(Photo: Trowbridge Estate)
As everyone knows, the A60 and A62 trains were made by Cravens of Sheffield in the early 1960s and put to work on the Metropolitan Line. And no doubt they looked very modern and impressive as they trundled Aelwyn from Rickmansworth or Croxley to his office near Liverpool Street every working morning, from 1964 to 1974. These marvels of technology boasted luggage racks and umbrella hooks.
Aelwyn had fought with the RAF in Burma during World War Two, and perhaps he enjoyed, in contrast, the serenity of his commuting routine. He worked as an actuary, which supported a comfortable lifestyle for his wife and children.
But his younger son – filled with ambition in his teenage years – felt that, pleasant though his father’s life no doubt was, there was surely more to life than this? A nice house in Chorleywood, two children and a dog? Was that it? No, somehow, he was going to conquer the world.
Later the son began his career in the City, and spent his working life commuting to Liverpool Street and Moorgate. He met a girl, fell in love and married. They lived in London, but soon after their first daughter was born, they decided to move to a place in the countryside, with a bigger garden and fresher air. After viewing lovely houses in unsuitable locations, and perfect locations where no houses were for sale, the first place they found which ticked both boxes happened to be in Chorleywood.
So they moved there, and soon after, their second daughter was born. Six years later, they got a dog.

And the son continued with his daily commute to the City, and one day noticed the plaque on the carriage floor by the doors: Cravens, Sheffield, 1962.
And he thought: a nice house in Chorleywood, two children and a dog. Perhaps it wasn’t so bad after all. And he didn’t even have to fight the Japanese in Burma. Contentment, the slayer of ambition, had crept in. His career just stayed in the first comfortable rut it came to.
In 2012 the venerable A60s and A62s were retired after fifty years of service, and he realised he was no longer enjoying work quite so much. Perhaps it was time to call it a day. Conquering the world would have to wait.

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