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Golden Arrow

 
Wikipedia: Golden Arrow (train)
A 1929 magazine advert for the new improved Golden Arrow Pullman train and boat service between London and Paris
Ex-SR Battle of Britain Class 34085 501 Squadron with the Golden Arrow at Wandsworth Road, June 1959
Type HA (Class 71) E5009 with the up Golden Arrow at Dover Marine c. 1971
Ex-SR Battle of Britain Class 34072 257 Squadron, an unrebuilt Bulleid Light Pacific, with the Golden Arrow styling

The Golden Arrow was a luxury boat train of the Southern Railway and later British Railways. It linked London with Dover, where passengers took the ferry to Calais to join the Flèche d’Or of the Chemin de Fer du Nord and later SNCF which took them on to Paris.

Contents

Overview

The Flèche d’Or was introduced in 1926 as an all-first-class Pullman service between Paris and Calais. On 15 May 1929, the Southern Railway introduced the equivalent between London and Dover. The train usually consisted of 10 British Pullman cars, hauled by one of the Southern Railway’s Lord Nelson class locomotives, and took 98 minutes to travel between London and Dover. Because of 'market forces' – including the impact of air travel – on the underlying economy, ordinary first- and third-class carriages were added in 1931. Similarly the first-class-only ferry, Canterbury, was modified to allow other classes of passenger.

The train service ceased at the outbreak of the Second World War in September 1939. It resumed after the war on 15 April 1946, initially running with the pre-war Pullmans and the Trianon Bar car, a converted twelve-wheeled Pullman.[1] In 1951 a new set of Pullmans was built, as part of British Railways' celebration of the Festival of Britain.

In 1961, with the Kent Coast electrification scheme, the train became electric-hauled. A decline in demand for rail travel between London and Paris saw the last Golden Arrow run on 30 September 1972.

Preservation

The preserved Bluebell Railway in Sussex runs a "Golden Arrow" train with Pullman cars "Car 64 (Christine)", "Fingall", "Car 76 (Lillian)", and an ex-LMS BGZ.

The main-line service was revived for a one-off event on 6 May 1994 when it formed part of the celebrations for the inauguration of the Channel Tunnel. It was hauled by the steam locomotive Britannia.

See also

  • Night Ferry - sleeper train between London and Paris/Brussels (1936-1980)
  • Eurostar - train service via the Channel Tunnel (since 1994)

References

  1. ^ Kidner, R W (1958). The Southern Railway. South Godstone, Surrey: The Oakwood Press.

External links


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