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75th anniversary of VE Day - Railway catering in a World War
As at 6th January 2025 11:02 GMT
 
75th anniversary of VE Day - Railway catering in a World War
Posted by CyclingSid at 07:38, 8th May 2020
 
Fof the gastronomes of the forum.

In 1916 restaurant cars were removed and GER Hotels Department produced cardboard food-boxes. A luncheon box for 1s 6d contained two ham or tongue sandwiches, one mutton pie, one fruit tartlet, cheese, roll and biscuits and one apple.
I think this is probably good value at today's prices; £6.13, although you would probably need an All Line Rover to find a mutton pie nowadays.

At the end of the war with Germany, restaurant car services were reinstated by 1 October in a limited way. Yet by New Year's Eve 1945 the GWR managed to put roast pheasant, Brussels sprouts, parsnips julienne and potatoes on its menus, preceded by cream of vegetables and concluded with Christmas pudding and ice cream, price 3/6 plus service which is probably a snip at £7.39 in today's prices excluding service.

From Britain's Railways in Wartime by Anthony Lambert.

Re: 75th anniversary of VE Day - Railway catering in a World War
Posted by eightonedee at 08:01, 8th May 2020
 
Sid

If 1/6 is £6.13, I reckon 3/6 is £14.40.
Still not bad for a three course meal, mind.

Re: 75th anniversary of VE Day - Railway catering in a World War
Posted by CyclingSid at 08:45, 8th May 2020
 
I just used an on-line inflation calculator to work out the values. Don't have a mental model of values, but there was 30 years difference and the Great Depression in between.

Re: 75th anniversary of VE Day - Railway catering in a World War
Posted by TaplowGreen at 09:05, 8th May 2020
 
Fof the gastronomes of the forum.

In 1916 restaurant cars were removed and GER Hotels Department produced cardboard food-boxes. A luncheon box for 1s 6d contained two ham or tongue sandwiches, one mutton pie, one fruit tartlet, cheese, roll and biscuits and one apple.
I think this is probably good value at today's prices; £6.13, although you would probably need an All Line Rover to find a mutton pie nowadays.

At the end of the war with Germany, restaurant car services were reinstated by 1 October in a limited way. Yet by New Year's Eve 1945 the GWR managed to put roast pheasant, Brussels sprouts, parsnips julienne and potatoes on its menus, preceded by cream of vegetables and concluded with Christmas pudding and ice cream, price 3/6 plus service which is probably a snip at £7.39 in today's prices excluding service.

From Britain's Railways in Wartime by Anthony Lambert.

What do you think Broadgage? Better value than the Pullman! (…..but was Port available?) 

Re: 75th anniversary of VE Day - Railway catering in a World War
Posted by didcotdean at 14:35, 8th May 2020
 
I just used an on-line inflation calculator to work out the values. Don't have a mental model of values, but there was 30 years difference and the Great Depression in between.
Constant inflation of a high to moderate level is a post WWII phenomena. Before that wars were the main cause of inflation and in between prices tended to be stable or fall during depressions - or in the 19th century just bounce around. This graph shows the history back to 1750 - prices around the start of the Napoleonic Wars were pretty much the same as those before WWI over 100 years later.

Re: 75th anniversary of VE Day - Railway catering in a World War
Posted by broadgage at 21:51, 10th January 2021
 
Fof the gastronomes of the forum.

In 1916 restaurant cars were removed and GER Hotels Department produced cardboard food-boxes. A luncheon box for 1s 6d contained two ham or tongue sandwiches, one mutton pie, one fruit tartlet, cheese, roll and biscuits and one apple.
I think this is probably good value at today's prices; £6.13, although you would probably need an All Line Rover to find a mutton pie nowadays.

At the end of the war with Germany, restaurant car services were reinstated by 1 October in a limited way. Yet by New Year's Eve 1945 the GWR managed to put roast pheasant, Brussels sprouts, parsnips julienne and potatoes on its menus, preceded by cream of vegetables and concluded with Christmas pudding and ice cream, price 3/6 plus service which is probably a snip at £7.39 in today's prices excluding service.

From Britain's Railways in Wartime by Anthony Lambert.

What do you think Broadgage? Better value than the Pullman! (…..but was Port available?) 

The good old days, sounds very good value even allowing for inflation. I presume that port was available.

 
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