Harry Beck was, obviously, a genius, and the way he redesigned the London Underground map to be diagrammatic rather than geographic was game changing. Having said that, it also lead to a lot of absolutely filthy lies being inflicted upon the public. I had two more stations to visit, in Hinckley and Atherstone, and they looked reasonably close on the West Midlands Railway map. About the same as South Wigston and Narborough, only across rather than along.
The reality is the two stations are at least eight miles apart, nudging ten depending on your route, and the path is mostly along the straight as a die Roman Road slash dual carriageway. It is, in short, not worth doing. I'll happily walk for three hours at a time if it's interesting or scenic or historic. Lolloping along Watling Street for an afternoon with nothing to look at except the backs of Romanian delivery trucks? No thank you.
I decided it would be easier to treat both towns as one offs, getting a look at their high streets then returning to the station for the next train out. Hinckley was first.
I'm always pleased to visit a station and find it's still got all the trappings of a proper halt; the building, the awning, the footbridge. Hinckley's footbridge doubles as a right of way across the railway and I crossed the tracks opposite a lot of people with shopping bags heading home after a visit to the town centre.
From the station it was a steep walk up a hill to the town itself, past residential streets and a couple of pubs. Hinckley's newest shopping centre, The Crescent, loomed over the road. I'm not sure why councils are still permitting this sort of development. For one thing, it was an incredibly ugly block, as the five screen cinema meant there was a requirement for large black boxes and it didn't matter what it looked like on the outside.
Besides, Hinckley didn't seem to be doing too badly. I continued along streets that seemed to be filled with businesses, then past a primary school with a playground of excitable kids. It was World Book Day and the mix of outfits was a joy. I'd have been a lot stricter about the criteria for dress up if I was a teacher, though. There were a few too many Marvel superheroes for my liking, which, ok, you could say are in books, but I don't think that's quite in the spirit of the day. I pictured some poor girl dressed as Amy March leaning against the wall because her bustle and corset meant she couldn't sit down while fourteen Spider-Men made pew pew noises as they shot their webs at one another. Amy will be the winner in the long run, of course, because she has an enquiring mind that appreciates great literature, but there and then in that playground she'd have felt a right loser.
It was a bit of a surprise to find myself back at the station; I'd not really taken in that I'd done a complete loop. I took it as a sign that I should go to the next town and, after a change in Nuneaton, I was alighting at Atherstone. I was pleased to have reached here via London North Western; after a few Cross Country's it was good to return to the actual purpose of this blog.
Across, on the opposite platform, was another fine railway building, with a little more pomp than the one at Hinckley. I was on the Trent Valley Line now, the section of the West Coast Main Line that avoids Birmingham, so it was unsurprising to me that it had a little more zhush than its predecessor. The boarded up windows were a disappointment, mind.
I emerged on the other side, mad keen to take a look at the station itself, but was disappointed. It turned out the building was no longer used for railway purposes and was instead a vet's surgery. The access to the platform was via a narrow alleyway at the side rather than through the far grander building. What a let down.
Beyond that were plenty of other shopping options, though Atherstone didn't have the breadth of Hinckley. The constant traffic down the centre of the street detracted from the atmosphere too - I dread to think what it would've been like if they hadn't built a bypass - but I still found myself charmed. It was another busy, thriving little community, and I felt as though people would enjoy living here.
Her two pals watched with a mix of amusement and mild horror. Clearly something had fallen on her and then plummeted into the carrier. They backed away from it, then slowly approached, before gingerly feeling around for whatever terrifying wildlife had launched itself at her. The first woman burst out laughing. "It were a bit of grass, you twat!"
I veered off the main drag for a little wander, spotting the constituency office for the local Tory MP (there was a To Let sign on it, but that seemed to be for the shop underneath; give it time). The bus exchange sat opposite some more modern flats, and there was a 1970s bulk of red brick council offices.
Once again, I had the feeling that the town was "done". It was pleasing, inoffensive, probably lovely to live in, but I couldn't see myself rushing back. I wandered back towards the station, annoyed that I'd not been more inspired, annoyed that I'd not found a decent pub. Then I noticed an A-board by the entrance to the station: The King's Head - A Warm Welcome To Customers Old And New. It turned out Atherstone did have a decent pub; it just wasn't with all the others, but instead sat by a canal with a pleasing outdoor terrace and a nicely refurbished interior.
I had my pint - then another one, to be sure - then rolled back for my train. That was the last station of the day, but there was one more to visit on this trip. It would just be a bit more difficult to collect.
2 comments:
There's been a big scandal at Atherstone Conservative Club https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-coventry-warwickshire-68098864
Well that explains why the chalkboard said "all welcome"...
Post a Comment