South Yorkshireman


The South Yorkshireman is a British named passenger train. In its modern version it is one of four named expresses operated by East Midlands Railway, and runs between and.
The original South Yorkshireman was a train in the post-WW2 era from Bradford via to over the Great Central Main Line.

1940s, 1950s

The South Yorkshireman was started by British Railways in May 1948. It left daily at 10:00, returning from London at 16:50, and calling at Huddersfield, Sheffield, and Leicester; in some years at least, also at Halifax, Brighouse, Penistone, Nottingham, Rugby and Aylesbury. It was not a particularly fast service even by the standards of that era, the down train taking 5 hours 30 minutes to get from London to Bradford. It usually had nine coaches including a restaurant car, and was often hauled by a Gresley A3 Pacific. The train continued running until 1960, when all long-distance expresses on the former Great Central route were withdrawn.

Present day

The South Yorkshireman in its current form started on 15 December 2008. The service was named as part of an East Midlands Trains competition to name two new crack express trains.
The southbound South Yorkshireman is the 07:46 departure from to. The northbound service leaves St Pancras at 17:55 for Sheffield.
The service is provided by an InterCity 125 HST train on the southbound service and a 7-car Class 222 Meridian on the northbound service. Both types are fixed-formation diesel sets.
The up train in 2010 has an end-to-end journey time of 2 hours 24 minutes. The down train takes 2 hours 9 minutes.

Stations served

The South Yorkshireman currently calls at :
The South Yorkshireman currently calls at :
East Midlands Railway operates three other named trains called: