Until 1987, there was still a busy stretch of British main line railway
where traditional Victorian operating practices were used to control the
movements of both express passenger and a variety of freight trains.
At the heart of the former Midland Railway main line from St Pancras to
Sheffield, the 45-mile section between Irchester in Northamptonshire and
Loughborough in Nottinghamshire was equipped with semaphore signals
worked from twenty-three mechanical signalboxes. It was the last main
line in the country where this once-standard arrangement remained
virtually unchanged since the days of steam. This pocket of mechanical
signalling was christened The Leicester Gap, because Leicester was to be
the site of a new power signalbox, the last in a chain of just five that
would control the whole of the Midland Main Line into the twenty-first
century.
From 1984 when resignalling work started, to 1987 when it was completed,
the author photographed as many trains passing through the Leicester Gap
as he could. This book is the result of those efforts.