It may seem strange to describe the quiet suburban town of Feltham as a border point, but that is precisely what it was since it was the location, only six miles in from the boundary with the London Midland, through which impressive tonnages of goods from the other regions – the manufacturing north, the coal-producing Midlands, and East Anglia – was accepted, remarshalled and forwarded on to the dozens of small dormitory towns which formed the huge south-western quarter of Greater London.
Estimating the population of this area at about three million people, this equates to 1.2 million households, shops and business premises, each of which demanded a thousand and one commodities, of which the most regular was probably coal, and indeed up to about 60 years ago a coal…