Train saved from the scrap heap is fully restored

Alice Cunningham
BBC News, East of England
Luke Deal
BBC News, East of England
Reporting fromEast Anglian Railway Museum
Luke Deal/BBC A man poses in front of the Clacton Express train. He has one hand on the collar of his blue shirt. The train's front is painted yellow and has three windows. The side of the train is a mixture of grey, red, white and blue, and windows are lined up along its side.Luke Deal/BBC
Brad Wright and a team of volunteers have finished the restoration of the Clacton Express

The restoration of a historic electric train has been completed, with members of the public able to have a look inside for the first time.

Brad Wright, 22, a railway enthusiast from Needham Market, Suffolk, bought the British Railways Class 309, also known as the Clacton Express, in March 2022.

He had been restoring it along with a team of volunteers at the East Anglian Railway Museum in Wakes Colne, near Colchester.

Mr Wright said he was proud to have finished the work and have it on show during the Essex Electrics Exhibition at the museum on Saturday.

"It was great to get involved to save it, but to then donate it to the museum to ensure that it survives well beyond me... was my main goal – to make sure it was safe and preserved for future generations to remember," he explained.

"I couldn't be prouder."

He added he had felt "an immense amount of satisfaction" in completing the restoration.

Luke Deal/BBC A man inside the Clacton Express train. He is smiling. He is wearing brown glasses and a white shirt with blue and red vertical stripes on it. An orange curtain tied back next to a window is next him.Luke Deal/BBC
Brad Wright said he was looking forward to the public being able to have a look inside the train for the first time

Mr Wright saved the train from scrap in Sussex in 2022 and set up the Clacton Express Preservation Group – a non-profit group that offers support and volunteers to restoration projects.

The train was a pioneer of its time and operated on the Great Eastern Main Line from London Liverpool Street to Colchester, Clacton and Walton-on-the-Naze from the 1960s.

It also ran to Harwich, Ipswich and Norwich from the 1980s before it was retired in the 1990s.

Luke Deal/BBC The passenger seats on the Clacton Express. There are three seats with headrests and armrests. They have brown, white, black, red and cream stripes on them.Luke Deal/BBC
The interior work was the last part of the project

The Essex Electrics Exhibition celebrates the 40th anniversary of the lines being electrified to Ipswich as well as the 40th anniversary of the refurbishment of the Clacton Express trains.

"They went through a big change in the middle of their lives," Mr Wright said.

"That's how it's preserved now – just as it would have rolled out of the factory 40 years ago after that rebuild."

Luke Deal/BBC A laminated print-out of two pictures of the Clacton Express, one above the other, from when it was in service. Luke Deal/BBC
The public can learn about the Clacton Express and other electric trains during the exhibition on 12 April

The team have given the train a complete restoration both inside and outside.

Members of the public can look inside and enjoy other guided talks and demonstrations during the event.

Luke Deal/BBC The exterior of the Clacton Express train on a sunny day. The train's front is painted yellow and has three windows. The side of the train has been painted a mixture of grey, red, white and blue, and windows are lined up along its side.Luke Deal/BBC
The train was moved outside for the first time in February

"It's always a boyhood dream when you're an enthusiast of 'Oh, wouldn't it be nice to have a part in saving a train from scrap?'" Mr Wright said.

"It really wasn't looking good for this unit.

"A lot of people wrote it off [and said] 'Just give up, put it to scrap', but to not let that happen and to see that through [has] been a lot of work – very tiring but very, very, immensely, satisfying."

Luke Deal/BBC The driver's cab in the restored Clacton Express. There are several instruments and dials. A window is directly in front of the driver's seat and there is one to the left hand side.Luke Deal/BBC
The Clacton Express operated on the Great Eastern Main Line from the 1960s to the 1990s and was one of the first to run at 100mph (160km/h)

Follow Suffolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.