Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated:
1
00:00:02,440 --> 00:00:04,240
World War I was a railway war.
2
00:00:06,600 --> 00:00:08,000
I'm going to find out
3
00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,120
how the railways helped to precipitate a mechanised war,
4
00:00:13,120 --> 00:00:16,280
defined how it was fought,
5
00:00:16,280 --> 00:00:19,720
conveyed millions to the trenches,
6
00:00:19,720 --> 00:00:21,720
and bore witness to its end.
7
00:00:23,080 --> 00:00:25,160
I've taken to historic tracks,
8
00:00:25,160 --> 00:00:27,720
to rediscover the locomotives and wagons
9
00:00:27,720 --> 00:00:30,120
of the war that was supposed to end all war.
10
00:00:32,880 --> 00:00:35,960
And to hear the stories of the gallant men and women
11
00:00:35,960 --> 00:00:38,840
who used them in life and in death.
12
00:00:57,720 --> 00:01:00,560
I'm travelling through Britain and Northern Europe,
13
00:01:00,560 --> 00:01:04,800
tracing the railway's role at every stage of the First World War.
14
00:01:06,320 --> 00:01:08,400
By the middle years of the fighting,
15
00:01:08,400 --> 00:01:12,960
the railways serving the 80 or so miles of the Western Front under British command
16
00:01:12,960 --> 00:01:14,680
were creaking.
17
00:01:14,680 --> 00:01:15,880
Back in Blighty,
18
00:01:15,880 --> 00:01:20,720
the home network was struggling to cope with the demands of total war.
19
00:01:20,720 --> 00:01:24,360
To sustain morale and to stand a chance of victory,
20
00:01:24,360 --> 00:01:26,880
Britain had to get its railways on track.
21
00:01:31,240 --> 00:01:33,440
Today, I'm getting hands-on experience
22
00:01:33,440 --> 00:01:35,200
of the narrow tracks and trains
23
00:01:35,200 --> 00:01:37,960
that kept supplies flowing to the front line...
24
00:01:37,960 --> 00:01:39,640
- Ready, lift.
- Whoa!
25
00:01:39,640 --> 00:01:43,360
..uncovering the story of the war's forgotten railway poet...
26
00:01:43,360 --> 00:01:46,320
"Blasphemer, braggart and coward all..."
27
00:01:46,320 --> 00:01:48,000
..It's quite strong stuff, isn't it?
28
00:01:48,000 --> 00:01:50,560
..and commemorating the many soldiers' lives
29
00:01:50,560 --> 00:01:54,160
lost in a horrific railway accident on British soil.
30
00:01:54,160 --> 00:01:56,960
It was a disaster almost waiting to happen,
31
00:01:56,960 --> 00:02:00,120
and it happened here on that fateful Saturday morning.
32
00:02:02,400 --> 00:02:06,720
I'll pay homage at the site of the tragic Quintinshill disaster,
33
00:02:06,720 --> 00:02:09,560
visit North Eastern Railway Headquarters,
34
00:02:09,560 --> 00:02:12,760
and take to narrow-gauge tracks in Staffordshire.
35
00:02:12,760 --> 00:02:15,240
I'll hear the story of the Bath Railway Poet
36
00:02:15,240 --> 00:02:17,000
before crossing the Channel
37
00:02:17,000 --> 00:02:20,920
to discover how the railways fed millions of men in the trenches.
38
00:02:32,320 --> 00:02:33,840
So far on my journey,
39
00:02:33,840 --> 00:02:38,560
I've learned how Britain faced up to a munitions crisis in 1915.
40
00:02:38,560 --> 00:02:40,760
But no sooner was one problem solved,
41
00:02:40,760 --> 00:02:42,600
than another reared its head.
42
00:02:44,840 --> 00:02:48,200
It wasn't just that too few shells were leaving the factories,
43
00:02:48,200 --> 00:02:51,240
many of those that did were slow to reach the Front,
44
00:02:51,240 --> 00:02:54,160
tied up in logistical bottlenecks.
45
00:02:54,160 --> 00:02:56,120
Britain might have lost the war
46
00:02:56,120 --> 00:02:59,400
had it not recruited practical men of business.
47
00:02:59,400 --> 00:03:01,360
The biggest problem-solver of all
48
00:03:01,360 --> 00:03:04,720
came from the railways, from his office in York.
49
00:03:07,840 --> 00:03:12,000
I'm on the trail of one of the First World War's forgotten leaders.
50
00:03:13,240 --> 00:03:15,960
His name was Eric Geddes, and in 1914,
51
00:03:15,960 --> 00:03:20,520
he was the Deputy General Manager of the North Eastern Railway.
52
00:03:20,520 --> 00:03:23,960
Chris Phillips from the University of Leeds has researched
53
00:03:23,960 --> 00:03:26,800
how the war took his glittering railway career
54
00:03:26,800 --> 00:03:29,160
in an unexpected direction.
55
00:03:29,160 --> 00:03:32,280
What kind of man was Eric Geddes?
56
00:03:32,280 --> 00:03:34,920
He was a man with a lot of drive, a lot of energy.
57
00:03:34,920 --> 00:03:36,520
He was a self-made man, really,
58
00:03:36,520 --> 00:03:40,000
he chose to actually go to America to make his fortune
59
00:03:40,000 --> 00:03:42,840
and he actually got his first introduction to the railway business
60
00:03:42,840 --> 00:03:46,320
working as a hand on one of the big four railroads in America
61
00:03:47,760 --> 00:03:50,920
After gaining further railway experience in India,
62
00:03:50,920 --> 00:03:53,520
in 1904, Geddes returned to Britain.
63
00:03:55,040 --> 00:03:56,720
He joins the North Eastern Railway,
64
00:03:56,720 --> 00:03:58,760
he's put on a traffic apprenticeship scheme
65
00:03:58,760 --> 00:04:00,880
and he rises through the ranks at a rapid rate.
66
00:04:00,880 --> 00:04:03,600
By 1911, he's the deputy general manager,
67
00:04:03,600 --> 00:04:05,800
he's the highest paid railway official in Britain,
68
00:04:05,800 --> 00:04:08,080
and his office is in this building here.
69
00:04:09,640 --> 00:04:13,760
Britain's railway companies were huge and successful businesses.
70
00:04:15,360 --> 00:04:17,480
By the time Geddes joined the NER,
71
00:04:17,480 --> 00:04:20,480
it was pioneering modern management techniques,
72
00:04:20,480 --> 00:04:25,120
gathering statistics to find ways to slash costs and boost profits.
73
00:04:28,680 --> 00:04:31,480
And this is the historic boardroom of the North Eastern Railway.
74
00:04:31,480 --> 00:04:35,040
- Gives you an idea of the grandeur of those companies in those days.
- Absolutely.
75
00:04:37,440 --> 00:04:39,720
The Liberal politician, David Lloyd George,
76
00:04:39,720 --> 00:04:43,720
believed that men of industry could be an asset to the war effort.
77
00:04:43,720 --> 00:04:46,000
In 1915, he invited Geddes
78
00:04:46,000 --> 00:04:50,400
to join the newly-created Ministry of Munitions.
79
00:04:50,400 --> 00:04:53,200
Is Geddes a success in his munitions role?
80
00:04:53,200 --> 00:04:56,520
Very much so, in the year before the Battle of the Somme,
81
00:04:56,520 --> 00:05:00,840
the munitions supply is increased exponentially,
82
00:05:00,840 --> 00:05:03,240
and Geddes is one of the main reasons for that.
83
00:05:03,240 --> 00:05:05,640
He's actually knighted for the work that he does
84
00:05:05,640 --> 00:05:08,880
with the Ministry of Munitions prior to the Battle of the Somme.
85
00:05:08,880 --> 00:05:11,400
In preparation for the "big push" on the Somme,
86
00:05:11,400 --> 00:05:14,600
shells were produced in phenomenal numbers.
87
00:05:14,600 --> 00:05:18,600
But as the battle got under way, the transport system began to buckle.
88
00:05:18,600 --> 00:05:19,720
Let's have some tea.
89
00:05:22,280 --> 00:05:24,560
Outside the key town of Amiens,
90
00:05:24,560 --> 00:05:27,320
there's a tailback of around 18 miles of trains,
91
00:05:27,320 --> 00:05:30,040
awaiting railheads to unload their ammunition.
92
00:05:30,040 --> 00:05:32,000
The problem is lack of coordination.
93
00:05:32,000 --> 00:05:35,240
The supply networks have been completely decentralised,
94
00:05:35,240 --> 00:05:38,560
so all of the different modes of transport that the British are using
95
00:05:38,560 --> 00:05:40,120
don't actually talk to each other.
96
00:05:40,120 --> 00:05:42,960
They need to get one man in to take control over the entire network,
97
00:05:42,960 --> 00:05:46,280
from the docks to the front line.
98
00:05:46,280 --> 00:05:49,760
To put this right, Geddes himself was given sweeping powers,
99
00:05:49,760 --> 00:05:53,560
unprecedented for a civilian on the battlefield.
100
00:05:53,560 --> 00:05:57,040
Effectively, he becomes Haig's personal transport adviser
101
00:05:57,040 --> 00:06:00,200
and he joins the senior command at GHQ.
102
00:06:00,200 --> 00:06:02,480
He's given the honorary rank of Major-General
103
00:06:02,480 --> 00:06:05,280
to reflect his position within the hierarchy,
104
00:06:05,280 --> 00:06:07,680
and he sets about effectively coordinating
105
00:06:07,680 --> 00:06:10,240
the entire transport network.
106
00:06:10,240 --> 00:06:13,320
Geddes drew on all his railway expertise.
107
00:06:13,320 --> 00:06:17,160
He collected data, demanded desperately-needed railway equipment
108
00:06:17,160 --> 00:06:19,680
and hundreds more skilled operators
109
00:06:19,680 --> 00:06:26,120
and improved communication between docks, roads, railways and canals.
110
00:06:26,120 --> 00:06:29,080
How would you assess his success at the Western Front?
111
00:06:29,080 --> 00:06:32,160
In 1916, the British struggled to supply one battle,
112
00:06:32,160 --> 00:06:34,200
which was the Battle of the Somme.
113
00:06:34,200 --> 00:06:37,560
In 1917, they managed to supply four,
114
00:06:37,560 --> 00:06:40,880
all of them consuming ammunition on a scale that simply dwarfed
115
00:06:40,880 --> 00:06:43,000
what was available at the Battle of the Somme.
116
00:06:43,000 --> 00:06:46,240
Sir Douglas Haig said that the First World War was about three things,
117
00:06:46,240 --> 00:06:49,480
it was men, munitions and movement - they were his "Three Ms".
118
00:06:49,480 --> 00:06:53,000
Kitchener provided the men, Lloyd George provided the munitions,
119
00:06:53,000 --> 00:06:56,040
but it was Sir Eric Geddes that provided the movement
120
00:07:03,240 --> 00:07:06,160
After the war, Geddes was made the first head
121
00:07:06,160 --> 00:07:08,880
of the newly-created Ministry of Transport
122
00:07:08,880 --> 00:07:11,840
the government department where some 70 years later,
123
00:07:11,840 --> 00:07:13,360
I was a junior minister.
124
00:07:18,320 --> 00:07:20,560
By my time in the 1980s,
125
00:07:20,560 --> 00:07:22,720
diesel and electric locomotives
126
00:07:22,720 --> 00:07:25,600
had conquered steam on Britain's railways.
127
00:07:25,600 --> 00:07:29,720
And that development could trace its roots back to the First World War.
128
00:07:33,720 --> 00:07:36,840
Massive locomotives belching fire and smoke
129
00:07:36,840 --> 00:07:41,520
did an excellent job transporting men and guns to the Continent,
130
00:07:41,520 --> 00:07:44,560
but they were too big, noisy and visible
131
00:07:44,560 --> 00:07:47,960
to work across the muddy plains close to the Front.
132
00:07:47,960 --> 00:07:52,680
What the army needed was something quieter, lighter and slimmer.
133
00:07:54,280 --> 00:07:57,400
As part of his 1916 transport revolution,
134
00:07:57,400 --> 00:08:02,120
Sir Eric Geddes recommended that lightweight, portable narrow-gauge railways
135
00:08:02,120 --> 00:08:05,120
be adopted across the Western Front.
136
00:08:05,120 --> 00:08:08,040
Today, these scaled-down trains and tracks
137
00:08:08,040 --> 00:08:11,880
can be seen at the Apedale Valley Light Railway in Staffordshire,
138
00:08:11,880 --> 00:08:15,240
where they've been preserved by the Moseley Railway Trust.
139
00:08:15,240 --> 00:08:17,720
Phil Robinson is its chairman.
140
00:08:17,720 --> 00:08:21,320
Phil, we're surrounded by the trappings of narrow-gauge railway.
141
00:08:21,320 --> 00:08:24,480
- Narrow gauge was used extensively in World War I?
- Absolutely.
142
00:08:24,480 --> 00:08:26,680
The main advantage is it's fairly lightweight
143
00:08:26,680 --> 00:08:29,440
and it can supply individual guns
144
00:08:29,440 --> 00:08:31,560
which is not something you could do for example
145
00:08:31,560 --> 00:08:33,400
with the standard-gauge stuff.
146
00:08:33,400 --> 00:08:36,720
It'll go around sharp corners, it'll dodge between buildings, you know,
147
00:08:36,720 --> 00:08:40,760
in a shelled village for example, and, not only that,
148
00:08:40,760 --> 00:08:43,520
the gradients that the narrow-gauge locomotives can cope with
149
00:08:43,520 --> 00:08:45,760
are also much better than what you could do
150
00:08:45,760 --> 00:08:47,680
with the standard-gauge system.
151
00:08:50,480 --> 00:08:52,040
From the start of the war,
152
00:08:52,040 --> 00:08:55,360
French and German troops used these nippy little trains
153
00:08:55,360 --> 00:08:59,240
to bridge the gap between main line and the front line.
154
00:08:59,240 --> 00:09:03,200
But British military planners had put their faith in motor vehicles.
155
00:09:04,640 --> 00:09:06,320
The big problem with the lorries is
156
00:09:06,320 --> 00:09:09,520
the weight of the lorry on the road was tearing the road surface up.
157
00:09:09,520 --> 00:09:13,360
So the classical view of the First World War is lorries
158
00:09:13,360 --> 00:09:17,200
up to their axles in mud. Men, horses struggling through the mud...
159
00:09:17,200 --> 00:09:19,920
And the beauty of the narrow-gauge railway is
160
00:09:19,920 --> 00:09:22,480
that it spreads the load across the rails
161
00:09:22,480 --> 00:09:25,640
Something like this, you could drive a ten-tonne locomotive on this track
162
00:09:25,640 --> 00:09:28,400
over the muddy part and it wouldn't sink in.
163
00:09:29,960 --> 00:09:32,120
By the time Eric Geddes took the reins,
164
00:09:32,120 --> 00:09:35,400
the churned up roads were causing major bottlenecks.
165
00:09:35,400 --> 00:09:39,720
On his recommendation, Britain began taking light rail seriously,
166
00:09:39,720 --> 00:09:44,000
ordering thousands of miles of 60-centimetre-gauge track.
167
00:09:45,920 --> 00:09:47,760
- Ready? Lift!
- Whoa!
168
00:09:47,760 --> 00:09:51,040
So, it's not too bad to handle with enough people.
169
00:09:51,040 --> 00:09:54,400
- No, not bad at all.
- Right, let's put it down here.
170
00:09:54,400 --> 00:09:56,440
'It came in prefabricated lengths...'
171
00:09:56,440 --> 00:09:57,720
Lift!
172
00:09:57,720 --> 00:09:59,400
'..meaning it could be put together
173
00:09:59,400 --> 00:10:02,800
'and taken apart again just like a train set.'
174
00:10:02,800 --> 00:10:05,400
And then you just have to bolt the track together.
175
00:10:05,400 --> 00:10:06,560
Yes, just bolt fish plates
176
00:10:06,560 --> 00:10:09,720
and then you can immediately drive a locomotive on this.
177
00:10:11,680 --> 00:10:16,880
By December 1917, 700 miles of these tracks were in use
178
00:10:16,880 --> 00:10:18,800
carrying shells,
179
00:10:18,800 --> 00:10:21,920
water supplies, wounded men
180
00:10:21,920 --> 00:10:25,360
even King George V on a battlefield tour.
181
00:10:25,360 --> 00:10:30,000
To haul these loads, specially-built small-scale locomotives were needed.
182
00:10:31,320 --> 00:10:33,760
This little loco here, although it doesn't look very big,
183
00:10:33,760 --> 00:10:35,120
it looks more like a toy,
184
00:10:35,120 --> 00:10:38,840
it'll actually pull 200 tonnes of goods along on the flat.
185
00:10:38,840 --> 00:10:42,280
So, compared with a modern truck, it's actually pretty powerful
186
00:10:42,280 --> 00:10:44,840
despite the fact it's such old technology.
187
00:10:44,840 --> 00:10:48,120
Now, that is remarkable. So, these were a great success?
188
00:10:48,120 --> 00:10:49,440
Absolutely they were.
189
00:10:49,440 --> 00:10:52,680
They probably had something in excess of 800 steam locomotives
190
00:10:52,680 --> 00:10:55,120
all of this same 60-centimetre gauge.
191
00:10:57,280 --> 00:11:00,640
But when steam locomotives got too close to the front line,
192
00:11:00,640 --> 00:11:05,440
the smoke and steam could be a deadly giveaway to the enemy.
193
00:11:05,440 --> 00:11:07,840
So, petrol engines, then in their infancy,
194
00:11:07,840 --> 00:11:09,960
were also brought into play.
195
00:11:09,960 --> 00:11:15,600
Lighter, cleaner and quieter, they also had other benefits.
196
00:11:15,600 --> 00:11:18,040
Of course, the big disadvantage of the steam locomotive
197
00:11:18,040 --> 00:11:20,160
- is the length of time it takes to get ready.
- Yeah.
198
00:11:20,160 --> 00:11:22,560
The beauty of the internal combustion engine is that
199
00:11:22,560 --> 00:11:25,080
it's ready almost instantaneously.
200
00:11:25,080 --> 00:11:27,000
- Shall we have a go at that?
- Sure.
201
00:11:27,000 --> 00:11:28,080
- Ready?
- Yep.
202
00:11:30,760 --> 00:11:31,800
Go.
203
00:11:34,160 --> 00:11:38,520
Yeah! So, quite a bit faster than a steam engine.
204
00:11:38,520 --> 00:11:41,200
It was the first time that internal combustion
205
00:11:41,200 --> 00:11:43,720
had been used on any scale on the rails.
206
00:11:43,720 --> 00:11:46,720
And all sorts of engines were soon available.
207
00:11:46,720 --> 00:11:48,360
Now, this one is armoured.
208
00:11:48,360 --> 00:11:50,760
That means you can take it to more exposed areas
209
00:11:50,760 --> 00:11:55,000
where the armour plating will at least give you some protection
210
00:11:55,000 --> 00:11:56,800
against people shooting at you.
211
00:11:56,800 --> 00:11:58,000
And, happily for me,
212
00:11:58,000 --> 00:12:01,440
petrol engines are simpler to operate than steam.
213
00:12:01,440 --> 00:12:03,200
- Hello, Selwyn.
- Hello.
214
00:12:03,200 --> 00:12:05,600
So, how does one drive this thing?
215
00:12:05,600 --> 00:12:08,360
What you've got up here is a brake on this wheel here,
216
00:12:08,360 --> 00:12:10,640
so you have to nurse the throttle a little bit,
217
00:12:10,640 --> 00:12:13,480
which that lever by your left hand.
218
00:12:13,480 --> 00:12:14,840
That's it, you've got it.
219
00:12:14,840 --> 00:12:16,320
So, the clutch like on a car.
220
00:12:16,320 --> 00:12:18,800
Push the clutch down,
221
00:12:18,800 --> 00:12:21,840
select first gear which is that way,
222
00:12:21,840 --> 00:12:24,800
and then very gently, release the clutch.
223
00:12:28,440 --> 00:12:29,480
And we're off.
224
00:12:31,920 --> 00:12:34,240
The First World War light rail experiment
225
00:12:34,240 --> 00:12:39,480
proved that internal combustion was a railway technology worth watching.
226
00:12:39,480 --> 00:12:43,120
After the war, more economical diesel versions were developed,
227
00:12:43,120 --> 00:12:46,160
and were soon being used on the main railway network.
228
00:12:47,840 --> 00:12:50,320
A locomotive like this
229
00:12:50,320 --> 00:12:52,920
helped to supply the front line
230
00:12:52,920 --> 00:12:55,920
and helped Britain to win the War.
231
00:12:55,920 --> 00:13:00,320
But the move from steam to the internal combustion engine
232
00:13:00,320 --> 00:13:03,640
also pointed the way for the modern railway.
233
00:13:12,320 --> 00:13:15,600
At the outset of the war, the railways on the home front
234
00:13:15,600 --> 00:13:19,720
did their best to maintain normal service for civilian travellers.
235
00:13:22,400 --> 00:13:26,160
But it was impossible not to notice that things had changed.
236
00:13:26,160 --> 00:13:28,240
Trains were packed with troops,
237
00:13:28,240 --> 00:13:31,320
stations were the scene of emotional farewells
238
00:13:31,320 --> 00:13:34,560
and railway staff witnessed it all first-hand.
239
00:13:38,200 --> 00:13:43,720
"Oh, Mr Porter, what shall I do?" The person who carried your suitcase
240
00:13:43,720 --> 00:13:46,680
could sometimes be a man to confide in,
241
00:13:46,680 --> 00:13:48,800
so that apart from baggage,
242
00:13:48,800 --> 00:13:53,200
porters also picked up stories, histories and emotions.
243
00:13:56,160 --> 00:13:58,560
I'm in Bath to meet Susan Sawyer,
244
00:13:58,560 --> 00:14:00,640
the descendant of a railway porter
245
00:14:00,640 --> 00:14:03,280
who found creative inspiration in the war.
246
00:14:04,400 --> 00:14:07,480
Sue, your great grandfather, Henry Chappell,
247
00:14:07,480 --> 00:14:10,000
was a porter here at Bath station,
248
00:14:10,000 --> 00:14:12,120
but what was his main claim to fame?
249
00:14:12,120 --> 00:14:16,360
Well, he wrote a poem in August 1914.
250
00:14:16,360 --> 00:14:20,760
That poem would became very famous, was published,
251
00:14:20,760 --> 00:14:22,360
put into several languages,
252
00:14:22,360 --> 00:14:25,040
and was posted in many stations throughout England.
253
00:14:25,040 --> 00:14:26,680
Do you think there was a connection
254
00:14:26,680 --> 00:14:28,960
between the two things he chose to do in his life?
255
00:14:28,960 --> 00:14:35,600
I think so. He always said it gave him his inspiration to write.
256
00:14:37,320 --> 00:14:42,000
By August 1914, from his vantage point in Bath, Henry Chappell
257
00:14:42,000 --> 00:14:46,760
would have sensed a change in the national mood.
258
00:14:46,760 --> 00:14:49,480
As the first troop trains jolted along the tracks,
259
00:14:49,480 --> 00:14:51,160
waved on by the crowds,
260
00:14:51,160 --> 00:14:53,600
the newspapers were full of shocking stories
261
00:14:53,600 --> 00:14:56,160
of German atrocities in Belgium.
262
00:14:56,160 --> 00:14:58,400
Amid this fevered atmosphere,
263
00:14:58,400 --> 00:15:01,640
Henry Chappell picked up his pen to write The Day.
264
00:15:02,640 --> 00:15:05,840
"You boasted the Day, and you toasted the Day
265
00:15:05,840 --> 00:15:07,240
"And now the Day has come
266
00:15:07,240 --> 00:15:09,840
"Blasphemer, braggart and coward all..."
267
00:15:09,840 --> 00:15:12,080
- It's quite strong stuff, isn't it?
- It is, yes.
268
00:15:12,080 --> 00:15:14,000
"..You spied for the Day, you lied for the Day
269
00:15:14,000 --> 00:15:16,400
"And woke the Day's red spleen
270
00:15:16,400 --> 00:15:18,880
"Monster, who asked God's aid Divine
271
00:15:18,880 --> 00:15:21,040
"Not all the waters of the Rhine
272
00:15:21,040 --> 00:15:23,800
"Can wash your foul hands clean."
273
00:15:23,800 --> 00:15:25,360
Who's this is directed against?
274
00:15:25,360 --> 00:15:28,920
- The Kaiser.
- And did the Kaiser know about it?
275
00:15:28,920 --> 00:15:30,400
He did read it, apparently.
276
00:15:30,400 --> 00:15:32,600
- And?
- He was furious.
277
00:15:32,600 --> 00:15:36,320
Do you think that this is part of that movement
278
00:15:36,320 --> 00:15:38,680
at the early stage of the war,
279
00:15:38,680 --> 00:15:42,680
stirring people up against the enemy, lifting the national morale?
280
00:15:42,680 --> 00:15:47,040
Quite possibly. It was what he saw on a daily basis,
281
00:15:47,040 --> 00:15:49,720
from talking to people on the station,
282
00:15:49,720 --> 00:15:53,280
listening to what their conversations were, and so on.
283
00:15:55,120 --> 00:15:57,720
The poem was printed in the Daily Express
284
00:15:57,720 --> 00:16:00,360
and became an overnight sensation.
285
00:16:00,360 --> 00:16:03,360
In 1918, Chappell's collected works were published
286
00:16:03,360 --> 00:16:04,920
by which time he was mixing
287
00:16:04,920 --> 00:16:07,600
with some of Britain's most eminent writers.
288
00:16:09,520 --> 00:16:12,280
He knew Kipling, that's for sure,
289
00:16:12,280 --> 00:16:16,760
and I know that Kipling came on the train up to Bath to meet him
290
00:16:16,760 --> 00:16:20,160
and shake hands with him after he'd written the poem The Day.
291
00:16:20,160 --> 00:16:24,560
So, if The Day was really rather well known in its day,
292
00:16:24,560 --> 00:16:27,040
why is it that we don't know about him today?
293
00:16:28,960 --> 00:16:31,400
Well, I think he was a very self-effacing man,
294
00:16:31,400 --> 00:16:35,640
he was offered the job of station master here
295
00:16:35,640 --> 00:16:39,200
and he turned it down, because he wanted to stay in contact
296
00:16:39,200 --> 00:16:42,240
with what he saw as his source material for his poetry.
297
00:16:48,760 --> 00:16:51,040
The railway's own war poet
298
00:16:51,040 --> 00:16:55,120
illuminates how many people felt at the outbreak of war.
299
00:16:57,360 --> 00:17:01,480
Our view today has been conditioned by the harrowing verse
300
00:17:01,480 --> 00:17:03,360
written by other poets,
301
00:17:03,360 --> 00:17:08,160
by soldiers on the front line, like Wilfred Owen and Siegfried Sassoon.
302
00:17:10,680 --> 00:17:14,640
By spring 1915, British morale was flagging.
303
00:17:14,640 --> 00:17:19,200
In Turkey, the Gallipoli campaign had got off to a bad start.
304
00:17:19,200 --> 00:17:23,160
Then on the 7th May, the cruise liner the Lusitania
305
00:17:23,160 --> 00:17:26,040
was sunk by a German U-boat off the coast of Ireland,
306
00:17:26,040 --> 00:17:29,360
killing 1,198 people.
307
00:17:32,320 --> 00:17:33,920
And then, a fortnight later,
308
00:17:33,920 --> 00:17:37,200
Scotland's railways were the scene of another tragedy.
309
00:17:38,560 --> 00:17:42,280
By 1915, the railways carried an enormous burden,
310
00:17:42,280 --> 00:17:43,720
not least at home.
311
00:17:43,720 --> 00:17:48,120
With unprecedented demand from civilians, soldiers and casualties,
312
00:17:48,120 --> 00:17:50,840
fuel, freight and munitions,
313
00:17:50,840 --> 00:17:54,320
and with the trains so overcrowded, it's perhaps not surprising
314
00:17:54,320 --> 00:17:56,240
that at that time, Britain suffered
315
00:17:56,240 --> 00:17:59,200
its most devastating railway accident,
316
00:17:59,200 --> 00:18:02,640
when the nation was reeling from the death toll at the Front.
317
00:18:06,880 --> 00:18:10,080
Men boarding troop trains to join the action,
318
00:18:10,080 --> 00:18:14,040
must have felt a mixture of excitement and trepidation.
319
00:18:14,040 --> 00:18:17,160
But when the 7th Royal Scots Territorial Battalion
320
00:18:17,160 --> 00:18:19,960
entrained for Liverpool en route to Gallipoli,
321
00:18:19,960 --> 00:18:22,160
they could have no idea how their journey
322
00:18:22,160 --> 00:18:25,200
on the West Coast Main Line would end.
323
00:18:25,200 --> 00:18:30,160
I'm retracing their route with author Adrian Searle.
324
00:18:30,160 --> 00:18:32,600
What sort of train were the troops travelling on?
325
00:18:32,600 --> 00:18:36,560
It was an antiquated train, to put it politely.
326
00:18:36,560 --> 00:18:39,800
Formed of old Great Central railway coaches,
327
00:18:39,800 --> 00:18:42,480
they were wooden bodied, wooden framed
328
00:18:42,480 --> 00:18:49,640
and crucially they were illuminated by gas cylinders beneath the floors.
329
00:18:49,640 --> 00:18:52,600
Pushed at any speed, they were a hazard.
330
00:18:56,320 --> 00:18:59,640
These outdated coaches had been pressed into service
331
00:18:59,640 --> 00:19:02,000
to meet the war's demands.
332
00:19:02,000 --> 00:19:04,040
And to get the troops to Liverpool on time,
333
00:19:04,040 --> 00:19:06,840
the driver was doing express train speeds
334
00:19:06,840 --> 00:19:09,200
as he approached the English border.
335
00:19:09,200 --> 00:19:12,640
The signals were clear ahead, but unbeknownst to him,
336
00:19:12,640 --> 00:19:15,440
at Quintinshill signal box,
337
00:19:15,440 --> 00:19:18,480
his path had just been blocked.
338
00:19:18,480 --> 00:19:24,040
The local train, coming from Carlisle was shunted across the tracks,
339
00:19:24,040 --> 00:19:26,880
onto what one might call the wrong line
340
00:19:26,880 --> 00:19:29,240
because there was no other room to put it,
341
00:19:29,240 --> 00:19:32,400
to make way for express trains coming up from the south
342
00:19:32,400 --> 00:19:35,680
and the troop train ran head-long into it.
343
00:19:35,680 --> 00:19:38,600
So, the train carrying the troops moving south,
344
00:19:38,600 --> 00:19:42,240
hits the local train. What happens?
345
00:19:42,240 --> 00:19:44,640
Well, because of the venerable state
346
00:19:44,640 --> 00:19:46,720
of the fast-moving troop train,
347
00:19:46,720 --> 00:19:48,280
it simply splinters.
348
00:19:48,280 --> 00:19:52,440
You have this terrible, sort of, storm of flying timbers
349
00:19:52,440 --> 00:19:54,160
and bits of steel flying about.
350
00:19:54,160 --> 00:19:57,120
You might say as deadly as anything an enemy force
351
00:19:57,120 --> 00:20:00,280
could throw at our forces on a foreign battlefield.
352
00:20:02,600 --> 00:20:05,800
And this disaster was about to become a catastrophe.
353
00:20:07,160 --> 00:20:10,080
Because hurtling north, towards this carnage,
354
00:20:10,080 --> 00:20:14,920
was the London-to-Glasgow express, travelling at 50mph.
355
00:20:14,920 --> 00:20:17,800
An express from the south ploughs into the wreckage,
356
00:20:17,800 --> 00:20:19,600
what does that cause to happen?
357
00:20:20,640 --> 00:20:25,440
The troop train and the front of the express train burst into flames
358
00:20:25,440 --> 00:20:28,960
and before long the whole pile of wreckage is burning.
359
00:20:28,960 --> 00:20:32,320
These soldiers, those trapped inside the wreckage of their troop train,
360
00:20:32,320 --> 00:20:34,800
were now being burnt to death.
361
00:20:34,800 --> 00:20:37,080
Their comrades who had not been seriously injured,
362
00:20:37,080 --> 00:20:40,680
and had not been killed, did heroically arise to the occasion
363
00:20:40,680 --> 00:20:43,520
and tried to get them out, but it is almost impossible.
364
00:20:47,840 --> 00:20:51,120
230 people were killed that day,
365
00:20:51,120 --> 00:20:55,560
214 of whom were men of the 7th Royal Scots.
366
00:20:59,560 --> 00:21:01,560
At the time, the tragedy was blamed
367
00:21:01,560 --> 00:21:04,320
on the negligence of the two signalmen on duty.
368
00:21:05,920 --> 00:21:09,080
It was found they'd broken various railway regulations,
369
00:21:09,080 --> 00:21:11,640
and they were jailed for culpable homicide.
370
00:21:13,920 --> 00:21:16,800
But Adrian has his own theory about what happened.
371
00:21:20,160 --> 00:21:25,560
So, here, we're looking down on the scene of the accident
372
00:21:25,560 --> 00:21:28,960
Yes, and it's pretty much as it would have looked 100 years ago,
373
00:21:28,960 --> 00:21:30,360
at the time of the crash.
374
00:21:30,360 --> 00:21:31,800
The signal box has gone,
375
00:21:31,800 --> 00:21:34,160
that was to the left-hand side of layout here,
376
00:21:34,160 --> 00:21:36,840
but apart from that, it's pretty much the same,
377
00:21:36,840 --> 00:21:38,800
the passing loops are still intact.
378
00:21:38,800 --> 00:21:41,960
And the passing loops are fundamental to understanding the accident.
379
00:21:41,960 --> 00:21:43,280
They are indeed, yes.
380
00:21:43,280 --> 00:21:45,840
They were both occupied by freight trains
381
00:21:45,840 --> 00:21:47,960
at the time the crash occurred.
382
00:21:47,960 --> 00:21:50,760
With this wartime traffic clogging the system,
383
00:21:50,760 --> 00:21:53,440
the local had to be left on the main line.
384
00:21:53,440 --> 00:21:55,720
But that doesn't explain why the troop train
385
00:21:55,720 --> 00:21:57,440
was given the signal to approach,
386
00:21:57,440 --> 00:22:00,680
while the local stood just yards from the box.
387
00:22:00,680 --> 00:22:03,360
It's too simple to say that the signalman simply forgot
388
00:22:03,360 --> 00:22:07,240
the train was there, he was an experienced, capable hand.
389
00:22:07,240 --> 00:22:10,040
The strong suggestion is that he was probably suffering
390
00:22:10,040 --> 00:22:14,560
from the effects of an epileptic seizure that morning,
391
00:22:14,560 --> 00:22:17,360
which both the Caledonian railway, his employers,
392
00:22:17,360 --> 00:22:21,320
and the government were not keen to broadcast at that time,
393
00:22:21,320 --> 00:22:24,840
it would have caused all sorts of questions to be asked.
394
00:22:24,840 --> 00:22:28,960
We'll never know for sure why the signalman made his fatal error.
395
00:22:28,960 --> 00:22:32,160
But Adrian believes that with wartime morale already low,
396
00:22:32,160 --> 00:22:35,560
the authorities were keen to pin the blame on him and his colleague,
397
00:22:35,560 --> 00:22:38,160
ignoring other factors.
398
00:22:38,160 --> 00:22:40,800
That troop train should not have been running at that speed
399
00:22:40,800 --> 00:22:42,800
given its venerable condition.
400
00:22:42,800 --> 00:22:45,760
You had the heavy wartime usage, the extra freight trains,
401
00:22:45,760 --> 00:22:50,080
the troop trains, but the passenger trains were still being operated
402
00:22:50,080 --> 00:22:52,240
to peacetime schedules. It was madness.
403
00:22:52,240 --> 00:22:56,440
Too many trains, it was a disaster almost waiting to happen,
404
00:22:56,440 --> 00:22:59,600
and it happened here on that fateful Saturday morning.
405
00:23:03,520 --> 00:23:07,520
While Britain's railways struggled to adjust to the challenges of wartime,
406
00:23:07,520 --> 00:23:10,520
over in France, the pressures on the small web of lines
407
00:23:10,520 --> 00:23:13,080
serving the Front were almost unimaginable.
408
00:23:16,160 --> 00:23:20,480
And there was one cargo the Tommies anticipated with relish.
409
00:23:25,400 --> 00:23:28,880
Napoleon once said that an army marches on its stomach.
410
00:23:28,880 --> 00:23:31,360
For the British Army, bogged down in the trenches,
411
00:23:31,360 --> 00:23:35,200
pounded by artillery, called upon to charge the barbed wire
412
00:23:35,200 --> 00:23:38,520
and the machine guns, good military order depended
413
00:23:38,520 --> 00:23:41,040
on a steady flow of nutritious food.
414
00:23:45,720 --> 00:23:47,680
From the ports on the French coast,
415
00:23:47,680 --> 00:23:51,720
the railways formed the backbone of a complex supply chain.
416
00:23:51,720 --> 00:23:54,000
One vital link was at Abancourt,
417
00:23:54,000 --> 00:23:56,600
a junction serving the Somme Valley
418
00:23:56,600 --> 00:23:59,160
and home to a vast British stores depot.
419
00:24:01,520 --> 00:24:03,760
At its peak, the place would have been buzzing
420
00:24:03,760 --> 00:24:07,720
with men unloading supplies and trains coming to and fro.
421
00:24:07,720 --> 00:24:11,800
But today, all that remains is this sleepy station.
422
00:24:11,800 --> 00:24:14,280
Geoff Clarke, a war studies scholar,
423
00:24:14,280 --> 00:24:17,480
is going to help me to bring its history to life.
424
00:24:17,480 --> 00:24:19,200
So, what do we have here?
425
00:24:19,200 --> 00:24:23,320
What we have here is the basics of a soldier's ration.
426
00:24:23,320 --> 00:24:26,840
So, bread, corned beef in this case,
427
00:24:26,840 --> 00:24:31,680
bacon, onion, potato, cheese, I take it, biscuits -
428
00:24:31,680 --> 00:24:37,160
quite a nice-looking biscuit that! - oatmeal and jam.
429
00:24:37,160 --> 00:24:39,920
How many calories was a soldier at the Front getting?
430
00:24:39,920 --> 00:24:42,520
Basically about 4,100.
431
00:24:42,520 --> 00:24:44,880
By comparison with what we're recommended to eat today
432
00:24:44,880 --> 00:24:46,480
4,000 seems a lot.
433
00:24:46,480 --> 00:24:49,280
Yeah, unless you're really doing heavy labour
434
00:24:49,280 --> 00:24:51,440
which is what these guys were doing.
435
00:24:51,440 --> 00:24:55,560
They were digging, they were building barbed-wire entanglements,
436
00:24:55,560 --> 00:24:58,880
they were just existing in wet, cold conditions.
437
00:24:58,880 --> 00:25:03,080
It's what the medics of the day and the scientists recommended
438
00:25:03,080 --> 00:25:07,000
as the kind of diet that you needed to actually survive
439
00:25:07,000 --> 00:25:09,440
in those kinds of conditions.
440
00:25:09,440 --> 00:25:12,920
But supplying all this to the men at the Front, day after day,
441
00:25:12,920 --> 00:25:14,680
was no mean feat.
442
00:25:14,680 --> 00:25:17,880
At the height of the British operation on the Continent,
443
00:25:17,880 --> 00:25:22,640
between '14 and '18, how many men were we trying to feed?
444
00:25:22,640 --> 00:25:23,880
2.5 million?
445
00:25:23,880 --> 00:25:25,560
2.5 million British men?
446
00:25:25,560 --> 00:25:29,400
Yep, and Canadian, and Australian, New Zealand and so on.
447
00:25:29,400 --> 00:25:33,120
- That is an amazing logistical challenge.
- Absolutely.
448
00:25:33,120 --> 00:25:35,480
How was it met?
449
00:25:35,480 --> 00:25:37,680
The railway was absolutely critical.
450
00:25:37,680 --> 00:25:42,080
The depot here was feeding over 800,000 men on a regular basis.
451
00:25:42,080 --> 00:25:46,080
At its peak, it actually fed 1.2 million men daily.
452
00:25:46,080 --> 00:25:48,680
21, 22 trains of rations a day,
453
00:25:48,680 --> 00:25:51,080
these go forward to the railheads,
454
00:25:51,080 --> 00:25:54,040
and at that point, it tends to go to road.
455
00:25:54,040 --> 00:25:57,640
There are places where it goes on the narrow-gauge railway to the divisional dump,
456
00:25:57,640 --> 00:26:01,040
from there, they issue it to battalion transport,
457
00:26:01,040 --> 00:26:04,120
and that is horses. That goes forward to the battalion,
458
00:26:04,120 --> 00:26:07,000
and after that, it's carried forward to the men.
459
00:26:10,520 --> 00:26:13,640
The horses, too, needed vast quantities of food,
460
00:26:13,640 --> 00:26:17,600
around twice the bulk of the rations for the men.
461
00:26:17,600 --> 00:26:20,640
Feeding the trenches was a British success.
462
00:26:20,640 --> 00:26:21,880
Unlike the Germans,
463
00:26:21,880 --> 00:26:25,400
whose supply chain crumbled in the final months of the war,
464
00:26:25,400 --> 00:26:27,720
British soldiers rarely went hungry.
465
00:26:29,960 --> 00:26:31,640
What else did the British Army do
466
00:26:31,640 --> 00:26:33,720
to help sustain the morale of the Tommy?
467
00:26:33,720 --> 00:26:35,640
They kept them in touch with folks at home.
468
00:26:35,640 --> 00:26:37,960
There was a very good postal system,
469
00:26:37,960 --> 00:26:42,240
it used the supply-train network to move the bags around,
470
00:26:42,240 --> 00:26:45,720
Basically, you could get a letter from home to the Front
471
00:26:45,720 --> 00:26:49,000
somewhere between 24 and 72 hours.
472
00:26:49,000 --> 00:26:50,920
There were little things like food parcels,
473
00:26:50,920 --> 00:26:53,360
it was a great day if you received a cake
474
00:26:53,360 --> 00:26:56,080
and you'd share that with your mates.
475
00:26:56,080 --> 00:26:58,240
Certainly, the more well connected
476
00:26:58,240 --> 00:27:00,200
were receiving pheasants and salmon
477
00:27:00,200 --> 00:27:02,360
from the family estates that were coming forward.
478
00:27:02,360 --> 00:27:05,760
Must have been extraordinary to be in such terrible conditions
479
00:27:05,760 --> 00:27:07,760
and yet, so in touch with their home?
480
00:27:07,760 --> 00:27:10,760
Oh, yes. But, of course, they were so close to home.
481
00:27:10,760 --> 00:27:13,280
Certainly, if you lived in the south of England,
482
00:27:13,280 --> 00:27:17,000
you could be home within 24 hours of leaving the front line,
483
00:27:17,000 --> 00:27:20,760
and again, it was the leave trains that enabled that to happen.
484
00:27:26,880 --> 00:27:31,040
Keeping two and a half million men and hundreds of thousands of horses
485
00:27:31,040 --> 00:27:33,160
in France and Belgium fed,
486
00:27:33,160 --> 00:27:37,160
equipping the front line with shells and bullets,
487
00:27:37,160 --> 00:27:38,720
and getting men home on leave,
488
00:27:38,720 --> 00:27:42,280
all of these were challenges on an extraordinary scale.
489
00:27:42,280 --> 00:27:45,680
Had the supply chain failed, no amount of gallantry
490
00:27:45,680 --> 00:27:48,760
in the trenches could have staved off defeat.
491
00:27:48,760 --> 00:27:53,200
The crisis required one who was a railwayman to his fingertips.
492
00:27:53,200 --> 00:27:55,920
Eric Geddes is one of those who won the war.
493
00:28:01,400 --> 00:28:05,920
Next time, I'll be learning how the war fundamentally changed British society...
494
00:28:05,920 --> 00:28:08,720
- Women wearing the trousers.
- Yeah, quite.
495
00:28:08,720 --> 00:28:12,680
..about the extraordinary exploits of Belgian spies...
496
00:28:12,680 --> 00:28:15,240
They used several different methods.
497
00:28:15,240 --> 00:28:19,360
- You know the pole...
- Pole vaulting?
- Yes, pole vaulting.
498
00:28:19,360 --> 00:28:22,040
..and how the end of the war marked the beginning
499
00:28:22,040 --> 00:28:23,880
of the decline of the railways.
500
00:28:23,880 --> 00:28:26,840
In future, road transport would become more important
501
00:28:26,840 --> 00:28:29,760
than rail transport as a source of army logistics.
42780
Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.