Information display boards vary greatly. Overall, I think that they are much better than they used to be, in terms of design, clarity and durability - open as they often are to the elements. I found this one particularly useful. It takes a “then and now” approach, superimposing more recent developments over the former railway landscape and doing it very effectively.
We had made for Newstead and Annesley Country Park in search
of a mealy redpoll that had been well-publicised on the Nottinghamshire
Birdwatchers excellent website, but which had apparently left the area a day or
two earlier. The feeders that had attracted it for the preceding weeks kept us
entertained instead with bullfinch, siskin, reed bunting and lesser redpoll. A
few pairs of black necked grebe were also busy on one of the lakes.
I have known about Annesley [16D] for as long as I can
remember as an important shed on the old Great Central Railway. It was home to
freight engines, in particular, and especially the Standard 9Fs used on mineral
traffic in the Midlands. I never reached it, however, so it has remained just a
mystical name from the past for me.
At this point, the Leen Valley was eventually host to three
parallel, north to south, main line railways – the MR, GNR and GCR. Today, it
only has a lone, single-track section of the Nottingham to Worksop, Robin Hood
line. In the meantime, most of the railway lines were taken up, the pit waste
tips were expanded in their place, then the collieries themselves were closed
and a significantly despoiled landscape gradually began to return to nature
with the help of the local authorities and a wide range of environmental
groups.
For someone who had no way of visualising exactly what it used to be like - what was where and what the sequence of events was - an on-site map with concise explanations what was just what was required. I can’t be sure it will do the trick in this second-hand form, but I’ll give it a go, nevertheless.
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