Fife Coast Express Explained

Fife Coast Express
Type:Passenger train
First:1912
Last:5 September 1959
Formeroperator:NBR, LNER, BR
Start:St Andrews and Crail
Frequency:Daily

The Fife Coast Express, formerly the Fifeshire Coast Express, was a named passenger train operating in the United Kingdom.

History

The summer service was started in 1910 by the North British Railway under the name Fifeshire Coast Express, as a Glasgow to Crail train at 4.20pm on a Friday evening, returning at 6.17am on Monday morning. This enabled businessmen to house their families on the coast during the summer, and travel to stay with them at weekends. From the following summer it ran daily, Monday to Friday.

In 1924 it became known as the Fife Coast Express.[1] The named train was withdrawn on the outbreak of the Second World War but was re-introduced for the summer of 1949.[2]

It was withdrawn on 5 September 1959.

Notes and References

  1. News: . Station Mishap . Aberdeen Press and Journal . Scotland . 8 September 1924 . 26 December 2017 . British Newspaper Archive . subscription .
  2. News: . More and Better Summer Trains . The Scotsman . Scotland . 22 April 1949 . 26 December 2017 . British Newspaper Archive . subscription .