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An evocative and lyrical tribute to those that worked on this famous old railway line which runs from Settle in North Yorkshire to Carlisle in Cumbria Features a selection of unpublished period photographs Written by a former editor of the Dalesman with over 200 books to his name In his long career as a writer, W. J. Mitchell has put people before himself. In Folk Tales on the Settle-Carlisle Railway, tales by folk who knew the celebrated line in the days of steam take precedence over traction by diesel or electricity. Join the driver and fireman on the footplate of a locomotive. Stand behind a range of levers in a signal box or be one of a gang working on the permanent way, sweating in the summer heat or shivering after a heavy snowfall. Maintenance men in Blea Moor tunnel needed patience and good lungs. The tunnel might be thick with locomotive smoke or draped with icicles. On a Settle-Carlisle journey, we are thrilled by a slowly changing landscape, glancing at Pen-y-ghent, which crouches like a lion above Ribblesdale. Further north, we admire the broad acres of the Eden Valley which lie between the Northern Pennines and the gaunt fells of the Lake District.An afternoon passenger train that took in the line from Garsdale to Hawes was named Bonnyface. When it turned up, workers smiled as they were about to go home. The Garsdale tank house was used for dances and an adjacent wheel-less carriage was the refreshment room. Folk tales were the subject of the authors' special study, especially those heard and recorded on "tape" when he met descendants of some of the folk who built or worked for the railway. Memories of t'owd days abounded among local characters. These were men and women of individual thought and action and their words are presented here in this fascinating book.