YP Letters: Give Maragret Thatcher credit for saving Settle to Carlisle railway
WHILE agreeing with the Rail Freight Group Mike Hogg’s assessment of the Department for Transport’s appalling decision in conection with investment (The Yorkshire Post, December 7), I do not see one of the problems being “Victorian Infrastructure”. On the contrary, I would say it is a lack of Victorian infrastucture, as by the middle of the last century, all ports and docks had extensive rail facilities – miles of siding and marshalling yards. The railway was then king of freight.
Every town and city had its own goods facilities for transferring from rail to road for local delivery. Come the 1960s and British Rail ripped all these out, encouraged by politicians of both parties who believed the only way forward was to build more and more roads.
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Hide AdWe are now suffering from the damage of those short-sighted decisions.
Ironically the only major politician of recent times to refuse the scrapping of a railway was Margaret Thatcher, no less, who on the advice of Michael Portillo, her then Transport Minister, refused BR permission to close the Settle to Carlisle Railway – now a major tourist and freight line.
It is something never mentioned by those who demonise the Iron Lady.