Great British Railway Journeys (2010–…): Season 2, Episode 12 - Durham to Grosmont - full transcript

In 1840, one man
transformed travel in Britain.

His name was George Bradshaw,

and his railway guides inspired
the Victorians to take to the tracks.

Stop by stop,
he told them where to travel,

what to see and where to stay.

Now, 170 years later,
I'm making a series of journeys

across the length and breadth
of the country

to see what of Bradshaw's Britain
remains.

Using my 19th century Bradshaw's guide,

I'm continuing my journey
from the cradle of the railways,

the Northeast of England, headed south.



Town and country
soon became more accessible.

And this green and pleasant land
was soon transformed forever.

Along the way, I'll be stopping off

at some of the sites recommended
in this extraordinary book

and finding out
how the places that it describes

were changed by the railways.

On this leg of the journey,

I'll be experiencing how tough it was
to drive a steam engine...

The heat from the boiler is intense.

And... the coal is heavy.

And the locomotive... is very hungry.

...meeting one of
the first locomotives...

It's in beautiful condition.
Am I allowed to...?

(man) I think you are.



It's quite thrilling actually.

...and sounding out Whitby which inspired
the Victorian horror story "Dracula”.

(screams)

How was that?

I started this journey in Newcastle.

Now I'm following some of the earliest
railway lines built for freight.

My route through Yorkshire
takes in the spa town of Harrogate,

and the industrial cities
of Leeds and Sheffield.

Then I'll be crossing
into rural Leicestershire

ending up at picturesque Melton Mowbray.

On this stretch, I start in Durham,

then cross the Yorkshire moors
to Whitby,

and at Grosmont catch a heritage line.

(tannoy) This is Durham.

(guard) Cheers.

My first stop is the historically
important city of Durham

whose overwhelming cathedral is rightly
praised in my "Bradshaw's Guide".

Bradshaw says of Durham,

"From all the neighbouring
points of view,

its appearance is unique
and striking."

"The public edifices exhibit
a great degree of magnificence.”

"The centre of the eminence is occupied
by the cathedral and castle.”

Victorian writers
could be pretty pompous

but the point is well made.

The view is stunning.

In the Victorian era, the cathedral
more than dominated the skyline.

It was the one of the most powerful
landowners in the county.

When the railway arrived,
the Chapter, its governing body,

demanded huge sums of money to allow it
to cross ecclesiastical land.

And even today, the cathedral
is central to Durham's way of life.

- Are you a native of Durham?
- lam. And a student.

That's unusual.
You're studying in your own city.

- I am.
- Do you go to the cathedral often?

It's such an impressive building
and I'm graduating there in January

which will be great
for myself personally.

- Is that lovely?
- Absolutely.

It's such a good setting.
As well, so historic.

The railway reached Durham in the 1840s
and in the succeeding decades,

the railway companies
promoted the cathedral

as an attraction worth the journey.

They appealed to a new type
of Victorian tourist.

The wealthy middle classes seeking
to educate themselves through travel.

And a "Bradshaw's Guide"
made a perfect tutor.

It records, "This venerable building
is a cross, 420 feet long,

built between 1093 and 1220,
chiefly Norman,

with many examples
of the early pointed style."”

I love Durham Cathedral.

As you march up this enormous nave,

you're aware of this impressive,
heavy, ancient architecture.

The great big columns
and the rounded arches.

It's all one. It's all of a period.

Yet I'm marching towards what I assume
is a later, beautiful rose window.

The whole place
is majestic and tranquil.

And vast.

In the early 19th century,

the bishops of Durham
were powerful and wealthy men.

They were so well remunerated,

a celebrated kerfuffle over
the pension paid to one bishop

is highlighted in my "Bradshaw's Guide".

Perhaps unfairly, I put the present-day
Dean Michael Sadgrove on the spot.

There is a curious reference
in my Bradshaw's.

It says, "In 1856,
an Act of Parliament was obtained

to enable the bishops
of London and Durham

to retire from their sees
with handsome pensions.”

What was he referring to?

That was the retirement
of Bishop Edward Maltby.

It was a cause célèbre
because that was unheard of.

You didn't retire,
you simply went on till you died.

He was given permission to retire
because the Bishop of London

was also given similar permission
at the same time.

And the pensions
on which they retired were huge;

I think £4,500 per annum,

which equates to about £350,000 a year
in today's money.

With the Victorian press
in full cry about the bishop's pension,

the Prime Minister
faced angry questions.

I looked up
the parliamentary debate, actually.

It's interesting as one MP
gets up and says,

"Why should these chaps have £4,500

when the average churchman
has only £1007"

So it's all about disparity of income.
It's got echoes of the present day.

(choir sings)

Before [ resume my journey south,

there is just time to hear
the Cathedral School Choir in rehearsal,

led by choir master James Lancelot.

(choir sings)

You must be James.
Very good to meet you.

That was lovely.
Thank you very much indeed.

Thank you very much, everybody.

How long has there been a choir
in this cathedral?

Since it was built, I think probably.

Ninth century.

And with boys since 1416 at least. Yes.

And I mean, the young voices
really fill the entire space.

They do.

They know about singing and the people
who built it knew about acoustics.

This is not the whole choir;
we've got 16 boys, ten men

and we've now got 20 girls
since last November.

(Michael) I'm talking
not only to a choirmaster

but also a bit of an aficionado
of trains, is that true?

That is true, yes.

Both the interest in music and trains
go back to childhood.

When you were this age,
what did you want to be?

I wanted to be an engine driver.
All boys did at that age.

I think it's very difficult to explain
to anyone under about the age of 55

just what the romance
of railway travel was in those days.

The sheer variety, the complexity
and at its heart, the steam engine,

which was the nearest thing to a living
creature that any machine has ever been.

I'm safely over 55 so you're OK with me.

I'm sorry to leave
such a glorious city behind,

but I must embark
on the next stage of my journey.

(tannoy) The next station call
is Darlington in 15 minutes' time.

I'm now headed for a place that George
Bradshaw would have found very exciting.

Towards the 22 miles of track,
that he says

"are memorable as being
the first locomotive rail in England.”

And he might have added
"or anywhere else in the world".

Built between 1821 and 1825
by George Stephenson,

I'm headed for the highly historic
Darlington to Stockton railway.

Darlington is considered by many

to be the home of the first
modern freight railway ever built.

It is indeed remarkable to think,
moving to think,

that in the early 1820s,
this was where George Stephenson

laid the first iron tracks to take the
coal from the collieries of Darlington

down to the river at Stockton.
Lots of people had laid tracks before

but what was to make
this railway unique, a first,

was that it wasn't horse drawn,
it wasn't driven by stationary engines;

this railway was going to be powered
by locomotives, by moving engines.

Are you very aware
of the history of this place?

I know quite a bit.
I've spent many a year here,

I'm in my 32nd year now.
I started 1978 on this station.

The railways here go back
even longer than you do, back to 1825.

I'm glad they do as well.

My 19th-century Bradshaw's Guide

says this is the first locomotive rail
in England.

But that's to understate it.

It's the first locomotive rail
in the world.

Maybe, but England always comes first,
doesn't it?

That's a good way of putting it.

- Lovely to talk to you.
- Thank you very much.

Close by is the resting place
of some of the earliest engines,

where I'm meeting railway expert,
Mark Allott.

How did the railway come about
between Stockton and Darlington?

It was the usual thing of that period;

the need of the growing industry
for coal.

The canals weren't particularly fast
at transporting things.

Hence, the decision was made
to build a railway in its place.

Initially, it was thought
horse-drawn vehicles

would ply the new line.

But engineer George Stephenson
was convinced that steam was the future

and devised a new engine
called Locomotion No.1.

(Mark) Locomotion is one of
the most important locomotives.

The first to haul passengers
on a public railway back in 1825.

It really is the grandfather
of all the railways we've got today.

(Michael) What we're looking at,
is this a replica of the Locomotion?

(Mark) No, it's the real engine.
And it's been preserved since 1841.

So isn't it fascinating to think
even when that was only 16 years old,

people had realised the important part
that that engine had played in history?

- It's in the most beautiful condition.
- It really is.

- Am I allowed to?
- I think you are. Absolutely.

It's quite thrilling actually.

Although the new railway
was designed for freight,

it soon began to take passengers too
who were doubtless also thrilled

even though the first train took over
two hours to travel just 12 miles.

What was it like
when they began to take passengers?

- Did they have carriages ready?
- Not quite.

What you'll see, and I'll show you,

is actually coal trucks like this
were some of the vehicles

carrying the first passengers.

Some of them would have ridden on top

and some would be empty
with people inside.

- How quickly did things advance?
- Really quickly.

A good analogy
is looking at how computers

have really changed very quickly
in the last few years,

or how mobile phone have shrunk.

In only ten years, you went from
a really fragile locomotive like that

through Rocket which had
all the essential components

of the end of steam, effectively,

to locomotives like Derwent that were
operating in collieries ten years later.

Look at the size of it compared to...

Size and sophistication.

From these small beginnings,

the railways spread rapidly
across Britain.

By the time my "Bradshaw's Guide"
was written in the 1860s,

the country was linked
by nearly 10,000 miles of track.

It was a railway revolution,

with the most deep-reaching
industrial and social consequences.

I'm now quitting Darlington for Whitby,

one of the towns transformed
by the new railways.

Bradshaw, in his flowery
Victorian language says,

"There are among
the watering places of England

few that have
more greatly benefited than Whitby

from railway communications,

or that have become better adapted
for the reception of visitors."

He's really enthusiastic
about Whitby's natural beauty

and about the quality of its hotels.
I'm looking forward to it.

(announcer) Ladies and gentlemen,

we shall shortly arrive at Whitby
where this service terminates.

Train travel came to Whitby in 1847,
and by the end of the century,

it had helped turn
a small fishing village

into a bustling seaside resort
of fashion.

Visitors came to admire
the romantic ruins of Whitby's Abbey

but I'm here to investigate
its more chilling claim to fame.

- Do you know you're in Dracula's town?
- Yes, I do, yes.

Do you know how Dracula arrived
in Whitby?

No.

- Do you know the story of Dracula?
- Not really.

I thought it was a ship, wasn't it?

It was a ship.

Have you come to Whitby
because of Dracula?

No, I haven't.
We've come for a girls' night out.

Which we had last night.

Was there much blood-sucking involved?

- Well, I'm not telling.
- (all laugh)

- Alright, thank you very much.
- Thanks, bye.

What weapon do you use
to see off a vampire?

Erm, well, I don't want to brag,

but I do have a lot of garlic
in the kitchen ready and waiting.

I'm more than willing to take him on.

What's the way of killing off a vampire?

A stake through the heart,
' would think.

Do you have any stakes in the kitchen?

- Probably the wrong sort.
- Only meat.

- Thank you very much.
- No problem.

Bram Stoker's "Dracula”,
published in 1897,

recounts how solicitor Jonathan Harker
and other innocents

fall victim to
the terrifying vampire Count.

Stoker used Whitby as the location

for some of the book's
most dramatic scenes.

Famously, Dracula arrived by ship
from Transylvania here in Whitby.

What's less well known
is that Jonathan Harker writes

of one of his first encounters
with the Count in his castle.

"I found the Count lying on the sofa,

reading, of all things in the world,
an English Bradshaw's Guide."

It's not reassuring that Dracula and I
share the same taste in books.

As the rain descends,
I need no convincing

this is a perfect setting
for a tale of horror.

Welcome to Wetby. Whitby.

Ideal weather for my terror tour
with Harry Collet.

If I were a betting man,

I'd wager you know something
about Dracula dressed like that.

Yes, just a little bit.

Why do you think Bram Stoker
chose Whitby for this Gothic novel?

(Harry) He came here as a holiday.

He took residency
in the Royal Crescents,

and for the first week
of his month-long holiday,

he stayed by himself whilst
his family came up by rail from London.

During that week, the Irishman started
to put pen to paper to write a play.

The play ultimately became
the novel Dracula.

The Count brings terror to Whitby

after a shipwreck
that reeks of the supernatural.

When the ship arrived, that was
a pretty frightening moment for people.

Just describe its arrival.

A big storm, pulled in,
crashed onto the beach

and there they found the captain dead,

lashed to the steering wheel,
clutching his crucifix and his rosary.

On to Tate Sands,
through the harbour entrance,

running aground on Tate Sands.

Off that ship leapt a large black dog

with saucer-like eyes
and fang-like teeth

to go and run helter-skelter
up the 199 church stairs

and go and hide in the graveyard.

- Who was that fearful hound?
- Dracula himself.

(Harry) Welcome to the Screaming Tunnel.

(Michael) Screaming Tunnel?

That's because it's said
if you venture in here after dark,

you might meet you-know-who.

(Harry) We did say to you
this was the Screaming Tunnel.

So after three,
1 would like you to fill your lungs

and have a good long scream.

You must be joking?
I'll get arrested, won't I?

- I doubt it.
- OK, here goes.

(screams)

- How was that?
- Excellent.

I feel better for that.

Another fantastic view of Whitby.
That's beautiful.

(Harry) It is.
It's one of the best views in the town.

One of the first times
we meet Dracula in the novel,

he's actually reading
Bradshaw's timetable. What's he doing?

He's working out how to get
the 50 coffins of earth

which he brings with him
from Transylvania into Whitby,

how to get them down
to the railway station in Whitby

to catch the 9:30 express to London

which will get him there
at 5:30 the following afternoon.

Even to the undead, Bradshaw's
railway timetables were indispensable.

The last stop on my Dracula tour
is also where I shall spend the night.

Pretty blowy out there.

The Royal Hotel.

Bram Stoker used to write here,
is that right?

He did indeed, yes, yes,

in one of our reading lounges upstairs
that is now guest accommodation.

Where am I saying?

You're in room 101,
which is on the first floor, sir.

- Have a wonderful stay with us.
- Will I sleep well?

- You'll sleep very well.
- Thank you, bye.

Built around 1850, the hotel
is described in my "Bradshaw's"

as "splendid, containing warm baths
and every convenience

for the accommodation of visitors."

From this cliff-top site, Stoker
could plot Dracula's nocturnal flits

around Whitby's impressive topography.

Ah, the famous view.

And here I shall stay until midnight.

Unpunctured by any fang,

I've woken to see what Whitby offers
other than vampires.

Bradshaw's says,
"Whitby has long been admired

for the peculiarity of its position

and the grandeur
of its coastal scenery.”

"To the eastward, the cliffs rise
almost 200 feet above the sea

and towards the south present
a procession of bold headlands."

This is clearly a place worth exploring.

Early railway travellers
were attracted by the views no doubt,

but many came determined
to acquire precious souvenirs

with the highest possible
seal of approval.

One item that Victorian tourists
latched on to was jet,

a black gemstone
that could be carved into jewellery,

which, after the death
of her husband Prince Albert,

became very popular
with Her Majesty the Queen herself.

Jeweller Chris Sellars will show me
where to look for jet,

a search that's continued
since Bradshaw's day.

- Interesting journey down here.
- Down the cliff? Absolutely.

What is jet?

It's a fossilised monkey puzzle tree.
Araucaria.

180 million years ago,
these were laid down

and under the pressure
have turned into the black magic.

I think of precious gemstones
as coming from the heart of Africa.

- Are there many in Britain?
- There are only two.

There is obviously Blue John
from Derbyshire,

but jet is so highly prized

and going back to Victorian days, it was
made and used extensively in jewellery.

The only jet to be found in Britain
is on the coast near Whitby.

The Victorian fashion for black jewels

created a huge demand
for rare this stone

and jet hunters combed the shore.

How did the Victorians quarry it,
if that's the word?

They weren't very eco-friendly
I'm afraid.

There is some evidence at certain times
you can see here

where they've drilled and they used
explosives on these cliffs.

Where do you find it today?

The material today
is largely beach combed.

There are some small seams
that appear in the cliffs

but we've got people that are
collecting it all the time on the beach.

(Michael) Can you see any jet
in the cliffs nowadays?

(Chris) Yeah, there is evidence of a few
collectors that have been down here

following some very thin, small seams.

It's actually harder to see
when it's wet.

But at the back of that there,
you can see a very thin seam.

It's lovely the way it glints
in the bottom there.

(Chris) It's beautiful stuff.

In Bradshaw's epoch,
Whitby had 200 jet workshops.

Only a few remain,
including Chris's, established in 1860.

(Michael) Morning.

So what do you do?

(man) I'm making some rings
at the moment.

Just a matter
of cutting the pieces down to size.

Show me you've got ten fingers.
You have.

(Chris) These are some antique pieces.

(Michael) I'm noticing
Victorian taste is for big pieces.

They were very bold
in what they actually did.

Jet was a material that enabled this
to happen because it's so light.

- There is no weight to it at all.
- None at all.

It was interesting
jet actually found its way

to the Great Exhibition
in London in 1851

where some important orders

were actually gained
by local manufacturers.

Again, that's the kind of thing
that helped put Whitby on the map.

Without the railways,
that wouldn't have been possible.

Chris has one last marvel to show me.

(Chris) The largest piece
of Whitby jet ever found.

It's absolutely beautiful.

That's enormous, isn't it?

Looking at the edge, though, you see
total gem quality all the way through.

An interesting part about it is,
on this side you can see

there are all the ammonites
that were actually crushed

when the branch actually went down.

(Michael) Covered in tiny
little fossils. All the way across.

(Chris) The whole length of it.

I must be on my way

and I shall board the train at Grosmont
just outside Whitby.

By now, you may know
that I'm thrilled by steam trains.

And so my pulse is quickening.

Bradshaw's says of
the Grosmont-to-Pickering line

that it passes through
"the most picturesque scenery."

"The vales of Newton and Goathland
present a wild country

with bold ranges of rock
on either side."

It was referring to what is now called
the North Yorkshire Moors Railway.

- How do you do?
- Will you drive this handsome beast?

Yes, it's a nice handsome beast.

It was built for
the Southern Railway in 1934.

Spent all its life in the South of
England and now it lives in Yorkshire.

They tell me amongst
the heritage railways in Britain,

the North Yorkshire Moors Railway
is the one that's most popular now.

Yes, we carried around
350,000 passengers last year.

We made a little bit of money but
we spend it all back in on the railway.

It's our love
and a lot of us do it for nothing.

I'm a retired railwayman.
I used to drive trains for a living.

But I've driven these
all my life as well.

- Shall we get on board?
- Yes.

Chris Cubitt has been driving
steam trains here since 1969.

Once we've got it up and running,

we put it across
and she'll just romp up the hill.

Right.

Meanwhile,
Harry is shovelling the coal in.

(Michael) Thank you.

Lovely heat, isn't it? Wow.

- It will get a lot hotter than that.
- Yes, OK.

- About 3,000 degrees.
- 3,000 degrees in there.

(Chris) The engine talks to you,
tells you everything.

- (Michael) It talks to you?
- Yes.

It talks to everyone, not just me.

(Michael)
Only you can hear what it's saying.

If you listen to the chimney,
it's nice and soft.

If you put some more steam in,
it goes harsh.

Yes.

The louder it is,
the more Harry has to shovel.

When I get the chance, it's great
to do something I've never done before.

The heat from the boiler is intense.

And... the coal is heavy.

And the locomotive... is very hungry.
Very demanding of coal.

I have a lot of admiration for Harry.
It is very hard work.

- (Harry) Hard work?
- (Michael) Hard work.

You've got to get it
right to the front as well.

Oh, right.

I'll leave that bit to you.

In the 30 years after one of
the first public railway lines opened

between Stockton and Darlington,
Britain was transformed.

Bradshaw's readers would already
take for granted rail journeys

behind powerful
and reliable locomotives.

In a generation, the train had become
an essential part of daily life.

Ever since I was a boy with a train set,
I've loved steam engines.

But now as an adult,

travelling along track that was built
by George Stephenson,

I share Bradshaw's admiration
for the pioneers of locomotion.

They built the future.

On the next leg of my journey,

I'll be hearing how Victorian women
reacted to the railways...

Women reputedly used to hide pins
in their lips

so if a man
actually stole a kiss from them

as they went through
a railway tunnel in the dark,

obviously their lips were lacerated.

...sampling the benefits
of Harrogate's famous spa waters...

The whole point about the waters
was they were a strong purge.

So you would not have breakfast

then come out and drink the waters
and parade about the town.

It's explosive power.

Internally explosive.

...and meeting some alpacas
whose fleeces made a Victorian fortune.

(woman) This is Holly.
She likes smelling hair.

(woman laughs)