Ten
more years were to follow, under nationalisation, before any major
improvement
came. Under British Rail, from about
1960 onwards, the timetables were redesigned and recast on a regular
basis.
This was part of the ongoing process by which a thoroughly modern
railway, as indeed
it had become, sought to respond to trends in passenger traffic and set
out to
encourage greater use of trains for long distance and cross-country
journeys. In post war Britain, largely
because of the private car, many people have become much more mobile
and
happily travel great distances each year for both business and pleasure. British
Rail made great efforts, which met with notable success, to increase
wherever
possible, its share of this growing inter‑city traffic, in competition
with the
private car and other modes of transport.
Much careful research led to the development of new passenger
traffic
flows and this is reflected in the later timetables.
TABLE
A
Summary of trains - leaving Stoke-on-Trent (Mondays to Fridays)
Year:
|
1910
|
1947
|
1961
|
1976
|
1996
|
1998
|
To final destinations under 10
miles
|
109
|
21
|
4
|
|
|
|
To final destinations under 20
miles |
53
|
41
|
41
|
25
|
23
|
8
|
To final destinations under 50
miles |
20
|
29
|
41
|
46
|
44
|
61
|
To final destinations upto 100
miles |
1
|
3
|
1
|
15
|
7
|
11
|
To final destinations over 100
miles |
3
|
4
|
6
|
14
|
33
|
37
|
Total
number of trains daily
|
186
|
98
|
93
|
100
|
107
|
117
|
Total train mileage
|
2613
|
2671
|
3143
|
5573
|
7732
|
9131
|
Average mileage per train
|
14
|
27
|
34
|
56
|
72
|
78
|
Final
destination of trains:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
London
|
3
|
4
|
6
|
11
|
15
|
16
|
Birmingham or beyond
|
6
|
6
|
8
|
10
|
17
|
23
|
Stafford Local only
|
4
|
9
|
9
|
11
|
8
|
8
|
Derby or beyond
|
7
|
8
|
15
|
14
|
15
|
15
|
Derby Line local Stations
|
41
|
15
|
10
|
|
|
|
Manchester or beyond
|
7
|
17
|
17
|
37
|
36
|
40
|
Manchester Line Stations
|
9
|
3
|
3
|
|
1
|
|
Loop Line Stations
|
43
|
10
|
2
|
|
|
|
Crewe or beyond |
10
|
13
|
23
|
17
|
15
|
15
|
Other Local Stations |
56
|
13
|
|
|
|
|
Total
number of trains daily
|
186
|
98
|
93
|
100
|
107
|
117
|
Two traffic
trends are, however,
discernible
in all the timetables, when compared to those previously produced, even
in the
case of the 1947 timetable. The first is an increase in the number of
express
and longer distance services (often with an earlier first train of the
day) and
the second is a decline in local and stopping services. These trends
are
illustrated in Table A above and it will be noticed that although the
number
of
trains daily in 1910 was almost twice the 1947 total, the 1947 train
mileage
was actually higher than the mileage in 1910. Furthermore, since 1947,
the
passenger train mileage has more than tripled.
Examination
of timetables also reveals that in 1996 there were approximately 110
stations
and halts served daily by one or more through trains from
Stoke-on-Trent. In 1910 the number so
served was in the order
of 120. However, in 1910 these included
some 80 stations on the North Staffordshire Railway system (not
counting the 18
on the Ashbourne, Churnet Valley and Burton-on-Trent branches), whereas
by 1996
there were just 14 North Staffordshire Railway stations still open for
passenger traffic. What North Staffordshire has lost in local services,
however, would appear to have been restored threefold in through
services over
a much wider area.
TABLE B
November in each year:
|
1947
|
...
|
...
|
1976
|
...
|
...
|
1996
|
...
|
...
|
|
Trains |
Average
|
Fastest
|
Trains |
Average |
Fastest |
Trains |
Average |
Fastest |
Stoke-on-Trent |
Daily |
Speed
|
Speed |
Daily |
Speed |
Speed |
Daily |
Speed |
Speed |
to |
|
m.p.h.
|
m.p.h. |
|
m.p.h. |
m.p.h. |
|
m.p.h. |
m.p.h. |
London Euston
|
4
|
42.8
|
49.3
|
11
|
72.8
|
76.6
|
15
|
77.9
|
80.1
|
Birmingham
|
6
|
22.2
|
29.0
|
10
|
40.5
|
44.7
|
17
|
40.6
|
47.1
|
Stafford only
|
9
|
|
|
11
|
|
|
8
|
|
|
Derby
|
8
|
29.2
|
36.6
|
14
|
41.5
|
42.4
|
15
|
44.1 |
48.0
|
Manchester
|
17
|
24.8
|
35.1
|
37
|
43.8
|
53.0
|
36
|
39.3 |
53.0
|
Crewe
|
13
|
26.0
|
29.5
|
17
|
29.5
|
30.5
|
15
|
32.8 |
35.4
|
Local services
|
41
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
Totals:
|
98
|
29.0
|
|
100
|
45.6
|
|
107
|
46.9
|
|
Summarised in Table B are counts of
the number of
services
to each of the five principal destinations outside Staffordshire to
which
trains from Stoke-on-Trent have traditionally operated showing the
average
speeds of all through services as well as the fastest. Local services
and
trains terminating at Stafford are shown separately. Connecting
services at
Stafford are not shown.
The Local Services
TABLE C
Number of trains per day in each year
from
Stoke-on-Trent to
|
1910
|
1947
|
1961
|
1976
|
1996
|
1998
|
Closed
|
Wedgwood
|
|
11
|
10
|
11
|
5
|
5
|
|
Barlaston
|
14
|
15
|
17
|
14
|
7
|
8
|
|
Stone
|
16
|
16
|
19
|
15
|
8
|
8
|
|
Norton Bridge
|
9
|
13
|
15
|
10
|
7
|
8
|
|
Stafford
|
10
|
15
|
17
|
22
|
25
|
30
|
|
Longton
|
46
|
21
|
25
|
14
|
12
|
11
|
|
Blythe Bridge
|
22
|
18
|
19
|
14
|
15
|
15
|
|
Cheadle
|
6
|
2
|
2
|
|
|
|
1963
|
Uttoxeter
|
10
|
13
|
21
|
14
|
15
|
15
|
|
Tutbury
|
8
|
8
|
11
|
|
15
|
15
|
|
Etruria
|
64
|
37
|
39
|
36
|
15
|
15
|
|
Longport
|
24
|
23
|
35
|
36
|
13
|
15
|
|
Kidsgrove Central
|
24
|
23
|
35
|
36
|
24
|
24
|
|
Congleton
|
13
|
16
|
17
|
20
|
13
|
14
|
|
Macclesfield
|
11
|
18
|
19
|
33
|
37
|
40
|
|
Alsager
|
11
|
12
|
22
|
17
|
15
|
15
|
|
Hanley/Burslem/Tunstall
|
44
|
16
|
5
|
|
|
|
1964
|
Kidsgrove Liverpool Rd
|
7
|
8
|
4
|
|
|
|
1964 |
Newcastle
|
33
|
5
|
4
|
|
|
|
1964 |
Silverdale
|
13
|
3
|
2
|
|
|
|
1964 |
Audley
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
|
1931
|
Market Drayton
|
5
|
2
|
|
|
|
|
1956
|
Trentham Park
|
5
|
|
|
|
|
|
1946
|
Colwich
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
|
1946
|
Sandbach
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
|
1930
|
Leek
|
8
|
7
|
|
|
|
|
1956
|
Biddulph
|
2
|
|
|
|
|
|
1927
|
Waterhouses
|
2
|
|
|
|
|
|
1935
|
Churnet Valley Line
|
3
|
6
|
3
|
|
|
|
1965
|
Local
services throughout North Staffordshire have declined
significantly over the years as is shown by the figures in Table C. The
reasons
for decline are clear. By 1910, the ‘Knotty’ (in intense
competition with the P.E.T. tramway
network) was providing the ‘six towns’ with
an
excellent and enlightened service of two loop line trains per hour
throughout
most of the day (44 trains daily each way). Newcastle-under-Lyme had 33
trains
daily to and from Stoke-on-Trent. Yet, even this could not match the
competition. Elsewhere in 1910, the local service was poor. Less than
half of
all the North Staffordshire Railway stations had more than six trains
daily in
each direction. The Biddulph line had just two trains daily, Audley and
Sandbach lines each had three, Market Drayton had five, Cheadle had
only six,
and Leek fared little better with just eight trains. Uttoxeter and
Pitts Hill
each had ten trains daily to and from Stoke-on-Trent.
Hanley
had become, by 1910, the largest of the six towns and was already
the commercial centre for the whole area and destined to remain so.
But, apart
from the loop line link with the other five town centres where only a
fraction
of Hanley’s workforce lived, Hanley lacked a local railway service.
Indeed,
following the post war suburban house building boom of the 1950s only a
very
small percentage of the population lived anywhere near a railway and
travel to
work by train was impossible for all but a small minority. North of
Tunstall,
the now closed loop line served relatively small communities. To the
east, two
former passenger lines from Biddulph and Leek converge at Milton which
is under
three miles from Burslem or Hanley by road, compared with over seven
miles by
railway and always with a change of train at Stoke-on-Trent. Yet it is to Hanley or even Burslem rather
than Fenton or Stoke-on-Trent that most passengers and especially
commuters
from the north-east of the city have always needed to travel. Anyone
wishing to
travel the 4½ miles from Biddulph to Tunstall by train (not
possible after
1927) would have had a choice of two trains daily and a journey of
14¾ miles
that took over an hour with, of course, a change at Stoke-on-Trent.
Beyond the
city boundary to the west, the districts of Audley, Lycett, Silverdale
and
Newcastle were also served by a railway that went round in a circle
before
taking its passengers to Stoke-on-Trent rather than to Hanley. Then of
course
on finally reaching Hanley, after changing at Stoke-on-Trent, the
traveller
realised that the station was but the starting point for a long uphill
walk to
just about everywhere in town.
Today,
the local service is limited to that which can be provided in
conjunction with
the important provincial services to Manchester, Crewe, Stafford, and
Derby and
beyond. Efforts were made in the 1960s and 70s to improve the local
services on
these lines but local usage has continued to decline. In an era when
even buses
need subsidies to compete with private cars in the field of commuter
transport,
local railways stand no chance unless they offer fast, frequent and
direct
services between residential areas and the city centre.
Links
to Summary Tables
Links
are given below to five of the 15 Summary Tables that form part of the
complete
study but could not be included with the printed synopsis. Yet they are very useful in enabling a fuller insight into
the services discussed.
Click this Link to go to the index of all 15 summary
timetables.
Main Line Express Services
The
decline of the local services has over the years been eclipsed by
the continuing development of InterCity and provincial services. Under
nationalisation, the London service was improved beyond measure. In
1947, as in
1910, there were just three daytime trains to London (plus several
connections
at Stafford). By 1996 there were 15 through trains daily.
Stoke-on-Trent
certainly benefits today from being on the shortest rail route from
Manchester
to London. However, there was, in the early and mid sixties, a long
period when
most Manchester to London trains ran via Crewe or (at the height of the
electrification work) via Matlock and Derby; and many journeys from
Stoke-on-Trent involved a change at Stafford, Crewe or Derby. The May,
1961
timetable, for example, contained both through trains and connections
which
operated via Derby in order to reduce the number of trains on the West
Coast main
line during the preparation work for electrification. During those
years the
Stoke-on-Trent to London service fluctuated widely and at one stage
almost
ceased to exist. Manchester to London Euston services returned to the
Stoke-on-Trent route on completion of the electrification work in 1967,
but at
first as a two-hourly interval semi-fast service only and the future
was by no
means secure.
The
number of through services has varied from year to year. By 1976 there
were
eleven, but as recently as 1988 this had reduced to eight through
trains during
the day plus one overnight. By 1996, with fifteen Manchester to London
trains
daily via Stoke-on-Trent compared with just two via Crewe, the future
was
looking rosy. Good services to London are
vital to
the prosperity of any British city and the service from Stoke-on-Trent
is now
truly excellent. It is primarily a Manchester to London service, which
could,
if necessary, run entirely via Crewe.
The people of North Staffordshire should never take it for
granted.
The Stafford & Birmingham Line
The
improvement in service on this line is even more remarkable. There
were 17 through trains to Birmingham and four good connections daily in 1996 compared with six
through trains and six connections in 1947. Speeds are not high but the
average
journey time from Stoke-on-Trent to Birmingham has been halved, which
is a
truly remarkable achievement for this very busy route. Two intermediate
stations have closed between Stoke-on-Trent and Stafford but four
remain. In
1947 the earliest possible arrival in Birmingham was 09:16 on the 07:32
from
Stoke-on-Trent. By 1996 there were five fast trains arriving in
Birmingham at
7:54, 8:16, 9:00, 9:33 and 9:54 after journeys of about an hour; and an
excellent service throughout the day.
Significant
also is the growth of through services to destinations
beyond Birmingham. In 1947 there were none. In 1976 there was one to
Plymouth,
a second to Taunton, one to Coventry and one to Cardiff making a total
of four.
By 1996 there was one West Country InterCity express to Cheltenham Spa,
Bristol, Taunton, Exeter, and Plymouth and seven through trains ran to
Birmingham International and Coventry. Of these, six provided an
excellent
service to Leamington, Banbury, Oxford and Reading before continuing to
southern destinations including Gatwick Airport, Brighton, Basingstoke,
Winchester, Southampton, Bournemouth and Poole.
The
Uttoxeter & Derby Line
Table A3: The
Uttoxeter &
Derby Line
This
line has certainly seen many changes in its passenger services
since the war. In 1947 there were only eight through trains to Derby of
which
seven provided a connection at Tutbury for Burton-on-Trent. With the
withdrawal
of the loop line services came station closures leaving just three
stations
between Stoke-on-Trent and Derby. Tutbury station re-opened in 1989.
That the
Derby service has survived and almost doubled from eight to fifteen
trains per
day is a tribute to British Rail. Since
1947, speeds on this line have increased significantly, Stoke-on-Trent
to Derby
is now on average 52% faster than 1947.
In
‘Knotty’ and L.M.S. times, trains rarely strayed beyond Derby except
for Summer excursions returning from Llandudno to Nottingham or
Leicester. By
1976 most trains on this line were running through to Nottingham and
Lincoln.
Recently, the reorganisation of the South Lincolnshire services from
Nottingham
through Grantham to Skegness has enabled the through running of ten
trains
daily from Crewe and Stoke-on-Trent to Boston and Skegness making
possible
excursions which would have been very difficult just a few years ago.
The
Macclesfield & Manchester Line
Examination
of the 1910 and 1947 timetables shows how few public
passenger trains actually ran on this line compared to the numbers
later
operated by British Rail. In 1947 there were just five expresses and
nine very
slow stopping trains to Manchester plus three more even slower stopping
trains
to Manchester which ran via the loop line. These plus a further 13
local trains
made a total 14 main line and 16 loop line trains per day in 1947. By
1976 the
electrified service was offering 18 expresses and 19 stopping trains
daily
between Stoke-on-Trent and Manchester Piccadilly. The service in 1996
was very
similar to 1976 except that there were nine fewer stopping services but
nine
more expresses, including one through train to Edinburgh.
In
1947, the first express for Manchester left Stoke-on-Trent at 11:41,
took 1 hour 24 minutes and arrived at 13:05. For the commuter or day
visitor
this was quite useless. Such a passenger would need to catch the local
at 07:00
due in Manchester at 08:34 or else the 08:06 that arrived at 09:40. By
1996,
the 07:45 express was arriving in Manchester at 08:32 and the even
faster 08:51
express at 09:34 and there were three stopping trains as well. Similar considerations appled to the return
in the afternoon or evening.
Of all the North
Staffordshire passenger services, that to Crewe has changed least. Two
intermediate stations have closed but four remain. The 13 trains in
1947 had
increased to 17 by 1979 only to reduce to 15 by 1996 with the average
journey
time of 34 minutes falling to 27 minutes. The speed has thereby risen
by a very
modest 25% and it is not clear why this half of the through service
should be
significantly slower than that from Stoke-on-Trent to Derby. In an
interesting
post-nationalisation development, the Crewe trains now [1998] run
through to
Manchester Airport giving an hourly service from Stoke-on-Trent
[Airport service discontinued 2003].
In Conclusion
The
foregoing account is but a brief introduction to the study of
railway timetables, in which the writer seeks to raise awareness of the
value
of timetables as evidence of the passenger service provided by the
North
Staffordshire Railway and its L.M.S successor and of the very great
changes
which have taken place during the 48 years of nationalisation.
©
Noel R Walley, 1998 & 2003.
Notes: Timetables Consulted
1. Bradshaw’s April 1910
Railway Guide [New Edition] (Newton Abbot: David and
Charles, 1968), 530-537.
2.
L.M.S.
Passenger Services, October 6th, 1947 until further notice (Manchester: Henry
Blacklock & Co. Ltd., 1947),
141-148.
3. Bradshaw’s
British
Railways Guide, From 1st May until 11th June, 1961 (London: Henry
Blacklock
& Co. Ltd., 1961), 634-638.
4. Great
Britain
Passenger Timetable, 3rd May 1976 to 1st May 1977 (London: British Railways
Board, 1976), 484-95 &
512-15.
5. Great
Britain
Passenger Railway Timetable, 27th September 1996 to 25th May 1997
(London: Railtrack
plc, 1996).
6. Great
Britain
Passenger Railway Timetable, 24th May 1998 to 26th September 1998 (London:
Railtrack plc, 1998).
The
above synopsis was published in the Autumn
1999 edition (volume 30) of ‘Staffordshire
History’ and also in Journal No.
12 (April
2003) of the North Staffordshire Railway Study Group.
A
much fuller treatment is given in the following web based study: