Railway Relics of Yesteryear
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rikj wrote: LS1 wrote: Anyway, I spotted this a few months back, and thanks to the trusty camera phone had to have a quick shot! Any guesses as to where??? I guess you were dodging traffic in Far Headingley to snap that manhole cover! Is there one there? I didn't know, this one is in the city centre - it should be a "where" as I think its pretty obvious "what" it is.
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Is there anyone within this forum that can help me with a little piece of info regarding Copley Hill and its sheds and yards? I have done a little bit myself, looking at old O/S maps the sheds etc. arrived somewhere between 1838 and 1898. More info gratefully received. Incidentally the wall still in situ at the site was the track boundary for the coaling point, this was done manually with barrows.
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Hi Danny, welcome to Secret Leeds. Ask away and we'll all do our best to help.Incidentally,I presume you mean the GNR/LNER/BR sheds that lasted into the 1960s. There was a L&Y shed next door but accessed by road from Oldfield Lane ( not used for loco purposes from 1927 ), and a shed near Dragon Bridge, also known as Copley Hill, that was the L&NWRs predecessor of Farnley Junction.
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Just thought i'd let you know there is a nice collection of archive railway shots around Copley Hill, maps e.t.c herehttp://snipurl.com/141in0It may, or may not answer any questions. But it's worth taking a look for the steam, shoot, and unfitted clanky waggons of yesteryear alone. Enjoy
My flickr pictures are herehttp://www.flickr.com/photos/phill_dvsn/Because lunacy was the influence for an album. It goes without saying that an album about lunacy will breed a lunatics obsessions with an album - The Dark side of the moon!
- Leodian
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Phill_dvsn wrote: Just thought i'd let you know there is a nice collection of archive railway shots around Copley Hill, maps e.t.c herehttp://snipurl.com/141in0It may, or may not answer any questions. But it's worth taking a look for the steam, shoot, and unfitted clanky waggons of yesteryear alone. Enjoy Great images there. They do though show just how smoky trains were! Getting grit into my eyes when peering out of a window was not the nicest of things and you soon learnt not to do it! Clanky waggons made me
A rainbow is a ribbon that Nature puts on when she washes her hair.
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