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-   -   Euro Trivia Quiz #17 - British Train Trivia (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/euro-trivia-quiz-17-british-train-trivia-1033015/)

PalenQ Dec 28th, 2014 09:59 AM

Euro Trivia Quiz #17 - British Train Trivia
 
Any British train buffs out there? Here are some esoteric trivia questions:

1- The sign on this train station's walls says it's "Britain's busiest train station"

2- An old comedy line about taking trains always ended with "And Change at Xxxxx" - like you always have to change at this station wherever you're going.

3- Britain's National Rail Museum is located in what city?

4- The world's first passenger train ran between which two English cities?

5- Parts of Harry Potter films were shot on this awesomely gorgeously scenic Scottish train line?
6- The U.K.'s furthest north train station?

7- the U.K.'s furtherest west train station?

8- The U.K. most southern train station?

9- The U.K.'s furtherest most east train station?

10 - Where is the Ffestiniog Railway?

First to name all gets a free year of access to www.nationalrail.co.uk

bilboburgler Dec 28th, 2014 10:09 AM

2 Crewe
3 York
4 Oldham and I'll leave the other end for others
10 Snowden

free ?

dotheboyshall Dec 28th, 2014 10:17 AM

4. This is going to be fun.

ESW Dec 28th, 2014 10:36 AM

1 Clapham Junction

3 York

4 Liverpool and Manchester

5 On the line between Fort William amd Mallaig, in particular the Glenfinnan viaduct.

6 Thurso

7 Milford Haven

8 Penzance

9 Lowestoft (by a whisker over Great Yarmouth)

10 North Wales. It runs between Porthmadog and Blaenau Ffestiniog.

dotheboyshall Dec 28th, 2014 10:55 AM

4. So The Mumbles - Swansea railway doesn't count.

7. Would have thought Londonderry is further west

ESW Dec 28th, 2014 12:32 PM

4. I've not come across the Mumbles Swansea railway so had to go to Wiki to find out about it. It did preceed the Manchester Liverpool. Trains were pulled by horse power rather than steam. You live and learn.

7. Do you know, I've a terrible confession, I'd completely forgotten Northern Ireland!

PalenQ Dec 28th, 2014 12:52 PM

The perpetrator of the quiz admits to being too vague about # 4 - I meant with steam not horse power so all answers are right for their respective traction power methods.

7 - I do believe Derry takes the prize for furthest U.K. rail station to the west.

ESW is today's champion and gets a free year on Fodor's forums!

flanneruk Dec 28th, 2014 10:46 PM

"The sign on this train station's walls says it's "Britain's busiest train station""

No such place.

No organisation in Britain would descend to putting up a slogan in American.

It's possible - just - that there's a statement at Clapham Junction that it's Britain's busiest railway station. Though it sounds extraordinarily unBritish to waste energy emblazoning the fact in public.

PatrickLondon Dec 28th, 2014 11:08 PM

>>Though it sounds extraordinarily unBritish to waste energy emblazoning the fact in public.<<

But the sign was (and is?) there. I travelled through there enough times to and from school. The signs certainly had been u since the time of peak stiff-upper-lippery, somewhere soon after nationalisation, I suspect - perhaps in some sort of effort to persuade people there was some sort of bright side to overcrowding, clapped-out trains and stations not decorated since the 30s?

willit Dec 29th, 2014 03:11 AM

4- The world's first passenger train ran between which two <b>English cities?</b>

Since when was Mumbles either English or a city?

ESW Dec 29th, 2014 03:34 AM

"It's possible - just - that there's a statement at Clapham Junction that it's Britain's busiest railway station. Though it sounds extraordinarily unBritish to waste energy emblazoning the fact in public."
You've only to do a google image search Flanneruk and there it is...
http://www.world-railways.co.uk/photos/1/15415.jpg

It's good to see we still use the the word 'railway' rather than 'train'. I hate being a 'customer'. I'm a PASSENGER!

Being pedantic PalenQ, Londonderry and Derry are both the same place. Derry is the modern name as the 'London' bit was regared as inflammatory.

Just as a matter of interest, what is the correct answer ro 2?

bilboburgler Dec 29th, 2014 03:42 AM

" Londonderry and Derry are both the same place. Derry is the modern name as the 'London' bit was regared as inflammatory"

so such more complicated than this.

The PC solution is to call it DerryLondonDerry that way two sets of women-hating religious bigots are happy :-) Merry Christmas

PatrickLondon Dec 29th, 2014 03:44 AM

Crewe.

<i>Oh Mr Porter, what shall I do?
I want to go to Birmingham, and they've taken me on to Crewe!
Take me back to London, as quickly as you can,
Oh Mr Porter, what a silly girl I am!</i>

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e-RpyLmIn3k

PalenQ Dec 29th, 2014 05:17 AM

I guess it would depend on what the train station in London(Derry) is called and I suppose it's Londonderry.

and of course the correct answer to # 7 would also be Londonderry, not Milford Haven.

Yes flanner is of course correct - I was just juggling my American mind in recalling that sign I've seen a zillion times - yes railway station - good show old chap!

dotheboyshall Dec 29th, 2014 08:41 AM

<i>Since when was Mumbles either English or a city?</i>

I said it would be fun. Do you say it's The Mumbles railway which was the first passenger carrying railway - though horsedrawn, then you have the Stockton Darlington line which was the world's first publicly funded railway and which carried passengers using a mixture of horse and steam or do you use Manchester - Liverpool which was the world's first fully steam powered passenger railway.

There's also evidence of horse drawn railways in the US which took paying passengers

PalenQ Dec 29th, 2014 10:21 AM

We now have railways that take horses and live stock as paying passengers but not much the other way around

PalenQ Dec 29th, 2014 12:40 PM

When I was in Manchester I visited what was said to be the world's oldest railway station, now a museum and part of the Underground Manchester museum showcasing the city's ancient sewage system.

dotheboyshall Dec 29th, 2014 12:43 PM

Liverpool Road - it closed in 1844.

ESW Dec 29th, 2014 02:16 PM

"When I was in Manchester I visited what was said to be the world's oldest railway station, now a museum and part of the Underground Manchester museum showcasing the city's ancient sewage system."

It also includes the Science and Industry Museum and is excellent. It has a fascinating section looking at the development of steam power.

LancasterLad Jan 1st, 2015 01:02 AM

I've just had a Brief Encounter with this thread.


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