Description
These machines built the world. They don't make them anymore. I spent the day at the High Weald Steam Working Weekend 2026 to capture an incredible spectacle: the Bluebell Railway's 1877 "Sharpthorn" locomotive being hauled uphill by two vintage road steam engines.
This is a 10-minute immersion into the world of Victorian engineering. No music and narration so you can hear the machines exactly as they sounded on the day. Whether it's the heavy thrum of the traction engines or the mechanical clatter , this is industrial ASMR in its purest form.
"Sharpthorn" (Manning Wardle No. 641) isn't just another engine; she is a pioneer. Built in 1877, she was one of the four locomotives specifically employed to construct the Lewes and East Grinstead Railway-the very line that now forms the Bluebell Railway. She is quite literally the engine that helped build the ground we are standing on today. She was named after the village of Sharpthorne, near East Grinstead, though note the spelling difference! She was originally named 'Solomon' when she was brand new in 1877.
While many Victorian engines were scrapped after their construction work finished, Sharpthorn enjoyed a second life. Following her railway-building years, she was purchased by Samuel Williams & Sons in 1888 and spent the next 70 years shunting coal wagons at Dagenham Docks. From building railways in the 1870s to moving coal in the 1950s, she represents nearly a century of continuous industrial service.
If you enjoy the sound of vintage machinery, subscribe for more cinematic, no-music industrial studies.