The
Great Western Railway promoted its holiday lines with enterprise
and imagination, none more so than the routes to the south-west
which somehow seemed to be everybody's favourite destination
for a break at the seaside. The famous 'Cornish Riviera Express'
restaurant car train between London and Penzance was easily
the best-known on the route. After the Second World War, holidays
with pay became the norm for the masses and this sparked a
massive upsurge in holiday traffic. Using top quality images,
this album looks back at the last years of steam on the former
Great Western routes in Devon and Cornwall which retained much
of their distinctive atmosphere well into the 1960s.