Template:Featured picture/December 2021
Van 1 was built in 2004 and is a replica of an 1873 Brown Marshall & Co. bogie van, familiarly known as the curly roofed van. It was paid for by a generous sponsor. As a practical detail while working this vehicle, it is convenient for a guard to look forward along the train over the concave section of the roof without putting his head above the roof line. In earlier days this would have been a life-saver, but nowadays the loading gauge has been extended from 8ft 6ins high to 9ft 8ins, so the same consideration no longer applies. The Festiniog Railway bought the bodies for three bogie luggage vans from Brown, Marshall & Co. - two in 1873 and the third in 1876, and added the bogies and brakegear at Boston Lodge works following delivery. They each contained a guard's compartment, a large luggage compartment accessed externally by sliding doors or internally from the guard's compartment, and a small compartment for dogs. On account of their peculiarly shaped roofs these vans became known to the preservationists as the Curly Roofed Vans, but this term was not used by the old FR Co. Unfortunately none of these vehicles survives in original form. The original Van 1 was broken up in 1921 and van 3 in 1955. Photo credit: User:Traindriverowen |