Heritage must be treated as a precious commodity
BACK in the days of the tail end of UK steam in the 1960s, the wholesale Beeching closures had left the UK littered with redundant railway buildings, most of them with no track to ever link them again. The car had long been crowned king by then, and while there were those who wistfully longed in vain for their local railway to return, most accepted the march of progress and accepted the eradication of station buildings, engine sheds, signalboxes, footbridges, and water columns as they made way for modern developments as the inevitable march of progress. In three years’ time, we will be celebrating the 200th anniversary of the Stockton & Darlington Railway, which gave the concept of a steam-hauled public railway to the rest of the world and shrank…