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🧳 The 1950s Seaside Special: Travelling with a 1957 Holiday Guide (Part 1)

Date: June 26th
Category: Vintage Travel | Seaside History | Antique Guidebook Series


Put on your wide-brimmed hat, pack your thermos, and don’t forget your swimsuit — we’re off on a railway holiday adventure straight from 1957, following the notes, nudges and not-so-subtle snobbery of an original British Railways Holiday Guide.

For this series, The Time Traveller’s Guild is travelling with an actual 1957 railway holiday guide in hand — revisiting its listed seaside resorts, recommended lodgings, and charmingly outdated advice. Can you still follow its path today? What’s changed? What’s vanished? And what lives on?


📘 The Guide: British Railways Holiday Guide – South & South East England (1957)

A compact, no-nonsense travel manual filled with:

  • Resort descriptions (“bracing air,” “safe sands,” “modest amusements”)
  • Accommodation listings
  • Recreational suggestions (tennis, bathing, reading rooms)
  • And of course: how to get there by train

Our first destination?


🚂 Destination #1: Bognor Regis, West Sussex

📍 As described in 1957:

“A family resort of sound character, favoured by His Majesty King George V and known for its health-giving climate and well-regarded bathing machines.”

Let’s see how it stacks up in 2025…


🏖️ Then vs. Now

Then (1957):

  • Sandy beach with rows of deckchairs
  • Promenade brass bands and donkey rides
  • Beach huts for hire by the day or hour
  • Direct trains from London Victoria and Waterloo

Now (2025):

  • Beach still sandy — tick ✅
  • No more bathing machines (unsurprisingly)
  • The promenade is thriving with ice cream stands and live music
  • Still reachable by train — about 1hr 45 from London Victoria

Verdict: Surprisingly faithful to the guide! Even the pier café serves a proper pot of tea.


🧳 Lodging, 1957-style

“Boarding houses and private rooms are numerous. Prices moderate. Booking essential during Wakes Weeks.”

We spotted several old boarding houses still running — now boutique B&Bs. One proudly displays its original “Full up for Festival Week” chalkboard sign in the hallway.


🚴 Top Tip from the 1957 Guide

“Cycling from Bognor to Littlehampton is encouraged for the agile and sun-seeking.”

We followed the route. It’s now a shared coastal cycle path — complete with sea views and a pub at the halfway mark.


📚 What We Brought from the Book

  • A fold-out 1950s map of rail-connected resorts
  • A list of what to pack (featuring “shoe polish” and “novels of an uplifting nature”)
  • Suggested reading: Just William at the Seaside or A Book of Seaside Verse

📖 “Reading at the seaside is the height of cultivated repose.” – The 1957 Guide (possibly quoting someone important, but it doesn’t say who)


📚 Want to Know More?


💬 Ever Travelled by Guidebook? Share Your Story: #1957SeasideSpecial

Do you have an old guidebook from your family? A favourite seaside line you still take?
Tag @TimeTravellersGuild with #1957SeasideSpecial — we’ll feature the best then-vs-now comparisons and vintage holiday memories in next week’s Seaside Showcase.

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