Wednesday, 24 June 2026

A Posting, Full On, Rye (3)

Above About Your Station

The station building at Rye is a splendid edifice on the Platform 2 (for Hastings etc) side of the tracks. To the right of the main building is a caff ...
... which has changed hands since the picture was taken. As well as the usual additions to a cup if coffee ...
... i.e. lots of gorgeous cakes ...
... the business also doubles as a florist ...
... with lots of gorgeous blooms!

As you approach the station via Station Approach, you will observe the town's main bus stops and time point.
Services are in the hands of Stagecoach ...
... purchaser of the East Kent company whose vehicles we see un years gone by, resting between duties beside the station building ...
... and using the same layby as does Stagecoach today.
Maidstone and District appeared as well.
fbb has failed abysmally to identify those route numbers! Here an M & D Single decker awaits its next departure.
Maidstone and District?
Even stranger in colour! It used to be with the Dengate Bus Company which operated several services un the Hastungs and Rye area ...
... usung an eclectic seleection of vehicles!

Today, through the central portico of Rye station, you enter a neat and tidy ticket office cum waiting area before continuing on to Platform 2 for trains to Hastings etc.
The platforms are staggered ...
... now linked by a footbridge.

Therein lies a tale. The line between Ore and Ashford was listed for closure under the Beeching Report. A combination of ferocious local opposition and relatively poor road links meant that the line survived but was later reduced to single track for part of its length.

With the arrival of the Hastings electrification came the proposal to add conductor rail to the Marshlink line.

So a footbridge was added for safety reasons ...
... which (fbb guesswork!) duly replaced a foot crossing.

The Marshlink line was not electrified!

There is a lengthy walking route from the station building via the car and coach park ...
... over the level crossing ...
... and back to Platform 1.
fbb is sure that the worthy citizens of Rye would demand a foot crossing and later rejoice (?) in the installation of the footbridge.

Platform 1 has just a basic shelter, but a shelter with character.
In the good old bad old days, such a facility would have routinely been demolished and replaced by a 'bus' shelter. So it is to the credit if whoever makes these far reaching management decisions that the characterful shelter has been fully refurbished.
Nice!

Tomorrow, fbb will look at signals and try to answer two cutting edge questions. 

Why, in the 21st century and with the benefit if modern electronics, does Rye appear to have a working manual signal box?

And why oh why at Rye (say I), are signals not controlled by the mega and hugely expensive signalling centre at Ashford.
They've got all the clever stuff there!


Well Done Stagecoach
fbb was revising his poor knowledge of current bus services at Rye when he came across this from Stagecoach.

Route 100 runs hourly between Conquest Hospital (Hastings), Rye, Lydd and Romney with a Sunday variant numbered 101.
There is no Saturday service (see timetable heading)!

Really?

The existence of a highlighted 'Saturday only' journey suggests that the table should be headed Monday to Saturday.

Whoops!

Convalescent Cartography
fbb has been spending some time creating a map. It is probably the most challenging design project the old bloke has ever attempted.
It is utterly purposeless but no equivalent exists - anywhere.

More in due course.

  Next Rye signals blog : Thursday 25th June 

Tuesday, 23 June 2026

A Posting, Full On, Rye (2)

 Tunnel Vision

When a youthful fbb used to go on Crusader holidays on the Isle of Wight, he found Waterloo station fascinating and a bit scary. Back then, green worms (Southern Region electric trains) would slide and wiggle on the tracks approaching the station. The lad hoped that the wiggles would not bring the carriages into crunching contact.

But everything, it seemed, was green caterpillars whizzing to and fro. You might then think that everything south of the Thames was electric. 

Even today, fbb's local line at Axminster is still diesel ...
... and very much in need of some new trains.

The colours were brighter under Stagecoach ownership but they have reverted to dull and duller c/o First.

The main line between London and Hastings was a late electrification candidate. Before being plugged in, it was operated by diesel electric units ...
... later resplendent in blue and grey.
These units were somewhat thinner than standard because of restricted clearance in some of the tunnels.

But, eventually, the third rail power came along, the tunnels were up-fettled and normal thickness trains were used.

They were even given a special livery called 'jaffa cake' by enthusiasts.
... and were appropriately branded.

Single Vision
Which left just one bit of line in the area without the electric.
Trains between Hastings and Ashford remained diesel electric, in various liveries ...
... on class 207 stock.
Today's equivalent are from the class 170 stable ...
... running as two or three car sets.

The units run through from Eastbourne via Hastings to Ashford providing a clock face hourly frequency.
In passing, note the times of trains at Rye above, xx47/xx49; and in the opposite direction below, xx46/xx48.
Yes, fans of railway operation, trains cross at Rye.
They need to, because this part of the route is single track!

Tourism Vision
Although, practically, only the section between Hastings and Ashford was originally branded "Marshlink" ...
... publicity tends to extol the virtues of the whole route. This full colour illustrated map is an example.

Here we see Eastbourne to Hastings ...
You would have a long walk to Herstmonceaux and a connecting train to Battle.

Then from Hastings to Ashford.
Again, best of British for a connection to Tenterden for the Kent and East Sussex Railway. 
There would be an equal challenge to make it to the Romney Hythe and Dymchurch line.
If you wish, you might even connect with a Eurostar at Ashford!
But Eurostar won't allow you to go from Ashford to Bruxelles!

Oddly, Rye Station would appear to have a signal box!
fbb will adumbrate tomorrow.

  Next Rye station blog : Weds 24th June 

Monday, 22 June 2026

A Posting, Full On, Rye (1)


It was Agatha Crusty who penned the celebrated crime novel as illustrated above. From memory (dodgy as ever) the rye in a pocket was a crucial link for the old lady from St Mary Mead as she brilliantly solved the intricate crime.

The line comes from a gruesome children's "nursery" rhyme ...

... which, to bring joy to the kiddies, involves one of said blackbirds pecking off the nose of a hard working kitchen maid. 

So many nursery rhymes are horrible; Ring a Ring of Roses is about death from the plague; The Grand Old Duke Of York is about appalling mismanagement of the Kingdom's defence forces (nothing changes!); and as for poor Humpty!

To avoid permanently traumatising the very young, we hardly ever see pictures of Humpty's terminal brokenness. fbb does, however, remember one of a smashed Humpty from his childhood. He disliked the picture and felt sad that no one attempted a repair.

The origins of the rhyme are lost for ever, but two possibilities are suggested. It may have referred to a sudden fall from grace for a politician or a member of the Royalty (so nothing new there, eh?) OR a sombre comment on the dangers of drunkenness (so no change there, eh?).

Bur we digress.

As usual!

Rye us a delightful town in East Sussex (almost in Kent) ...

... sitting at the confluence of three rivers, The Rother (but NOT as in Rotherham!), The Tillingham and The Brede.
The area is partially reclaimed marsh and the name Rye may be derived from an ancient word for an island. Some authorities show it as an island on geological maps.
At the back of fbb's quirky brain function was the idea that Rye was one of the Cinque Ports. Yes, it's French for 'five' but we have to pronounce it "Sink"! It wouldn't do for the Brave British Bulldog breed to submit to johnny foreigner's strange and impenetrable vowel sounds.

Rye wasn't a Cinque Port but it was!

The confederation of Cinque Ports is a historic group of coastal towns in Sussex and Kent. The name is Old French, meaning "five harbours", and alludes to the original five members (Hastings, New Romney, Hythe, Dover and Sandwich). At its peak in the Late Middle Ages, the confederation included over 40 members. There is now a totalof 14 members: five "head ports", two "ancient towns" and seven  "limbs".

So here is a list of the most recent "club" membership

Head Ports (The "Five")

  • Hastings
  • New Romney
  • Hythe
  • Dover
  • Sandwich

Corporate limbs (The Hangers-On)

  • Pevensey
  • Seaford
  • Tenterden 
  • Lydd
  • Folkestone
  • Faversham 
  • Fordwich
  • Deal

Ancient Towns (because they were ancient!)

  • Winchelsea
  • Rye

Winston Churchill, Sir Robert Menzies and Her Majesty The Queen Mother were all once holders of the onerous task of being Lord Warden if the Cinque Ports. The main onerous duties were to turn up for the occasional knees-up in the posh clobber.
It's a tough job but someone has to do it!

The railway came to Rye in 1851 ...
... and in many ways things have not changed greatly over the years.
But it was the shelter on Platform 1 ...
... that excited fbb's blogging juices, of that shelter more too follow.

Before we go there, however, there was another railway at Rye.
This 3 foot gauge line ran from its own Rye station ...
... to Camber Sands, here with diesel haulage ...
... via  a stop at the golf course.
Some of the buildings remain, now repurposed; and most of the track bed can be spotted.
The bridge (above with train crossing) is still there, just about.
The line closed in 1939. fbb doubts whether it was ever commercially viable!

Back to National Rail platform 1 tomorrow.

  Next Posting, Full On, Rye : Tues 23 June