I hear there has been more building at the station site in Towcester.Anyone know what they've dug up?…Continue
Tags: Towcester
Started by Andy Thompson. Last reply by Nigel Nov 7.
Broom History Group will be holding an event at Broom Village Hall 2-4pm on 9th November 2024 including a film on the railway and Broom Junction.…Continue
Started by Simon Stevens Oct 25.
Hello, I'm a new member and I've searched through the articles and can't find anything specific to my answer/ question. Can anyone help?…Continue
Started by Matt Davis. Last reply by Matt Davis Oct 16.
Hi everybodyI’m building a OO gauge model of Fenny Compton and Clifford Sidings over here in Belgium.Quite a strange idea but so be it…In view of this I plan to transform a RTR Beatie Well Tank into SMJR N° 5 the 2-4-0T and use some etchings for the…Continue
Started by Jack Freuville Aug 29.
Folks,
Please accept my apologies if I'm stepping out of line with this, but just recently we have formed the Helmdon and District Heritage Railway Society with the intention of turning Helmdon GCR station into a working museum. Given that the SMJ runs underneath the GCR Viaduct just north of Helmdon GCR station we are looking at including the SMJ as part of Helmdons railway heritage.
I was wondering if anyone knows if there are any colour pictures of the SMJ Company crest which we have so far been unable to find.
I hope posting this is ok but if there are any problems please let me know.
Best wishes
Paul
Tags:
Simon, the seal die is a METAL stamp that was used in a seal press machine to stamp official company letters. It does not impart any colour to the paper, I suppose it's similar to embossing. The crest or coat of arms is a colour shield that most big railway companies had and displayed them on their engines or carriages. The coat of arms are usually slightly different to the seal die pattern. I have not yet been able to find a coat of arms for the SMJR in colour or black & white.
I know the difference between a seal die (is a larger one a walrus die?) and a crest.
If you look at the seal image, there are different hatching patterns, and I believe these are used to represent colour.
It may be that this is as far as it ever went: I have seen no evidence of a crest on a locomotive, carriage or wagon. Use of lettering seems to have been it, after a short period of SMJ plates on engines.
My point was, that if we wish to create a colour version, then we probably use the hatching, or indeed the Stratford seal, as guidance. It might not be 100% historically correct, but it would be authentic in spirit. (I was thinking more of the "society" than I was or your Heldon project, admittedly.)
Simon
Dick Bodily said:
Slightly of subject but equally relevant to Helmdon, did the Northampton & Banbury or the East and West Junction have coloured crests?
Again off track but possibly of interest... somewhere I've seen a picture of the GC being built near Helmdon Viaduct with a temporary link line to the East & West and some sort of a camp. I'll have a good look through all my GC literature to see if I can find it. There are unfortunately not too clear pictures of Helmdon taken by SWA Newton in Rolt's 'The Making of Railway' but somewhere I've seen better.
Dick, I have done a search and can find no reference to the E & W or N & B railway company seals let alone any company crests. Were these companies so hard up they just could not afford them ?
Seal die for the Birmingham, North Warwickshire & Stratford upon Avon Railway Company showing that the emblem for Stratford was indeed a shield with 3 'tiger' faces and inverted 'V'. C 1894. Interestingly Sir Edward Watkin, of the G.C.R., hoped to gain control of this railway and together with the SMJR provide a through Great Central route from London to Birmingham.
NIGEL said:
Dick, I have done a search and can find no reference to the E & W or N & B railway company seals let alone any company crests. Were these companies so hard up they just could not afford them ?
Over 11 years ago I came across a book with details of old liveries, devices, etc. The SMJR managed less than a page, including a very brief history of 3 sentences! I passed the book on to a friend who runs a decal manufacturing business not unknown to railway modellers. It may have been George Dow's book, if so then he would have had direct access to any remaining official records.
The attached picture is a scan from that book, and the following words accompanied it:
"No armorial device of any kind was in use but the oldest and biggest component, the East & West Junction, which ran from Stratford-on-Avon to Towcester, displayed a garter 12 ¾ in wide x 12 ¼ in high on some of its chocolate and cream coaches. It is illustrated because of its great rarity; the vehicle number was usually exhibited within it.
"According to Teariness' records this garter was first ordered in 1897, when the white background was shaded pink. Similar transfers ordered nine years later embodied a green background shaded pink. The specimen in the author's collection has a pale blue background."
I would advise being slightly wary of the "chocolate and cream" description, as contemporaneous descriptions also suggest that the darker colour was crimson lake, or like the LNWR's plum. In reality, there was probably some form of lake involved, but beyond that, who knows?
Andy Thompson said:
Paul
Andy here - this whole site was my fault! (although I only got it going, the members have taken over that baton!)
As far as an SMJ crest goes... when I started the first version of the site - www.towcestersrailwayhistory.co.uk I too wanted a crest, it seemed a good central starting point. I too struggled, and have struggled since in finding a definite one.
If there is no-one here that can help - you are stuffed!
By te by, when the museum gets going, I have a bolt (one of those which sat inside those ceramic insulators that held the telegraph wires that seemed to go up and down as we looked out of our carriage windows) borrowed from Helmdon GCR station
Andy
Andy, the official blazon for Stratford upon Avon was, in 1905, ' a chevron azure (sky blue) between three leopard's faces gules (dark red). It doesn't mention the background colour, but the blazon is yellow or gold. Whether the SMJR used a coat of arms is still elusive, the possible other option is to have the 2 seal dies side by side for Helmdon.
Simon,
Thanks for the info on the East and West 'garter' displayed on its coaches. You can see an example of this on page 150 of the Riley and Simpson book. I always wondered what that blob was in the middle of the 'garter', and now I know it's the coach number (looks like no.6 to me). Interesting to note that the lettering on the coach is SMJ, I wonder if they changed the E&W lettering on the garter?
I do have an example of this Garter amongst all my paraphernalia, I've scanned a copy for your perusal. I'll leave you to decide on colours!
I hope Paul doesn't mind us hijacking his thread on the discussion of crests etc. he must think we're a little obsessive.
Best regards,
Jim.
Of course, that obsessive part to us might be exactly why he came here and started the thread! :)Simon,
I hope Paul doesn't mind us hijacking his thread on the discussion of crests etc. he must think we're a little obsessive.
Best regards,
Jim.
Thanks for that: I was completely unaware of that envelope.Simon,
I do have an example of this Garter amongst all my paraphernalia, I've scanned a copy for your perusal. I'll leave you to decide on colours!
Best regards,
Jim.
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