering Line) and stopped first at Nottingham Midland at 11.13. After calling at Chesterfield it reached Sheffield Midland at 12.18 and Leeds City 13.26 – so a journey of 39 miles took over an hour as a result of subsidence-induced speed restrictions. Then came stops at Skipton, Hellifield, Settle and Appleby West before Carlisle was reached at 15.31 Five more stops in the border country were made at Newcastleton, Hawick, St Boswells, Melrose and Galashiels before final arrival at Edinburgh Waverley at 18.34.

This was a journey of nine hours 15 minutes – the Flying Scotsman left London at 10.00 and took only six hours. However the Waverley provided a useful service from the East Midlands and Yorkshire to Edinburgh, and also provided a direct London service to the small towns on the Settle-Carlisle route, and in the Scottish borders between Carlisle and Edinburgh (the Waverley Route). However by this time the train had acquired a bad reputation for slowness and unpunctuality

The Waverley ceased to run during the winter after 1964 but continued to operate during the summer until September 1968.