If it's Great Western, I would think perhaps an 0-4-2t with a single coach for passenger service. They had a very unusual push-pull arrangement. Then a Pannier tank 0-6-0t for the goods traffic. Of course my experience with British practice is limited to what I've seen in pictures, so I'm no authority.
Tom
Sounds like you have a good plan!!
George In Midcoast Maine, 'bout halfway up the Rockland branch
andrechapelon A British branch line terminus in 4 mm scale
Sounds workable to me, Andre, and I really enjoyed reading your back-story for the plan.
Rather than restrict it to Dublo, though, the modeller could choose whatever scale he wanted simply by using the trains from Thomas, which are widely available in several scales. That'd have folks everywhere pontificating, let alone those in High Dudgeon.
Wayne
Reminds me of "The Titfield Thunderbolt," that great Ealing Studios comedy about branch line closure in the UK in the 1950s.
4mm is a beautiful scale- are you going to use the widely available OO-gauged equipment, or build to Protofour or EM standards?
If you are modeling the GWR/ Western Region, you should check outthe beautiful kits once made by Martin Finney and now by Brassmasters:
http://www.brassmasters.co.uk/gwr_kits.htm
These are etched brass, and I have long wanted to get. His LSWR T9 and LNER A3. You have to buy the wheels and motors separately, but what an impressive product!
http://mprailway.blogspot.com
"The first transition era - wood to steel!"
Also, you might consider having a look at Adrian Vaughn's "Signalman's Morning," an account of learning to work as a signalman (what we would call a block operator) in Berkshire in the early 1960s, during the British transition era. He worked in Western Region, the former GWR, and the book is thick with both atmosphere and the details of "absolute block working," the British equivalent of American manual block rules.
Apparently, a satire is something that most people think of as an item that fits on some kind of wheeled vehicle. Granted, it's not on the same level as Jonathan Swift's "A Modest Proposal", but really????
Andre
From Mark Twain's short story "Niagara":
...... and, to crown their disgraceful proceedings and add insult to injury, they threw me over the Niagara Falls and I got wet.
That pretty much sums it up. I think I'll try some other endeavour, albeit probably something other than satire. Like my boyhood hero, Mark Twain, maybe I'll re-invent myself as an editor of an agricultural journal - http://www.twainquotes.com/Galaxy/187007a.html
Either that, or try my hand at Tennessee journalism: https://americanliterature.com/author/mark-twain/short-story/journalism-in-tennessee
There's nothing to prevent satire or storytelling in actual modeling - check this guy out:
http://www.ottgalleries.com
Guess your High Dudgeon reminded me too strongly of John Ahern's Much Madder:
https://www.pendonmuseum.com/about/madder
MidlandPacific There's nothing to prevent satire or storytelling in actual modeling - check this guy out: http://www.ottgalleries.com Guess your High Dudgeon reminded me too strongly of John Ahern's Much Madder: https://www.pendonmuseum.com/about/madder
Actually, I'm familiar with both. Rail Model in the UK published an article on the Madder Valley in "Great British Model Railways, Vol. 2" (2014) and I stumbled on John Ott's website a couple of years ago.
Personally, I'd regard the Madder Valley as more whimsical than satirical. As for Ott, not my cup of tea, but he does fantastic work. Not a fan of HP Lovecraft, however.
Rats, apparently someone beat me to it. Not with the backstory, but the name.
https://www.newrailwaymodellers.co.uk/Forums/viewtopic.php?f=22&t=42204
I hate it when that happens.
EDIT: Even worse, apparently there's a house in the UK named High Dudgeon.
https://tinyurl.com/jjlpkkj
I hate the Internet.
andrechapelonRats, apparently someone beat me to it. Not with the backstory, but the name.
Ah but its only part of the name. Im guessing Much Simmering is either a branch from High Dudgeon or on the way there from Knickers-in-a-twist. You could model the High Dudgeon to Knickers-in-a-twist line.
Nothing you can do about the house.
BMMECNYC andrechapelon Rats, apparently someone beat me to it. Not with the backstory, but the name. Ah but its only part of the name. Im guessing Much Simmering is either a branch from High Dudgeon or on the way there from Knickers-in-a-twist. You could model the High Dudgeon to Knickers-in-a-twist line. Nothing you can do about the house.
andrechapelon Rats, apparently someone beat me to it. Not with the backstory, but the name.
Perhaps, but I somehow feel the need to include the halt at Loaded Nappy.