electric locomotive (no. E3035) in
Electric Blue livery in the original
Nanking Blue livery at St Pancras railway station The standard livery for most British Railways steam locomotives was black, often with a thin red, cream and grey trim; express passenger locomotives were not painted in the former middle chrome green colour of the
Great Western Railway as is often stated, but were painted in British Standards: BS224
Deep Bronze Green also known as
Land Rover Deep Bronze Green LRC001 with orange and black lining. This error in colour identification comes from an article and question published in a model railway magazine in the 1950s, where the responding editor made the error and it has frequently been repeated since then. This has been confirmed by records held at the
National Railway Museum. All
Class 42 Warship diesels were delivered in green, but some
Class 52s were delivered in maroon to match the then-standard coaching stock livery. This livery suited these diesel hydraulic classes and allowed the
Western Region to once again show a degree of independence; it was not applied to any other diesel or electric classes (other than the
Warships). The 25 kV electric locomotives were painted from new in a striking shade of bright blue, known as
Electric Blue. They retained this livery for some years, before being painted in
Rail Blue when that became the standard. In 1964, as part of a plan to develop a new corporate image for British Railways, a number of experiments were tried: • Two
Class 31 diesel locomotives were painted in trial liveries. No. D5578 was painted in an unlined
Light Electric Blue, and No.D5579 was painted in a colour variously described as
Bronze Gold when it was first delivered in 1961. • Another Class 52, no. D1015
Western Champion, was delivered in another, darker yellow/brown colour described as
Golden Ochre, though somewhat different from that applied to D5579.) and cream for
corridor coaches, with all-over crimson being used for local, non-corridor stock. The colours were chosen to be different from those of any of the
Big Four pre-nationalisation railway companies, while retaining a traditional aspect. However, many people were not happy with the loss of the traditional historic regional colour schemes as used by the former private companies.
The second phase From 1956, maroon (similar to crimson lake) was adopted as the standard colour for coaching stock, with corridor coaches lined and non-corridor plain initially; later, all stock was lined. There was a return of some regional schemes; the Western Region turned out some
Mark 1 sets for named expresses in chocolate and cream, similar to that used by the GWR before nationalisation. Until the introduction of Mark 1 catering vehicles in the late 1950s, these trains had matching former GWR catering vehicles. The special saloons and a few other special coaches were also repainted in chocolate and cream but regular former GWR coaches carried maroon. From July 1956, the Southern Region began using a
coaching stock green that was somewhat darker than the
malachite green colour of the old
Southern Railway and this extended to former Southern vehicles as well as Mark 1 stock. For cost reasons, liveries were usually changed piecemeal, when coaches came in for scheduled maintenance. Coaches from different regions could also often find themselves coupled together and trains of two or three mixed liveries were not uncommon. Due to the consequent muddle of liveries, many trains began to get an untidy, if not tatty, appearance which added to the run-down image of the railway. The rebranding of
British Railways to
British Rail on 1 January 1965 was coupled with the introduction of an entirely new national livery.
XP64 A mock-up for the
British Railways Mark 2 stock was displayed at the Design Centre, 28
Haymarket, London, (the showrooms of the
Council of Industrial Design) in 1964. This included many of the features which were later incorporated in the Mark 2 and trialled in an experimental train designated
XP64. This mock-up was shown in an orange and grey livery which, however, never appeared on rolling stock in service. The XP64 train was used to test technology and carriage arrangements for the planned Mark 2 coaches. The coaches for the XP64 train were painted in a slightly lighter version of what would eventually become
Rail Blue, with a Pale Ivory stripe centred on the passenger windows, and brown
underframe. One locomotive,
Class 47 No.D1733, was painted to match the coaching stock. In 2001, as passenger work for diesel locomotives operated by
Virgin CrossCountry came to an end, a number of their Class 47s were painted in heritage liveries that they had carried in the past, including the former D1733 (now 47853) which once again carried a near-correct version of the XP64 livery. == Rail Blue ==