Date: 30/11/2019
About thirty guests turned up in brilliant sunshine on 30th November 2019 to see a Transport Trust red wheel plaque unveiled at Wemyss Bay station and hear Gordon Masterton hail the station as a transport icon in a style, the impossibility of whose classification was surely its unique charm. He cited Simon Jenkins as having written that it had variously been called domestic revival, Queen Anne, arts-and-crafts and 'chalet', but Jenkins had found also a touch of Los Angeles Spanish, perhaps under Caledonian Railway engineer Donald Mathesons American influence which was reflected also in architect James Millers inclusion of theories about passenger circulation. Friends of Wemyss Bay Station Chair Greg Beecroft conducted a guided tour beforehand and provided hospitality for guests afterwards.
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Wemyss Bay
This is one of the pre-eminent ^must see^ stations in Scotland. In 1905 it replaced an original Wemyss Bay [1st] station of 1865 on a slightly different orientation (see that entry for the 1865-1905
Transport Trust
Transport Trust is the hub of the transport preservation movement in the UK, supporting and promoting the restoration and preservation of all parts of our transport heritage.
Friends of Wemyss Bay Station
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