GWR postcards
GWR postcards series 4-6
Series 4
This series of 25 gravure cards appeared in September 1905 and cost 1/- (one shilling) for the complete set. These were the first to carry the company crest composed of the two shields of London and Bristol under which was a scroll with the words Great Western Railway. The crest was printed at the top left of the address side of the cards, and G.W. "Series 4." was printed above it.

63 - Perivale Church.
Great Western Railway, Perivale Halt

64 - Clievden Woods.
By G.W.R. to Maidenhead

65 - Reading from Caversham.
Great Western Railway

66 - Christchurch, Oxford.
Great Western Railway

67 - Stratford-on-Avon.
Nearest Station, Great Western Railway, Stratford

68 - Worcester Cathedral.
By Great Western Railway

69 - Leamington.
Great Western Railway

70 - Horse Shoe Falls.
By Great Western Railway to Berwyn

71 - Valle Crucis Abbey.
By Great Western Railway to Berwyn

72 - Wells Cathedral.
By Great Western Railway to Berwyn

73 - Footbridge to Old Mill
By G.W.R. to Cynwydd.

74 - The Lower Avon, Bath.
Great Western Railway

75 - Oystermouth Bay.
Great Western Railway to Swansea

76 - Bristol Cathedral and College Green.
Great Western Railway

77 - Minehead (Somerset).
Great Western Railway

78 - The Beach, Teignmouth.
Great Western Railway

79 - Dawlish.
Great Western Railway

80 - "The Cornish Riviera Express", near Dawlish
Great Western Railway

81 - Paignton.
Great Western Railway

82 - Dartmouth and Kingswear Castles.
Nearest Station GWR Kingswear

83 - Fowey (Cornish Riviera.)
Great Western Railway

84 - Truro. Cathedral and River Fal.
Great Western Railway

85 Newlyn Harbour.
Nearest Station GWR Penzance

86 - Hugh Town, St. Marys, Scilly.
By Great Western Railway to Penzance

87 - Great Western Railway Express Engine. (County Class)

Series 4 postcard back
Series 5
This was the third and final series to be published in 1905. These were the first 'view' cards to be printed in colour and could be bought as a set of 25 for 1/-. With three exceptions, all cards carried the title on the front with the words 'Great Western Railway' below. Aberystwyth had the word 'via' added, whilst Glastonbury said instead By G.W.R. to Wells and similarly Lynmouth said By G.W.R. via Barnstaple. On the address side the cards bore the same 'two shields' device as that on Series 4 with G.W.R. Series 5. printed above.

A Fishpond, Burnham Beeches
Great Western Railway

Cockington Forge, Torquay
Great Western Railway

College Barges on the Thames, Oxford
Great Western Railway

Glastonbury Abbey
by G.W.R. to Wells

Lynmouth
By GWR via Barnstaple

Memorial Theatre, Stratford-on-Avon
Great Western Railway

Old Yarn Market, Conegar Tower, Dunster
Great Western Railway

On the Tryweryn, Bala
Great Western Railway

On the Wye, Chepstow
Great Western Railway

St. Michael's Mount, Marazion
Great Western Railway

Suspension Bridge, Clifton
Great Western Railway

The Abbey, Tintern
Great Western Railway

The Beach, Aberystwyth
via Great Western Railway

The Cathedral, Exeter
Great Western Railway

The "Cornishman" near Box
Great Western Railway

The Esplenade, Weymouth
Great Western Railway

The Harbour, Ilfracombe
Great Western Railway

The Hoe Promenade, Plymouth
Great Western Railway

The River And Church, Marlow
Great Western Railway

The Sands, Tenby
Great Western Railway

Torquay from Rock Walk
Great Western Railway

Torr Steps, Dulverton
Great Western Railway

Upper Falls, Dolgelley
Great Western Railway

Weston-Super-Mare
Great Western Railway

Windsor Castle
Great Western Railway

Series 5 postcard back

11 - Posted to Oxford, franked '9 Jan 1909'
Series 6
This series of 12 black and white photographic cards was published from July 1908 and was sold as a set for one shilling. With the sole exception of the sixth card, which shows a passenger express train at speed on the main line, it featured posed studies of a variety of railway locomotives of the GWR. The address side carried a new Company device which was formed from the joining of the two shields of London and Bristol with a scroll bearing the words 'Great Western Railway' beneath. SERIES 6 was printed below the scroll. The Great Western Railway Magazine from August 1908 carried a collage of all 12 cards in the series with the title Pictorial Postcards - G.W.R. EnginesGreat Western Railway Magazine
August 1908
Author's collection
Click or tap link for a larger image. The postcards are shown below listed in the sequence as they were illustrated in that collage.
The locomotive illustrated on the last card is one which has particular significance in the history of the Great Western Railway. Bulkeley was built at Swindon in 1880 and was named in honour of a long-standing Great Western Railway director, Captain Bulkeley of Windsor. On Friday 20th May 1892, Bulkeley hauled the last Great Western Railway broad gauge passenger train which was the 5 p.m. from Paddington to Plymouth.
An interesting local note is that three de Glenn 4-4-2 compound expansion engines nos. 102 La France (card 7), 103 President and 104 Alliance (card 10) were shedded at Oxford from 1913. They were purchased by the GWR from the Chemin de Fer du Nord for comparison trials circa 1903 and scrapped from Oxford in 1926, 1927 and 1928 respectively.

Atlantic Type. "Scot" Class, "Ivanhoe."

"Single" Wheel. "Achilles."

"Consolidation" Goods Engine. No. 2803

"County" Class. "County of Radnor."

Double-End Tank Engine No. 3120.

3:30. p.m. from Paddington. Engine No. 178 "Kirkland."

Glehn Compound. "La France."

"Star" Class. "Evening Star."

Glehn Compound Engine No. 104

"City" Class. "City of Bath."

Six Coupled Passenger Engine. "Viscount Churchill."

Old Broad Gauge "Single" Wheel "Bulkeley."

Series 6 postcard back

2 - Misprinted (and upside down) back

Series 6 packet

Series 6 packet inside

Series 6 packet back
As a footnote, the apparent misprinting on the back of one of the cards in our collection, as shown above, probably came about as a result of the way they were made. We understand that the cards were made up from three laminations glued together and then cut into the individual cards. The first was the picture, then a plain card stock, and finally the printed address side which in our example was misaligned and the wrong way up.