Five items of Railway Queen's regalia

Railway Queen's regalia

Creative Commons LicenseThis image is released under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 Licence

Buy this image as a print 

Buy

License this image for commercial use at Science and Society Picture Library

License

Railway Queen's regalia
Science Museum Group
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum

Five items of Railway Queen's regalia

Details

Category:
Railway Uniform & Costume
Object Number:
1990-7590
type:
items
credit:
Trustees of the Railway Queen Regalia

Parts

Velvet Railway Queen gown, blue and gold

Velvet Railway Queen gown, blue and gold

Velvet gown, Railway Queen's blue velvet gown with gold trim.


This luxuriously trimmed gown formed part of the Railway Queen's regalia and was accompanied by a tiara and chain of office, examples of which are also in the Science Museum Group's Collection.

The role of the Railway Queen had come into being with the centenary celebrations of the Stockton & Darlington Railway, taking place at the Railway Carnival at Belle Vue, Manchester. The Carnival was open to all railway workers and their families and the main attraction was the crowning of the Railway Queen.

This competition was open to all teenage daughters of railway workers, who submitted a photograph of themselves from which pool a winner was picked; she would become that year’s Railway Queen. The first Railway Queen was Helena (Ella) Wotton, the daughter of a Great Western Railway Employee.

The role of the Railway Queen was to act as a representative of the railway industry and to foster goodwill between companies and Trade Unions. Tensions had been high due to a series of strikes which had been called in recent years and the Railway Carnival was seen as a way to engage railway workers and their families and promote a positive relationship between the railway companies and their employees. The Railway Queen ceremony survived until the 1970s, by which time society and transport in the UK had changed considerably and attendance at the Railway Carnival was dwindling.

In hindsight it was an extraordinary task to lay upon the shoulders of a teenage girl. On the one hand intended to be a ceremonial figurehead aesthetically and virtuously appealing, and on the other a public relations maestro capable of bringing together disparate voices both nationally and internationally. Indeed, one Railway Queen, Audrey Mossom (‘crowned’ 1935) visited the USSR as part of her duties and had an audience with Josef Stalin.

Measurements:
overall: 24 kg
Object Number:
1990-7590 Pt1
type:
robes
The International Chain for Railway Queens

The International Chain for Railway Queens

Chain of Office, 9ct gold, "The International Chain", worn by Railway Queens, each link shaped like a screw coupling donated by the country visited by the Railway Queen.

Measurements:
overall: 420 mm x 110 mm
Materials:
gold (metal) and enamel
Object Number:
1990-7590 Pt2
type:
chain of office
British Railways chain of office presented 1957

British Railways chain of office presented 1957

Chain of Office, silver gilt, "British Railways Chain", worn by Britain's Railway Queens, depicts emblem of British Railways, presented by British Transport Commission in 1957. Made by Deakin & Francis, Birmingham, 1956. Overall: 376 mm x 48 mm.

Measurements:
overall: 376 mm 48 mm,
Materials:
silver gilt and enamel
Object Number:
1990-7590 Pt3
type:
chain of office
Gold bar presented to Dorothy Northwood, Railway Queen, 1944

Gold bar presented to Dorothy Northwood, Railway Queen, 1944

Gold bar dated 1944, in presentation box, presented by Czechoslovakia to Railway Queen Dorothy Northwood, G.W.R. Engraved. Bar: 13 mm x 60 mm x 6 mm; box: 22 mm x 216 mm x 43 mm.

Materials:
gold (metal) , leatherette , wood (unidentified) , textile and velvet
Object Number:
1990-7590 Pt5
type:
gold bar