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VOLK'S RAILWAY
(2005): The story of the Oldest Working Electric Railway in the World 60
minutes Narrated by TIM BLISSETT (DVD ONLY) For many generations the skeletal like carriages
or cars of Volk's Railway have run along Brighton Beach carrying excited
children and the young at heart to Children's Playground and Black Rock. Opened
on 4 August 1883, the creator of this popular railway was electrical pioneer
Magnus Volk. Owners of seafront shops and beach traders alongside the route
feared the railway would drive away their customers, and the residents of Kemp
Town were vocal in their oposition. But with the passing of time, the sight of
the cars on their way to and from Black Rock became a familiar part of beach
life, and once hostile residents embraced the railway, believing it to be an
asset to their town. As part of his transport plan for Brighton seafront Magnus
Volk also built a railway in the sea. Nicknamed Daddy-Long-Legs, this curious
hybrid of boat and pier ran from Black Rock to Rottingdean from 1896 to
1901. Price: £12.95
(includes p & p) Order
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IN SEARCH OF DADDY
LONGLEGS, 30 minutes DVD only Volk's Railway was the first electric railway to be constructed in
England. It's quite a modest little railway but it was once part of a much
grander scheme, for there was a time when Volk's railway ran all the way along
the coast to Rottingdean, and it was very unusual because the track, for the
most part, was under the sea, and the carriage travelled above the surface of
the water on long 'stilt like' legs. Much of the track has been obliterated
by the building of the Marina but there are still remains to be seen a little
further to the east. The track is only exposed at low tide and this must have
posed quite a few problems for its construction. The time that you get to
explore down here is quite limited so it must have been the same for the
builders of the track. The trip would start from the Banjo Groyne at Kemp Town
and then proceed to Rottingdean at not much more than a walking pace for which
you would be charged the princely sum of sixpence each way.Magnus named his
creation the 'Pioneer' (soon nicknamed Daddy Longlegs) and it proved to be a
great success with his public. Sadly though, it only ran for a very few years,
mainly due to the fact that it was operating in such a harsh environment, but
its memory lives on. Price £8.50 + £2.00 p+p Order from R.Shaw, 13
Aberdeen Road, Brighton, Sussex, BN2 3JA |
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DEVIL'S DYKE - A
VICTORIAN PASTIME (1979): 45 MINUTES Narrated by JOHN HUNTLEY VHS VIDEO and
DVD The Devil's Dyke, a deep
gorge in the South Downs five and a half miles north west of Brighton, began
life as a tourist attraction as early as 1818 when a small wooden hut was
erected on the adjacent Dyke Hill. In the 1830s a Mr. William Thacker built a
hotel on the site, and in later years an adventurous proprietor named James
Hubbard took over and increased the facilities to include a bicycle railway,
roundabouts, swings, a brass band and all the fun of the fair. He also opened
two unusual enterprises; an Aerial Cableway and a Funicular Railway. An
essential part of a day out at the Devil's Dyke was the ride on the Brighton
and Dyke Railway. The standard gauge line enabled visitors easy access to the
Dyke, and during the 1890s James Hubbard's amusement park was one of the most
important tourist attractions of South East England. Price: £12.95 (includes p & p)
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SHOREHAM AERODROME
(2001): The story of Britain's Oldest Licensed Airport 48 MINUTES Narrated
by TIM BLISSETT DVD ONLY SHOREHAM AERODROME, known today as Shoreham Airport, was the
birthplace of aeronautical heritage in the South East of England. There have
been many a famous aviator flying to and from Shoreham's grass, but this story
tells about the less well known characters that have made Shoreham the well
respected airport that it is today. Harold Piffard, the first person to fly a
heavier-than-air powered flying machine over Sussex, created local public
interest in flying, Cecil and Eric Pashley, the two brothers who put Shoreham
on the aviation map, and Fred, George and Blossom Miles, the family that kept
the airport operational during those lean years after the Second World
War. Price: £12.95
(includes p & p) Order
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