Back in the days when pretty much everything was transported by rail, private owner salt
wagons were a major feature of the British railway scene, and a very colourful feature at that.
Most salt producers transported their goods in the type of pitched-roof wagons which have
become synonymous with the industry, but an exception was Seddon's, based at Middlewich in the
heart of the gigantic Cheshire saltfields, who used low arc-roofed vans like our model. The majority
of their fleet were wooden-bodied, but in the aftermath of the First World War the railway
companies had a surfeit of steel-bodied gunpowder vans which they were keen to lease out to
any takers, and they must have made Seddon's an offer they couldn't refuse. However the
combination of salt and metal was never a very happy one, and the steel vans weren't widely
adopted for this type of traffic. Give your goods trains an unusual but authentic touch with one
of our Seddon's vans.
Many thanks to Richard Neale for his assistance with the research into this livery. |