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The Origins of Thomas the Tank Engine
The Railways Series #1
Published in 1945
1. Edward's Day Out
2. Edward and Gordon
3. The Sad Story of Henry
4. Edward, Gordon and Henry
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Thomas the Tank Engine is fifty years old. The stories were first created by
an Anglican clergyman, the Reverend Wilbert Awdry, as a way of entertaining
his young son Christopher as he recovered, in isolation, from scarlet fever.
Christopher demanded that he be told the stories again and again and, in the
way of small children, corrected his father whenever inconsistencies crept
into the retold stories. In self defense the Rev. Awdry wrote the first
stories down on available scraps of paper. To add to the story telling, the
Rev. Awdry drew simple pictures of steam locomotives on the paper along with
the stories. A head on view being the easiest to draw, he drew a row of
locomotives standing in an engine shed with a human face and expression on
each locomotive's smokebox door.
The Railways Series #2
Published in 1946
1. Thomas and Gordon
2. Thomas' Trains
3. Thomas and the Trucks
4. Thomas and the Breakdown Train
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"Why is this engine sad, Daddy?", asked Christopher, pointing at an unhappy
faced locomotive. "Because he's old and tired and he hasn't been out in a
long time.", replied his father. "What's his name, Daddy?"
"Edward" was the first name that came into the Rev. Awdry's mind. This was
the genesis of "Edward's Day Out", the first in almost a hundred simple moral
tales about the exploits and adventures of a group of railway engines given
human personalities.
The Railways Series #3
Published in 1948
1. James and the Top Hat
2. James and the Bootlace
3. Troublesome Trucks
4. James and the Express
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Mrs Awdry believed that these children's stories had some merit and so
pestered her husband to "do something about them". Through a distant cousin
a small publisher, Edmund Ward, was found who was interested in these railway
stories. The connection was made so suddenly that the Rev. Awdry had to send
the stories as they were written on scraps of paper as the original
manuscript. Nevertheless in 1945 the first of the Railway Series of books
"The Three Railway Engines" appeared. This was a book, small enough for
children's hands, containing three stories, "Edward's Day Out" being the
first. The book was laid out with the text on the left hand page and a full
page illustration of an incident in the story on the right.
The Railways Series #4
Published in 1949
1. Thomas and the Guard
2. Thomas Goes Fishing
3. Thomas, Terence and the Snow
4. Thomas and Bertie
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Thomas the Tank Engine did not appear until the second book was published a
year later in 1946 and more books followed at yearly intervals. The
illustrator for the first dozen or so books was C. Reginald Dalby, who
established the basic appearance of each locomotive character from the Rev.
Awdry's sketches and by looking at real steam engines in use in Britain at
that time. Thus an obscure 0-6-0T Class E2 shunting engine built in the
Victorian era for the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway became the
model for Thomas, now known to millions of children worldwide. Gordon can be
seen to be based on a Gresley A3 Pacific from the London and North Eastern
Railway; Flying Scotsman being the most famous real locomotive of this class.
The Railways Series #5
Published in 1950
1. Henry and the Elephant
2. Tenders and Turntables
3. Trouble in the Shed
4. Percy Runs Away
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As the stories developed, the location and other features of fictional
railway system emerged. Many stories were based on actual happenings on
British Railways and its predecessors. A railway locomotive did disappear
down a mine shaft on the Furness Railway and get spun on a turntable by the
wind: Midland Railway. More than one of the Reverend Awdry's clerical
colleagues were just as fascinated as he with steam powered machinery. The
Rev. Terry Boston was a well known collector of steamrollers and became the
inspiration for the vicar who saves Trevor the Traction Engine from the scrap
heap. More locomotive characters appeared, learning to deal with the
troublesome trucks and to become "really useful engines" as they pulled their
trains over the railway system presided over by the stern but kindly Fat
Controller: Sir Topham Hatt. The now famous engines all went to London and
the Queen came to visit the railway. By the time British Railways retired
its last steam locomotive, the Rev. Awdry had firmly established the Island
of Sodor as the location of his railway, happily unaffected by the
modernization on the mainland.
The Railways Series #6
Published in 1951
1. Coal
2. The Flying Kipper
3. Gordon's Whistle
4. Percy and the Trousers
5. Henry's Sneeze
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After twenty six books, the Rev. Awdry laid down his pen, only to have it
taken up by his son Christopher, who is now continuing to write stories for
his son. Ten more books of the Railway Series have now appeared so far under
Christopher's name. Perhaps, in his turn, the Rev. Awdry's grandson will
continue the tradition! During the 1960's the Rev. Awdry built a model of
Thomas's branch line and exhibited it at various model railway shows
throughout England. It wasn't until 1984 that a whole new generation of
children were introduced to Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends when the first
of the T.V. series of that name was made. Gauge 1 models based on Marklin
mechanisms were used in the making of the T.V. shows in a studio not far from
Clapham Junction, Britain's busiest railway station. In response to the
rekindled interest in Thomas, a British Model Railway Manufacturer, Hornby
Railways, introduced a number of OO gauge models of the locomotives in the
Railway Series.
Credits :
The text was written by
Ian Gunn
Images from http://images-eu.amazon.com/
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