57314 leads 1Z53 Scarborough to Bedford at Willer…
66150 on rear of 1Z50 Kings X - Scarborough via Hu…
66746 at Willerby Carr Crossing with The Royal Sco…
DRS class 68 No. 68004 RAPID at Shap Village on 1Z…
East Midlands Trains class 222 No.222 010 at Robin…
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Hayburn Wyke from Tindall Point 27th February 2011
The Hayburn Wyke Falls 27th February 2011
Looking North from Hayburn Wyke 27th February 2011
Hundale Point 27th February 2011
The North Landing at Flamborough 16th January 2011
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Whitby Abbey at Sunset 20th June 2012
Sunset at Whitby 20th June 2012
Sunset from St.Mary`s Church Whitby 20th June 2012
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Sunset from Sutton Bank Top 15th March 2014
Sunset from Sutton Bank 15th March 2014
Lincoln Cathedral
Byland Abbey
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4965 ROOD ASHTON HALL at Barrow Hill 21st October…
5043 EARL OF MOUNT EDGCUM at Ais Gill with 1Z75 C…
70013 OLIVER CROMWELL on The Scarborough Spa Expre…
60009 UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA at Nappa on 1Z21 The C…
60007 SIR NIGEL GRESLEY at Esk Viaduct on 2P03 10.…
45428 ERIC TREACY+45407 THE LANCASHIRE FUSILIER on…
34067 TANGMERE on 1Z69 The Scarborough Flyer Scar…
6201 PRINCESS ELIZABETH on 1Z42 Crewe to Carlisle…
6201 PRINCESS ELIZABETH Leaving Sarborough on 1Z69…
Rydal Mount ,William Wordsworth`s House 20th July…
Pavey Ark with Jacks Rake running from bottom righ…
Great End from Styhead Tarn
Grasmere
Fairfield from Heron Pike 23rd March 1991
Avro Vulcan,Scarborough Armed Forces Day 28th June…
Waterhead near Ambleside 23rd August 1993
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Wastwater
Haweswater Head 10th September 1996
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Oban Bay 22nd August 2013
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71000 DUKE OF GLOUCESTER at Abbots House Farm on 1T13 14.00 Whitby to Pickering 7th May 2011


The BR Standard Class 8 was a class of 4-6-2 Pacific steam locomotive designed by Robert Riddles for use by British Railways. Only the prototype was constructed, which was named Duke of Gloucester. Constructed at Crewe Works in 1954, the Duke, as it is popularly known, was a replacement for the destroyed Princess Royal Class locomotive number 46202 Princess Anne, which was involved in the Harrow and Wealdstone rail disaster of 1952.
The Duke was based on the BR Standard Class 7 Britannia design. It incorporated three sets of modified Caprotti valve gear, relatively new to British locomotive engineering and more efficient than Walschaerts or Stephenson valve gear. The Duke was regarded as a failure by locomotive crews due to its poor steaming characteristics and its heavy fuel consumption. Trials undertaken by British Railways also returned negative feedback, reporting problems with the poor draughting of the locomotive which resulted in difficulty adhering to the timetables.
The result was an operational period of only eight years. This unique locomotive was saved from being scrapped at Woodham Brothers scrapyard in Barry, Vale of Glamorgan, South Wales when it was purchased by a group of railway enthusiasts who restored it from scrapyard to as-built condition in 13 years. Since then, modifications have been made to the original design, resulting in one of the most efficient and powerful steam locomotives ever to run in Britain. As a result, the Duke of Gloucester can frequently be seen on the mainline around Britain.
The Duke was based on the BR Standard Class 7 Britannia design. It incorporated three sets of modified Caprotti valve gear, relatively new to British locomotive engineering and more efficient than Walschaerts or Stephenson valve gear. The Duke was regarded as a failure by locomotive crews due to its poor steaming characteristics and its heavy fuel consumption. Trials undertaken by British Railways also returned negative feedback, reporting problems with the poor draughting of the locomotive which resulted in difficulty adhering to the timetables.
The result was an operational period of only eight years. This unique locomotive was saved from being scrapped at Woodham Brothers scrapyard in Barry, Vale of Glamorgan, South Wales when it was purchased by a group of railway enthusiasts who restored it from scrapyard to as-built condition in 13 years. Since then, modifications have been made to the original design, resulting in one of the most efficient and powerful steam locomotives ever to run in Britain. As a result, the Duke of Gloucester can frequently be seen on the mainline around Britain.
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