LMS & BR Days

Hughes 4-6-0 No.10432 mainly in LMS red, but with a black boiler!
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Introduction
The demise of the L&Y came about simply because the Government wished to create a few huge
railway companies following the First World War, ostensibly for efficiency but practically to avoid
paying the huge reparations they owed for the enormous effort the private companies had put in
during the conflict.
Rather than allowing natural allies to merge through the stockmarket they forced through the
amalgamation that became the big four which would have forced the L&Y, on 1st January 1923, to
become part of the London Midland and Scottish Railway.
However, in 1921 the London & North Western Railway with which the L&Y had good relations,
appointed the L&Y General Manager, Arthur Watson, to the same post on the LNW while retaining
his L&Y post. It was then announced that the two lines would merge on Ist January 1922. Whilst the
LNW was a much bigger company and its name was applied to the new organisation it was L&Y men
who took most of the top jobs including George Hughes as CME. When the LMS was formed a year
later, both Watson and Hughes took the same jobs in the new group. In the three years up to his
retirement Hughes introduced his highly successful 2-6-0 mixed traffic engine known as the ‘Crab’
which served the LMS and BR with distinction until the mid-1960s.
The old L&Y became a major part of the Central Division of the LMS and while standard systems
were introduced the operation carried on much as it had before. The most obvious change was
to liveries with carriages becoming red (although many Attock arc roof carriages retained L&Y
colours with LMS markings until withdrawal around 1930). Passenger engines became red until the
economies brought on by the recession dictated a return to black.
The great recession of the 1930s affected the area served by the old Company in many ways. Goods
movement was down, passenger traffic was down and petrol buses and lorries began to eat away
at the remaining business as well. Further rationalisation took place at Horwich, after the building of 10 ‘Jinties’ in 1931 no new locomotive construction took place for 12 years. A few small engine
sheds were closed and their staff and locos transferred to nearby larger depots eg. Colne staff
went to Rose Grove and Ormskirk staff were split between Lostock Hall (Preston) and Bank Hall
(Liverpool). However, it was not all doom and gloom, as new dormitory suburbs were being built new
stations were opened at Squires Gate (Blackpool) in 1931, Besses o’the Barn (Bury) in 1933 and
Bowker Vale (North Manchester) in 1937. Signalling was improved as well with special installations
at Manchester Victoria in 1930 and Mirfield in 1932 to speed up traffic and replacements were to the
latest LMS standards.
During the war maintenance suffered and several L&Y srtuctures were destroyed or damaged.
Manchester Victoria took a direct hit causing major damage and the loss of the Central Train Control
office.
After the war the Government again forced through a major reorganisation taking the railways into
state ownership. Once again the money which should have gone into renewing the railway did not
materialise (this time it went to the shareholders of the Big Four) so the recovery was slow and
painful. Much of the infrastructure such as station buildings and canopies had not been touched for
years and needed major attention. The funds were not available so they eventually became unsafe
and had to be demolished. Horwich works was run down and eventually closed although, happily,
most of the buildings still survive.
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