John Palmer
Member
I'll do my best to contribute something of value, but I'm afraid it will be far from definitive!2251 0-6-0 3215 on arrival at Templecombe Upper with the 6.18 Bournemouth West to Templecombe Upper train right next to the signal box on 9th June 1962. However, this is another that doesn’t seem right. Surely the train would have reversed at Templecombe S & D and travelled up to the bay platform. Perhaps John @John Palmer can enlighten me. In any event the loco was on the Templecombe S & D allocation and was withdrawn from there in February 1963. (SLS). It was scrapped at Cashmore’s. Newport, in January 1964.
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Standard Class 4 2-6-0 76027 described as on the link line to Templecombe Upper from Bath on 9th June 1962 – however I believe the signal in the “off” position suggests that the train is travelling down the bank – loco going backwards so there’s probably a pilot on the other end – in order to reach the S & D and reverse towards Bournemouth West. 76027 was a Bournemouth engine from March 1962 and was withdrawn in October 1965. (SLS). It was scrapped in January 1966 at Cohen’s, Morriston. (BR Database).
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Brian
Neither the 1955 nor 1961 WTTs available to me disclose a service terminating at Templecombe that left Bournemouth around 6/18. The closest approach to such a train is a 1955 service dep. Bournemouth 5/18 arr.Templecombe 7/5; in 1961 this had become dep. Bournemouth 5/30 arr. Templecombe 7/1 (massive acceleration!). Once again the shadows are long and the sun well round to the west, so I wonder whether this may be the later 6/48 (SO) Bournemouth West – Bath service, which in 1961 was timed to leave Templecombe Upper at 8/50. This may better fit with the milk train pictures in Templecombe Upper Yard, which were in locations close to the spot where this photograph was taken.
I don't have any problem with a 2251 appearing in this picture, since the train, if it has come up through Dorset, will have been piloted from No.2 Junction up the spur to Templecombe Upper by a locomotive attached to what had been the rear of the train. Such pilot work was a common task for a 2251 and is what I think is being illustrated here. I think I also detect exhaust from the train engine proper above the second carriage.
I agree with @daifly that 76027 is stationary, and suggest that it is being held at No.2 Junction's “To SR Starting” signal. I think the setting is one in which the No.2 Junction signalman, having got the road to Wincanton, has pulled off all his Up line signals including his “From SR Up Inner Distant” (which is visible here showing a somewhat questionable aspect) to permit an Up train to descend the spur from Templecombe Upper with a train bound for Wincanton and beyond. That train has yet to traverse the spur from Templecombe Upper, and the No.2 Junction signalman will have to wait until the crossover from Down to Up road at the end of Templecombe Upper's Platform 3 has been restored to normal after the Up train's passage over it before he can ask the road for 76027 and its train. A problem with this theory is that there is no obvious service shown in the 1961 WTT that is likely to find its progress up the spur obstructed by a northbound train leaving Templecombe Upper. However, bearing in mind the capacity for timetable disruption to which the S&D was vulnerable, particularly on a summer Saturday such as this, it's by no means impossible that one or both of the services in this scenario were so well adrift from their timetabled paths as to bring about this unforeseen delay to 76027's train.