Railway Memorabilia
dates back to the start of steam travel in the 1800s In addition to locomotive nameplates and station signs, there are many evocative railway-related items around - and some are quite affordable
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Railway Memorabilia |
The most popular memorabilia dates from the early 1920s until nationalisation in 1948. The Beeching Report on the British railway network, published in 1963, led to the closure of many lines and stations, yielding more collectables.
Railway Memorabilia |
Nameplates, especially those from steam locomotives that
operated on mainline routes, are prized. The class of locomotive, condition of
the metal plate (often cast iron or brass), and even the name itself affect
prices. The record for a nameplate is ,£-54,000, paid in 2002 for 'Sir William
A. Stainer FRS'.
As demand is high and the supply is limited, steam loco nameplates are rarely found for less than £10,000.
Even more
recent electric or diesel plates can fetch high prices: a 'Queen Elizabeth I*
nameplate from a 1991 Class 91 electric loco can cost £6,000-£7,000.
Locomotives also incorporated number plates ('cab side' and
'smokebox') and works plates. Cab-side plates are valuable, with rare brass
examples commanding around ±10,000-15,000 or more. More common examples can
cost less than ±1.000. Values have levelled out, so keep an eye on price trends
before investing.
Railway Memorabilia |
Smokebox plates are smaller in size and less expensive than cab-side plates, although rarer examples can command high prices: a 1948 plate from the Duchess of Sutherland' is valued at £6000 to £7000.
Railway Memorabilia |
Railway Memorabilia |
values are starting to rise..
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Station information notices, trackside signs, including Beware of the Trains'
notices,
and signal box name-boards are less expensive, with prices starting at around
£50 and rising to more than £2,000 for unusual or pristine pieces. Other collectibles include ticket boxes and the 'key tokens' exchanged by train crews
to prevent two trains from travelling in opposite directions on single-track
lines.
Rare 19th-century signalling lamps can be worth thousands
of pounds, but early 20th-century lamps can sell for about £50
Railway Memorabilia |
Luxury carriage fittings are sought after, and Pullman table lamps can cost around £1,500- 2,000. Brass whistles can be a good buy: a pair of GWR whistles can cost less than £300.
Railway Memorabilia |
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