Thursday, May 24, 2012

Tim Light on train travel in the 60s

Posted by noelbynature

Tim Light shares his childhood memories of the train from Singapore to Malaysia from the 1960s, and compares them to recent history.

class-20-bukit-timah-late-1950s

The guest blogger on Good Morning Yesterday first arrived in Singapore in 1961:

In 1961, Singapore had just one main railway line, linking Tanjong Pagar with the Johore Bahru, and a few sidings to industrial locations and the docks. From the causeway, the line paralleled Woodlands Road and Bukit Timah Road as far as Bukit Timah, where it headed south towards Holland Park and Buona Vista. It was on the Woodlands to Bukit Timah section that we saw most of our trains. By 1962 we were living at Hong Kong Park, off Dunearn Road, with a daily return trip to the Royal Naval School at Sembawang, so we were alongside the railway for much of the journey. I was constantly on the lookout for trains, and the biggest treat was always the KL Express. I noticed that, despite its sleekness, it didn’t go all that fast, and our school bus could keep pace with it between stops. I later learned that the Malayan Railway (KTM) had a top speed of 45 MPH, and that this limit still persists in many places today.

You can read his accounts here, and also his reflection on how train travel has differed from the 1960s.

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