Print

Print


The longevity of Ladies Waiting Rooms was presumably a combination of
plumbing and economics - not worth the expense of changing the toilet
arrangements.  Errol Station, a wayside station on the Dundee-Perth
line, certainly still had the classic arrangement of Ladies Waiting Room
containing 'the Ladies', General Waiting Room and separate 'Gents' with
direct access from the platform up until its closure in 1985.

John Beech

Hoadley, Stephen wrote:

> I believe 'Ladies Only' sections of trains were denoted at some point
> by a blue line at cant rail level, similar to the yellow lines of
> first class and the red lines of catering vehicles. Do we still have
> 'Ladies Only' waiting rooms at stations? If not, their demise was
> fairly recent.
>
> Stephen
>
>     -----Original Message-----
>     From: All aspects of railways, past, present and future.
>     [mailto:[log in to unmask]]On Behalf Of Juliet Jain
>     Sent: 01 March 2005 14:16
>     To: [log in to unmask]
>     Subject: women only train carriages
>
>     I was recently informed by a lady in her 70s that there used to be
>     'women only' railway carriages in britain.  Can anyone confirm
>     this, and point me to any references about this?
>
>     Please email to the address below.
>
>     Dr Juliet Jain
>     Research Associate
>     Centre for Transport and Society
>     Faculty of the Built Environment
>     University of the West of England
>     Frenchay Campus
>     Coldharbour Lane
>     BRISTOL   BS16 1QY
>
>     Tel: 0117 328 3304
>     Fax: 0117 328 3899
>     Email: [log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
>
>     www.transport.uwe.ac.uk <http://www.transport.uwe.ac.uk/>
>
>
>     ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>     This email has been independently scanned for viruses and any
>     virus software has been removed using McAfee anti-virus software
>