Monday
14 September was a day of celebration for the volunteers of the Gloucestershire
Warwickshire Steam Railway (GWSR).
That’s
because the 900 people who freely give of their time to help run and grow the
popular steam railway in the Cotswolds, were presented with the Queen’s Award
for Voluntary Service, at a special ceremony at the railway’s Toddington
station.
Dame
Janet first arrived at Winchcombe station where she formally opened the
railway’s new ‘Discovery Coach’ which imaginatively presents the history of the
railway and its local context.
She
then boarded a steam train to Toddington, along with GWSR officials and guests.
After touring the locomotive restoration facilities she mounted steps to
the footplate of the latest locomotive to be restored at Toddington, to
announce the citation and present the Award and a certificate from HM Queen
Elizabeth to Chairman of GWSR Plc, Alan Bielby.
The
occasion was witnessed by up to 200 of the railway’s volunteers.
Dame
Janet said that the selection committee had ‘no hesitation’ in making the award
to the railway’s volunteers, noting how impressed she was with the scale of the
operation and all that it had achieved.
Since
1982, when the embryonic GWSR first took occupation of a derelict Toddington
station yard and fifteen miles of vacant trackbed, after British Railways
closed the line in 1979 and removed the track and infrastructure, it has
steadily grown to become one of the leading tourist attractions in the
Cotswolds and Gloucestershire..
GWSR
Chairman Alan Bielby commented: “We have won many awards over the years but the
Queen’s Award for Voluntary Service is by far the most prestigious and the most
meaningful.
“It
is a testament to our volunteers, past and present, for all that they have
contributed to making this railway such a success. It’s the envy of many
other heritage railways because it remains almost entirely volunteer run.”
Please look at latest news o the GWR news for a selection of photographs
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