Gresley's A4 Pacifics are arguably the most famous locomotives ever
built, a status cemented by Mallard's record breaking run on the 3rd
July '38. And yet only a year later the glamorous 'streaks' seemed
likely to be cast into obscurity by the coming of another world war. So,
for only four exhilarating years they were allowed to flourish as their
creator had intended and in that time captured the imagination of
railwaymen and public alike.
With the help of previously unpublished material the author analyses the
complex evolution of the A4s - a project that began in 1911 when Gresley
was appointed as Locomotive Superintendent of the Great Northern
Railway. It is a story with many strands to consider - war, peace and
war again, engineering and art, politics and business, recession and
social change, the growth of the media and consumerism, the struggle for
professional reputations and a growing, deeply damaging international
rivalry. All these elements are captured in the story of the A4s in the
heady days before conflict ended their brief golden age and Gresley's
life came to an end.