Great British Railway Journeys (2010) s02e06 Episode Script

Ledbury to Shrewsbury

In 1840, one man transformed travel in Britain.
His name was George Bradshaw, and his railway guides inspired the Victorians to take to the tracks.
Stop by stop, he told them where to travel, what to see and where to stay.
Now, 170 years later, I'm making a series of journeys across the length and breadth of the country to see what of Bradshaw's Britain remains.
In the mid-19th century, Britain was in the grip of a railway revolution.
George Bradshaw's timetables were an essential tool for the new wave of Victorian travellers.
His handbook gave them travel tips and tourist information.
Today I'm using it to plan my journeys around Britain.
The journey I'm starting now is along a line that was built for speedy communication.
Ireland was part of the United Kingdom in George Bradshaw's day.
The railway was extended to Holyhead in 1848 to cut five hours off the journey time between Dublin and London for really important things, everything from urgent documents to Members of Parliament.
This historic railway was built to carry the Irish mail.
But it also brought changes to the crafts, industries and places along the way.
Bradshaw wrote about many of them, and, with his help, I'll find out how the railways transformed almost everything that they touched.
On the first leg of my route, I'll be sampling a classic Victorian drink How much cider or perry? There are 1200 gallons in that one and about 40,000 in Pip and Squeak.
(Michael) Pip and Squeak! You'd get quite a hangover from one of those.
meeting Britain's finest pedigree bulls It's extraordinary that he is so docile.
Just not the reputation bulls have at all.
.
And discovering an engineering first.
(man) This is the grandfather of the skyscraper.
Really? The skyscraper was born in Shropshire.
The skyscraper is born right here.
Following my "Bradshaw's Guide", I'm journeying north through the Welsh border towns of Shrewsbury and Chirk towards Chester.
Then I'll follow the scenic coastal route to Llandudno, before travelling inland to explore Snowdonia, and crossing the Isle of Anglesey to Holyhead.
Starting in Ledbury, today I'll travel 65 miles via Hereford to the pretty market town of Shrewsbury.
For city dwellers like me, Herefordshire seems impenetrably rural.
But in the days of horse and cart, its towns and villages would have been days away from the major English cities.
The railways brought rapid connections and the products of the countryside found markets throughout the kingdom.
We pass through the most spectacular green, rolling fields and that's brought us into my first stop, Ledbury.
"Bradshaw's" describes Ledbury as "a place remarkable for its manufacture of rope, twine and also cider and perry.
" Perry has been made in this area for over 150 years.
But apparently, few people know much about it today.
- Do you know what perry is? - Perry? - It's a drink, isn't it? - It is.
- It doesn't mean anything to you? - No, it doesn't.
I'm following a 19th-century guidebook.
It says that this place is remarkable for cider and perry.
Do you know what perry is? Erm It's like a sparkling Like a sparkling Not quite sure.
(Michael laughs) - What's it made from, do you know? - No, I don't.
(Michael) Can you tell me what perry is? Perry is an alcoholic drink made from pears rather than apples for cider.
There's local perry producers in and around.
- Do you drink it yourself? - Yes, I do, chilled.
Very nice.
One of the oldest perry producers is just up the road.
I've walked through a beautiful garden up to this historic house.
It's surrounded by an industrial complex, what looks like a brewery, evidently where they make the perry and the cider.
- Helen.
Hello, I'm Michael.
- Hi, Michael.
- How lovely to see you.
- And you.
Helen Thomas's family has been making perry for over 100 years, since her great-grandfather, Henry Weston, began farming here.
But it wasn't always a business.
When it was first made, what was it for? Presumably for people locally.
Mainly it was for home consumption.
Also it was part of the wages that they used to pay their labourers with.
They'd have so much cider and so much pay at the same time.
The drink used to pay the workers was also known as haymakers' cider and had little alcoholic content.
To make extra cash, it was sold to passing travellers at the gate, who often added a little something of their own.
Bradshaw says that the cider and the perry are sometimes "qualified" with brandy.
What does that mean? I think they must have put extra brandy with the perry and cider to make it a little stronger.
I haven't actually tried that.
- That would make you pretty drunk.
- I'm sure it would.
How did it go from being something enjoyed by villagers and farm workers to being a commercial proposition? Henry Weston made a particularly good cider and perry and he was encouraged to make more of it and start to sell it commercially.
He would have used the railway to get it further afield.
He would have used a horse and cart to take it to the railway station.
- And from there to the nation.
- That's right.
As the railway network expanded through Herefordshire, Henry Weston's perry business began to grow.
Other farmers brought their perry pears here to be processed and bottled before being sent all over Britain.
But Henry had his own orchards as well.
These are the cider apple trees.
The taller trees you see in front are perry pears.
This is a perry pear tree.
You can see it's much larger than the cider apple trees which are behind you.
They take years and years to grow.
They say you plant a perry pear tree for your heirs.
(Michael) Bradshaw might have been drinking perry from trees like this.
- (Helen) I'm sure.
- If I come back in 20 years, I'll still be able to see some of these magnificent old, tall trees.
(Helen) I want them here for another hundred years.
The varieties of pears used for perry are native to Herefordshire and are still processed in traditional ways.
- This is fantastic.
- (Helen) This is our vat house.
All these immense casks Vats, you call them.
(Helen) They've all got a particular name.
When you refer to something, you know where it is and what you're talking about.
We have three that Henry Weston The first vats that he bought.
They are called Gloucester, Worcester and Hereford.
(Michael) Is this a museum? - You don't still use these vats? - All these vats are used.
We can't get these vats now, so these are part of our heritage, and very important to how we make our cider.
(Michael) How much cider or perry would they contain? There are 1200 gallons in that one and about 40,000 in Pip and Squeak.
Pip and Squeak.
Bit of an understatement.
You'd get quite a hangover from one of those.
There's one change to perry since Bradshaw's day.
Victorian perry was still.
But Helen also makes a sparkling variety, which these days is sold as pear cider.
I'm happy to try both.
- Any technique to this? - I don't think so.
- You drink it like a fine wine.
- Slight slight smell of pear.
- Soft and mellow.
- Soft, mellow, completely flat.
- Not a bubble in sight.
- This is what Henry Weston made.
Then this fellow I can see has bubbles.
(Helen) Slightly sparkling.
Yeah.
Stronger smell of pear, I'd say.
Much sweeter.
More pear-like.
I like the bubbles on the tongue.
I remember perry being advertised when I was a child with a little Bambi hopping around on the edge of a champagne glass.
- It's not for men, is that right? - It is today.
It's served in pubs and you buy it by the pint.
You can go into a pub and say, "I want some perry.
" Yes, you can.
(Michael) Well done.
Cheers.
Happy days.
Before the perry goes to my head, I need to retrace my steps to Ledbury and unearth more about its very unusual station.
- Hello.
- Morning.
Very beautiful ticket office.
We do our best to keep standards up here.
Unlike at most stations, the ticket office isn't run by a railway company, but by a small-scale entrepreneur, John Goldrick.
I'm paid on commission basis rather than a salary from the railways.
I want to see people travelling by train.
It's up to me to encourage people to use the railways.
(Michael) Have you got a lot of people using the line? (John) We're jammed.
We've gone from a forgotten country station to capacity.
Let me boost your commission a tiny bit.
Can I have a single ticket standard class to Hereford, please? OK.
That will cost you £5.
Next stop, Hereford.
My "Bradshaw's Guide" describes this next part of the line as "one of the most picturesque in the country".
This is the very essence of England, isn't it? Deep, beautiful, rich greens.
Rolling countryside.
Fantastic.
(conductor) Tickets and passes, please.
Thank you very much.
This is a very beautiful stretch of line.
We're seeing it at its best today.
- Lovely.
Nice day for it.
- Thank you very much.
Bye-bye.
Next stop is Hereford, which I know a bit.
Beautiful cathedral city.
Although there are things I haven't seen there.
But I'm going in particular because Bradshaw mentions the cattle.
He says, "They are a splendid breed, white-faced with soft, reddish brown coats.
" I'm really looking forward to meeting my Herefords.
(conductor) We will shortly be arriving at Hereford, where this service will be terminating.
All change, please, all change.
In the 19th century, the Hereford was one of the country's top breeds and Hereford beef graced many Victorian dinner tables.
Astonishingly, there were three trains a day leaving Hereford carrying cows acquired in the city's market down to London.
I'm interested to know what made this pedigree breed so successful.
So I'm heading to a farm whose speciality is grass-fed organic Hereford cattle.
It's been owned by the Watkins family for five generations and once enjoyed its own railway link.
Hello.
Michael.
- Hello, David Watkins.
- George Watkins.
Welcome to Ballingham.
This is an old railway bridge.
(George) This is in fact the old Ballingham station.
(Michael) Not much trace of a line now.
When did this close? '64, I think, with the rest of the Beeching closures.
(Michael) So you would remember this, David? Yes, I can remember a steam train coming through here.
Very, very young.
(Michael) Were you a passenger or were you bringing your cattle here? (David) We used to bring cattle down, so my grandfather used to tell me, to load them on the train to go to Hereford and Ross markets.
In Victorian times, the farm and the cattle began to thrive thanks to the railway.
It really is a very handsome animal.
It really is strikingly red.
What are its characteristics as an animal and as a meat? The animal itself, why it was originally so popular, was its hardiness.
They get fat off the land here.
They don't need a lot of grass to get them fat in comparison with a more modern breed.
This old Welsh breed was so resilient that, in the 19th century, farmers around the world imported them to improve the quality of their cattle stock.
I think they first started going off in the 1850s, firstly to America, then Australia, and then pretty much everywhere in between.
That coincided with the railways.
That enabled them to take them to the ports.
And then off to wherever else.
(Michael) Herefords are now globalised.
(George) Yeah.
You'll see Herefords as far as the States, Mongolia, Australia, Argentina.
They're pretty much everywhere.
(Michael) George Bradshaw describes Herefords as having the red coat and white face.
That's the same.
But would he otherwise recognise these Herefords of today? (George) I think he'd recognise them.
Sometimes you see old photographs of Hereford cattle that might be a bit more dumpy and short, whereas now we try and get a longer animal with less wastage in the leg.
Herefords were known for their succulent meat marbled with fat.
But as tastes changed in the 20th century, they fell out of fashion.
In England they were replaced by larger, leaner European cattle.
Today, Hereford meat is marketed as a niche product for discerning customers.
(George) People are much more interested in where their food comes from.
Obviously here we can oversee the whole thing from the moment I pull the calf to the moment it ends up on the plate in Hereford.
So traceability is really important.
And why? Why is it such a good breed to have? I think it's because they're very relaxed and very docile.
As you can see now, they're not bothered too much about us.
I think it comes through into the flavour of the meat.
(George) We've got a bull just over there.
We can go up and stroke him.
- You're not serious? - He's pretty docile.
As part of my Spanish heritage, I'm not used to doing that.
We have a rather more aggressive approach normally.
George, this is an immense animal.
It's extraordinary that he is so docile.
Just not the reputation bulls have at all.
What a friendly guy.
Well, I didn't think I would ever touch a bull.
George and David sell most of their meat locally.
And some of it ends up on the plate at their hotel in the centre of Hereford, where I'm going to spend the night.
Isn't this absolutely wonderful? Quintessentially English.
The medieval cathedral rising above the river.
The bridge, 1490, damaged in the English Civil War.
A perfect summer's evening.
A superb view.
And now, at last, I think an excellent steak dinner.
Traditionally, Hereford beef is hung for 25 days to enhance the taste.
I'm about to enjoy the result of all that patient effort.
Thank you very much indeed.
Marvellous.
Tender.
Delicious.
- Full of flavour.
Fantastic.
- Excellent.
Morning in Hereford.
I'm on my way to the cathedral, which I've seen before, but there's something I haven't seen and I have long wanted to.
Today I will fulfil that ambition.
My "Bradshaw's Guide" talks about "a curious Saxon map of the world" kept in the cathedral's library.
I'm meeting the commercial director of the cathedral, Dominic Harbour, to find out more.
Dominic.
Michael.
You're admiring your beautiful cathedral.
The map is fragile and must be kept in a darkened room.
This is the most extraordinary thing, Dominic.
So point out to me the great places.
Where's Jerusalem? (Dominic) Jerusalem at the very centre of the map, shown as a circle.
Really it's from there where the rest of the known habitable world spreads out.
This extremely rare manuscript is called the Mappa Mundi.
It's a 13th-century concept of the world drawn onto animal skin.
In a way, this is what we would almost call a virtual map, or a conceptual map.
It's not geographically accurate.
Absolutely.
Geography isn't really the greatest priority on this map.
You've got illustrations from the Bible.
You've got information about flora, fauna.
It's like cyberspace at the end of the 13th century.
Originally, the map would have been visited by religious pilgrims.
But by the 19th century, Hereford Cathedral was increasingly attracting Victorians who were simply curious about their history.
George Bradshaw calls it "a curious Saxon map".
Why was he really rather dismissive of this thing? (Dominic) Particularly to Bradshaw's time, this was something that illustrated perhaps everything that was bad about what we think of medieval today.
It's chaotic, it's barbaric, it's dirty, it's complete chaos.
(Michael) Is it unique to Hereford? (Dominic) There would have been other Mappa Mundi that existed across Europe.
In fact they were quite common at that time.
However, certainly by Bradshaw's time, this was a very rare, exceptional survival.
- Did you tell me it was on hide? - Yes.
It's a single piece of calfskin.
- It could be a Herefordshire, could it? - Possibly.
(Michael) Really remarkable visit.
Thank you so much.
I'm now leaving Hereford for the last leg of my journey.
Busy, busy.
50 miles along the track towards Shrewsbury.
And there's one thing I'd like to straighten out before I arrive there.
Excuse me.
- Do you know the line quite well? - Erm, yes.
- (Michael) Such beautiful country.
- It's gorgeous.
I love the ride going into Shrewsbury Station and the castle up above and the gorgeous station.
I notice you say Shrewsbury.
Should I say Shrewsbury or Shrowsbury? You could ask people in Shrewsbury or Shrowsbury what they say.
I think that's a good idea.
- It's like tomahto, tomayto.
- It is.
(Michael) Hmm.
OK.
(tannoy) This train is for Manchester Piccadilly.
The next stop is Shrewsbury.
The electronic voice thinks it's Shrewsbury.
But I think I'll check with real human beings when I get there.
My "Bradshaw's Guide" offers no advice on this thorny matter, but it does make me focus on the town's impressive station.
Bradshaw is really keen on it because it's built in the Tudor style with these lovely tall chimneys and he's kind of shocked at how much it cost.
£100,000, including acquiring the site.
But he really approves of it, too, and it is beautiful.
It's testimony that Shrewsbury was really keen on the railways, and this palace indicates Shrewsbury's enthusiasm for the new age.
Time now, though, to find out just how the good folk of Shrewsbury pronounce their town's name.
Excuse me.
Am I in Shrewsbury or Shrowsbury? - (both) Shrewsbury.
- You're very clear about that.
It's always known that that side of the bridge say Shrowsbury, - that side say Shrewsbury.
- (Michael) What's the difference? The private school tends to bring a lot of the Shrowsbury.
- The private school is Shrowsbury.
OK.
- Yeah, I think so.
Shrewsbury or Shrowsbury, in Bradshaw's day, this place was very different from the rural market town that we see today.
It was once at the centre of the Industrial Revolution, surrounded by mills and foundries.
There's one mill in particular that I've been urged to see.
- John.
- Hello, Michael.
- Good to see you.
- Welcome to Ditherington flax mill.
Showing me around the mill is John Yates, inspector of historic buildings for Shropshire.
Forgive me, it doesn't look all that special.
What is the point of it? It's special on the inside, as you'll see in a minute.
But it's an actual first.
The world's first iron-framed building.
This is absolutely at the cutting edge of technology.
The new technology of the time, an iron building, an experimental building.
200 feet long, five storeys high, 40 feet wide.
An astonishing act of confidence and bravado and virtuosity and skill.
(Michael) You've whetted my appetite.
How do we get in? The owners of the site had just suffered a financial catastrophe.
They'd lost thousands of pounds when one of their timber-frame mills in Leeds had burned down.
(John) Onwards and upwards.
Desperate to avoid more losses, they hired engineer Charles Bage to design a new mill in Shrewsbury.
Bage knew that cast iron was being used to make rails at nearby Coalbrookdale.
He decided to make use of it in a building.
That's what it's all about.
Isn't it wonderful? (Michael) These supports, they're made of iron? (John) They're made of cast iron.
Iron poured molten into a bed of sand that's been shaped to go to this lovely, slender shape, just tapering out a little in the middle, just like the columns on the Parthenon.
Significantly, Charles Bage's iron frame was fireproof.
When the railways arrived, it became easier to transport large pieces of iron and then steel around the country and many other new buildings adopted the technology.
(John) These columns all support iron beams that run right across the building from one side to another.
Then the beams themselves support shallow brick vaults, just half a brick thick, that span from one beam to the other.
Then to stop the vaults simply collapsing by pushing apart in the way that arches always do, there are wrought-iron, even stronger iron, formed into bars that run the whole length of the building, all 200 foot of it.
So this three-way metal frame, that's up, across and along, - is the grandfather of the skyscraper.
- Really? The skyscraper was born in Shropshire.
The skyscraper is born right here.
(John) Shropshire may seem a sleepy place now, but in 1800, this was Silicon Valley.
This was absolutely at the cutting edge of the technological and industrial revolution.
The use of a metal frame in place of wood enabled architects to design taller buildings and eventually led to the steel-framed skyscrapers of the 20th century.
Before I leave Shrewsbury, there's an intriguing reference in my guidebook that I must investigate.
This high spire is the Church of St Mary's.
Bradshaw is clearly quite amused by an incident that occurred here.
He says, "Many years ago a hare-brained fellow undertook to slide down a rope laid from the top of this spire to the other side of the river, but he was killed in the attempt.
" That's rather sad.
I've come to find out more about the tragic events of 1739 from Robert Milton, who works at St Mary's Church.
(Robert) Robert Cadman was a steeplejack by trade.
He was asked by the church council to repair the weather vane on top of the spire.
Having done so, he then requested permission to do his party trick, which was the tying of a rope to the bell frame, bringing it through the louvres behind us.
It then extended to the very far side of the river, to ground just short of the railway box.
- About 500 yards.
- Good Lord.
He would then walk up the line performing tricks and the firing of pistols.
I suppose hundreds of people would have turned out to watch this stuff.
It was a craze of its day.
Of course his wife would go round and collect the pennies and whatever was being offered at the time.
His final trick was to slide all the way down the rope from the spire to the ground.
That's where it went wrong, unfortunately.
Where the rope had come through the bell louvres, it parted, and poor Robert plummeted to his death.
It snapped here? It snapped here where it came through the wooden frame.
Is Cadman regarded as the hero of Shrewsbury? Do people celebrate his birthday? (Robert) No.
I think relatively speaking he's quite unknown within the town.
I hope George Bradshaw has done something to revive his memory.
I hope so.
I think it's well deserved.
I'm often surprised by details that Bradshaw thought to include in his guidebook.
From hare-brained tightrope walkers to white-faced cows and the origins of perry, the full breadth of life and death is captured in its pages, and all of it accessible because of the new railways.
In Herefordshire, farmers made use of the arrival of the railways to find new markets for their products.
In Shropshire, inventors and entrepreneurs grasped the railways enthusiastically to pursue their industrial revolution.
The railways transformed everywhere.
But the nature of the change depended upon the geography and the character of the people in each county.
On my next journey, I'm following Bradshaw to see the world's first iron bridge - Where do I go to see it? - Down the bottom.
It's amazing, you'll love it.
visiting a place where the railways weren't initially welcome My ancestor at the time of the railway was particularly disenchanted with the idea of a railway being built across his land.
So he tried very hard to disrupt the surveyors.
and discovering the secrets of good cheese.
It's just exactly as my great grandfather would recognise.

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