This is a test of GDPR / Cookie Acceptance [about our cookies]
Really irritating test - cookie expires in 24 hour!
Cardington Street?
As at 22nd November 2024 05:18 GMT
 
Re: Cardington Street?
Posted by PhilWakely at 11:58, 19th December 2023
 
As a youngster, I would try to visit Collector's Corner whenever I was in London. I only ever purchased two items - a Warship plaque made from remnants of a scrapped (original) class 43 and a BR(W) noticeboard header.

Re: Cardington Street?
Posted by 1st fan at 23:31, 18th December 2023
 
No because I’m too young to have gone 50 or 60 years ago but I would have loved to have gone there. Looks amazing.

Re: Cardington Street?
Posted by RichardB at 23:26, 18th December 2023
 
Around five years before Collectors Corner opened at Euston, the Western set up its own place selling railwayana in a room at Newton Abbot station.  No idea how long it lasted - I certainly never saw it.

Re: Cardington Street?
Posted by RichardB at 23:23, 18th December 2023
 
I was a regular visitor to Collectors' Corner from around 1980.  Knew it in all three of its Euston locations and well remember the pile of running-in boards at the bottom of the steps to the first one.  Bought a doublesided Forres running-in board for £20 when the large amount of enamel signage that had survived in Scotland until the early 80s was being replaced with the emergence of Scotrail under Chris Green.  That was in its second location, at ground level just along from the first.

Much missed.


Re: Cardington Street?
Posted by bradshaw at 18:22, 18th December 2023
 
I called in there one late afternoon many years ago. Bought the running in board for Oxenholme for £5!
Too big to get into a taxi, I had to unscrew it into its two halve and carry them to Paddington. It was fun meeting a friend at a pub in Marylebone at rush hour!
Then caught the HST to Castle Cary and on to Maiden Newton.
I kept it for many years, eventually selling it with a green totem for Maiden Newton and a sign from Cattistock Halt in order to buy a new MacBook!

Re: Cardington Street?
Posted by grahame at 16:50, 18th December 2023
 
I don't know if other members ever visited Collectors Corner at Cardington Street, Euston, some 50 to 60 years ago (goodness) and bought railway memorabilia for a song.  It came up "on this day" for 18th December (1982) which is the timestamp on the top two pictures; search as I might I could not come up with a picture of the inside as a whole.



I have a few - very few / far too few things that my pocket money let me buy ...

From the Science Museum

The idea for a shop which could sell off British Rail’s (BR) collectable items commonly known as relics arose from a staff suggestion after it was noticed that a former BR Fireman who had been made redundant had set up a business buying and selling railway relics which in the late 1960s mainly comprised of items from steam locomotives such as name and number plates. Collectors Corner opened in November 1969 in a building on Cardington Street, Euston which had originally been a harness room for horses which were used for the delivery and collection of parcels in the local area of London. Starting from a small staff of two which was part of the London Midland Region`s Stores Controller organisation, a sweep of various stores around the Region had brought together all sorts of items from lamps to station signs, out of date copies of rule books, timetables, labels, signalling equipment, old uniform clothing etc. Initially the shop was open on three days a week from Wednesday to Friday ...

Cardington Street?
Posted by grahame at 19:57, 17th January 2023
 
Collectors Corner?

From Rail Magazine

DB Cargo (DBC) has put a further 12 Class 60s up for sale, with a deadline of registrations to receive tender documents on January 20.

The operator has previously sold 36 of the class, some of which are now operated by DC Rail and GB Railfreight.

If all 12 are bought, it will mean that DBC has sold 48 of the 100-strong class, all of which passed to the company via its EWS predecessor.

To be ‘sold as seen’, all 12 have been out of service for more than a decade. They are among 35 of the class currently stored in long lines in Toton yard.

An unspecified reserve price has been set by DBC, with the winners being the highest-value bids. None of those offered for sale have been refurbished.

and from Ozark Mountain Railcar

SEABOARD COAST LINE OBSERVATION CAR #775004

 
The Coffee Shop forum is provided by customers of Great Western Railway (formerly First Great Western). The views expressed are those of the individual posters concerned. Visit https://www.gwr.com for the official Great Western Railway website. Please contact the administrators of this site if you feel that the content provided by one of our posters contravenes our posting rules ( graham AT sn12.net ).

Although we are planning ahead, we don't know what the future will bring here in the Coffee Shop. We have domains "firstgreatwestern.info" for w-a-y back and also "greatwesternrailway.info"; we can also answer to "greatbritishrailways.info" too. For the future, information about Great Brisish Railways, by customers and for customers.
 
Current Running
GWR trains from JourneyCheck
 
Links in development

Member contributions
Recent new POSTS
Recent new THREADS
Popular Threads
Member Polls
Transport Diary
So far this month
Search for

Also on our site
About the forum
Whitelisted (public) documents
On this travel day
2B added - Individual Station Data

User site admin
Tailor your experience

Externnal Links
JourneyCheck
2B added - Live Station updates
2B added - Booking engine links
BBC news feed

Old site pages - active
About the Coffee Shop
Acronymns and Abbreviations

Old site pages - being replaced
BBC News Feed
Recent New Topics
Popular Threads
Members Polls
On this day
Diary
So far this month
Forum Home Page
 
Code Updated 13th September 2024
From https://greatwesternrailway.info/t27096.html - go insecure