Whitstable Woodgrain 1 – 9: Rust-stained woodgrain in old railway sleepers recycled as fencing at Whitstable Harbour, Kent, England.
Information boards in the harbour area at Whitstable say that in the late 1820’s a company was set up to build a railway line linking Canterbury and Whitstable and to construct a new harbour there. The railway opened in 1830 and was the first to carry passengers in trains drawn by steam power. At that time, on the hilly sections of the route, the trains were pulled on ropes reeled in by stationary steam-driven winding machines. Stephenson’s Invicta locomotive hauled trains along the flatter section of the line near Whitstable. Because of its seaside connections the railway was popularly known as the Crab and Winkle Line. The harbour was built two years later in 1832.
Eventually trade declined in the harbour and the railway closed in 1952. It is interesting to speculate whether the old timbers shown in these photographs with all their wear, rust stains, and drilled holes are the actual wooden sleepers from that old Crab and Winkle Line.
Beautiful photographs, Jessica. So glad you took the time to notice and then to show us this fence. Interesting story, too.
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Fabulous texture and colour…
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Thank you very much, Evelyn. I am enjoying and learning from your current ventures in watercolours and landscape as well as your previous experiments with colour, texture, and collage work. You are so talented.
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Thank you for calling me talented Jessica! I’m enjoying my mixed media art experiments but watercolour painting is what I love best and I have so much to learn…
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