Final Destination: Riding Britain’s Trains to the End of the Line Posted by grahame at 18:42, 9th May 2025 | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Final Destination: Riding Britain’s Trains to the End of the Line
Hardcover – 8 May 2025
by Nige Tassell (Author)
Amazon reviews this
All aboard for a one-of-a-kind journey by train to some of the most obscure parts of BritainOn the 200th birthday of the world’s first passenger-carrying railway, Nige Tassell sets out to ride Britain’s railway network all the way to its lesser-travelled-to corners, its seldom-visited outposts. From Wick to Penzance and many points in between, he stays on until the end of the line. He is the last man sitting.The sixteen final destinations he visits offer sixteen different stories. By delving into their histories, by speaking to their people and by having a good old-fashioned nose around, Tassell reveals much about places that rarely have light cast upon them – from ferry ports to abandoned resorts, from tiny hamlets to towns being reclaimed by the sea. It''s a journey that takes in Harry Potter, Muhammad Ali, goths, Alan Bennett, Vera Brittain, Viz comic, Alex Horne, Nigel Farage. Vikings, John Betjeman, Aneurin Bevan, Tyson Fury, Charlotte Rampling''s dad and the weepy judge from The Great Pottery Throwdown. All human life is here.So grab yourself a window seat for an odyssey that tells us much about Britain today. All aboard, all aboard.
Somehow I would love to know what the destinations actually are ... I will naughty speculate
Coryton
Bromley North
Hertford East
Parkend
Milngavie
Bere Alston ....
Re: Final Destination: Riding Britain’s Trains to the End of the Line Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 19:30, 9th May 2025 | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
... judge from The Great Pottery Throwdown.
That'll be Keith Brymer Jones, so https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pwllheli_railway_station then.

Re: Final Destination: Riding Britain’s Trains to the End of the Line Posted by Ralph Ayres at 23:13, 10th May 2025 | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Chesham - Alex Horne, though "lesser-travelled-to" is being stretched a bit I feel. Anyone fancy a trawl through the station usage figures to work out the real least-used? I'd go for some of the current/former ferry ports being likely candidates.