PROPELLING PASSENGERS AT ANSTRUTHER (AND WHITBY AND GUISBOROUGH)
“I used to delight in watching the trains run past the end of the garden on the embankment behind our cottage...”
The June and July 2016 editions of The Railway Magazine carried a fascinating two-part article by consultant editor Nick Pigott containing an in-depth interview with John Cameron CBE, farmer and well-known figure in the railway world, who is the owner of celebrated streamlined ‘A4’ Pacific No. 60009 Union of South Africa and ‘K4’ Mogul No. 61994 The Great Marquess. His family owned large farms in Perthshire and Fife, and the young John grew up in Fife, attending school in the small coastal town of Elie, which lies on the south coast of the doghead-shaped peninsula known as the East Neuk (‘neuk’ meaning ‘corner’).
The East Fife Railway
Elie was one of a number of towns and villages served by the East Fife Railway, or the ‘East of Fife Line’, as it was called in British Railways timetables, which was opened in six stages from 1854 to 1887.
When finally completed it provided a circuitous loop line running for 39 miles from Thornton Junction, on the Edinburgh to Dundee East Coast Main Line (ECML), via Crail and St Andrews to Leuchars Junction, also on the ECML. Thornton and Leuchars Junctions were only 20 miles apart on the ECML, and trains taking the direct route between the two junctions took only 30 to 40 minutes, whereas those taking the route via Crail could take an extra hour.
Nick’s interview with John Cameron was particularly interesting to me because of the references to his own experiences of the East Fife Railway. As a schoolboy, during the early 1950s, he was allowed to help out at Elie signalbox and to take footplate rides all the way to
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