The Scotsman

This is the Royal Mail crossing the Border as rail service is expanded

- By ALASTAIR DALTON adalton@scotsman.com

Trains with parcels crossing the Border evoked by the classic documentar­y Night Mail are to be stepped up as part of a remarkable rail renaissanc­e by the Royal Mail.

The service, which came back from closure 18 years ago, is to be increased to up to double its current frequency, The Scotsman has learned.

Three additional trains a day are to run to the Royal Mail’s depot at Shieldmuir, near Motherwell, when a huge new parcels centre opens next year at Daventry in Northampto­nshire.

The news came in a presentati­on by Network Rail at the

Rail Freight Group’s (RFG) Scottish conference in Edinburgh this week.

The extra services are expected to come on top of Royal Mail’s three trains a day between its depot at Willesden in north-west London, Warrington and Shieldmuir which carry some 300,000 items a day.

They are operated by Royal Mail’s dedicated fleet of 15 windowless, sealed trains which were specially designed to carry mail containers. The fourcarria­ge trains, which operate on the west coast main line, have already been upgraded by reducing the number of doors to increase their capacity by nearly one-third.

In 2003 it looked like the end of the line for mail trains when Royal Mail cancelled all its contracts, including the “travelling post offices” immortalis­ed by the 1936 documentar­y about the London-glasgow service which featured the WH Auden poem Night Mail and music by Benjamin Britten.

Postal workers on the specially-adapted trains – which started running in 1838 – sorted mail into pigeon holes en route, in addition to collecting and dispatchin­g mail bags suspended from trackside poles, which continued until 1971.

The last travelling post office ran in January 2004, but mail trains with no staff on board were reinstated for Christmas 2004 and then continued. For a time, a service was also added on the east coast main line between London and a Royal Mail depot near Newcastle.

The Royal Mail’s latest expansion of the service is understood to be part of its planned transition to become an internatio­nal business focusing on parcels. The company benefited from an online mail order boom fuelled by lockdown restrictio­ns during the Covid pandemic.

The Royal Mail new 78,000 square metre hub – the company’s biggest parcel centre – will be part of the third phase of the Daventry Internatio­nal Rail Freight Terminal. Its automated sorting system will be capable of handling more than one million parcels a day.

RFG director general Maggie Simpson said: “Moving post, parcels and packages by rail is a huge opportunit­y, making online retail cleaner and greener and keeping lorries off the roads. We welcome the investment in new facilities to support this, and look forward to seeing new services starting in the coming months.”

A Royal Mail spokespers­on said: “We have no comment to make at present.”

Mail has been carried by rail for nearly 200 years, with services starting between Liverpool and Manchester in 1830. Other firms are seeking to develop rail freight by converting passenger trains.

 ?? ?? Royal Mail runs a dedicated fleet of mail trains, which have no windows, and have recently been upgraded to increase their capacity
Royal Mail runs a dedicated fleet of mail trains, which have no windows, and have recently been upgraded to increase their capacity

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