A Great Western Railway Picnic Saloon, No.9346, completed at Swindon on December 12th 1896 is to be given a new lease of life on the South Devon Railway. The carriage was inhabited until very recently and had been built in to a small bungalow in the tiny village of Cove, near Tiverton. The bungalow was constructed in 1939 using the carriage as the living accommodation with a kitchen, bathroom and larder built on the outside at one end of the coach. Initially, it had a pitched roof with a verandah around it but this was then altered to become entirely enclosed. As a result the vehicle has remained in an incredibly good state of preservation. Internal alterations were few and can easily be reversed. As built the coach had two seating compartments with bench seats around the sides. One of the two seating areas also had a central long mahogany table. Between the two seating areas was a toilet and wash basin. The biggest repair will be to replace part of the end of the carriage where the kitchen and bathroom was added as the alterations carried out to prepare it for its 65 years as a house included the construction of a chimney with fireplaces in both living areas Interestingly, at one point some steel panelling had been put over part of the exterior and beneath the original GWR livery, including some lining and the number 9346 had survived (see photo). Up until this discovery identification marks had made it appear that the coach was No 2541 – the number is stamped on an internal door, which is another similar carriage from another batch. Coaches such as these were hired by families or groups and added to trains, quite often more than one coach at a time, to go to the chosen location for a day trip. The recovery was led by member Patrick Barter who had become aware of the vehicles existence a couple of years ago. After a few days of preparation a team of SDRA members were able to remove the pitched roof and chimney on Sunday 10th August and then the body was lifted by crane onto a lorry and moved to Buckfastleigh on 11th August. A suitable chassis has already been located, although this will mean the coach running as a four wheeler instead of as built as a six wheeler.
Ashburton Junction Box construction update.
© South Devon Railway Trust 2003