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World War II steam train Canadian Pacific back on the rails in England

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Canadian Deputy High Commissioner Robert Fry addresses guests as the 1941-built Canadian Pacific steam locomotive returns to service at Alresford Station in Hampshire, UK. /Jaimi Joy/Reuters
Canadian Deputy High Commissioner Robert Fry addresses guests as the 1941-built Canadian Pacific steam locomotive returns to service at Alresford Station in Hampshire, UK. /Jaimi Joy/Reuters

Canadian Deputy High Commissioner Robert Fry addresses guests as the 1941-built Canadian Pacific steam locomotive returns to service at Alresford Station in Hampshire, UK. /Jaimi Joy/Reuters

The Canadian Pacific, a 1940s steam train that took soldiers and supplies to England's south coast during World War II, has returned to service, taking on board volunteers who spent 14 years reconditioning it and relatives of those who built it.

Billowing smoke from its chimney, the Canadian Pacific set off from the market town of Alresford, in southeast England, for an inaugural journey to nearby Alton marking the completion of a restoration project that began in 2011.

One of the volunteers for the project, 78-year-old retiree Stephen Wilson, said he believed his late mother could have been one of the many women involved in building the train in 1941, while men were away fighting.

"It's the culmination of a lot of hard work by a lot of people and seeing it... (is) just brilliant," he said with a big smile as he stood next to the green locomotive.

The train was named after the Canadian Pacific shipping lines that crossed the Atlantic during the war to deliver military and civilian supplies to Britain. Many such vessels were destroyed or damaged by the Nazis.

The loco has been restored by volunteers over the past 14 years. /Jaimi Joy/Reuters
The loco has been restored by volunteers over the past 14 years. /Jaimi Joy/Reuters

The loco has been restored by volunteers over the past 14 years. /Jaimi Joy/Reuters

Sitting with her family in one of the train's dining carriages, Blanche Chaisty, 68, said she was proud to be on board knowing that both her mother and grandmother helped build it.

"It's a bit surreal," Chaisty said. "I don't quite know how to feel... it's wonderful."

After World War II, the train was used for regular passenger services to and from the coast, often for holidaymakers. It was last taken out of service in 2008 and is now due to be revived for tourist trips on the heritage Watercress Line.

Canada's deputy high commissioner in the UK, Robert Fry, was among those who participated in the inaugural trip.

"The railway for us is very symbolic of a united Canada at a time when we are talking a lot about our country and protecting our sovereignty," he said, in a reference to U.S. President Donald Trump's recent threats to annex Canada.

Source(s): Reuters
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