Although closed to traffic in 1966, with most of its infrastructure
swiftly destroyed by British Railways, this unique railway line still
lives in the minds of many, some too young to remember it in its
heyday.
For more then a hundred years it courted disaster and could on a number
of occasions have succumbed to overpowering financial pressures, but it
survived with the help of partnerships with larger, more secure
companies, namely the Midland Railway and the London & South Western
Railway. Later on, after the grouping in 1923, the line came under the
control of the L M S and the Southern Railway.
It was unfortunate that the line suffered in later years, from inter
regional rivalry between the Western and Southern Regions of British
Railways, which led to its eventual closure.
The variety of companies involved in its running meant that during its
lifetime the small pool of locomotives needed to service the line was
supplemented by the best each partner could offer.
So from the beginning to the end there were a myriad number of types of
locomotive running over the Mendips providing a lively variety of motive
power.
This heavily illustrated book traces this unique and fascinating history
and brings to life this singular, much missed and loved railway.