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Great Southern and Western Railway

The Great Southern and Western Railway (GS&WR) was an Irish gauge (1,600 mm (5 ft 3 in)) railway company in Ireland from 1844[2] until 1924.[3] The GS&WR grew by building lines and making a series of takeovers, until in the late 19th and early 20th centuries it was the largest of Ireland's "Big Four" railway networks. At its peak the GS&WR had an 1,100-mile (1,800 km) network, of which 240 miles (390 km) were double track.[4]

Great Southern and Western Railway
1920 map of the railway
Overview
Dates of operation1844–31 December 1924
SuccessorGreat Southern Railways
Technical
Track gauge1,600 mm (5 ft 3 in)
Length1,148 miles 2 chains (1,847.6 km) (1919)[1]
Track length1,554 miles 58 chains (2,502.1 km) (1919)[1]
GSWR Ireland route map, circa 1902
GSWR British Isles connections map, circa 1902

The core of the GS&WR was the Dublin KingsbridgeCork main line; Ireland's "Premier Line", and still one of her most important main line railways. The company's headquarters were at Kingsbridge station. At its greatest extent the GS&WR included, in addition to the Dublin – Cork main line, the Dublin – Waterford and Mallow – Waterford lines and numerous branch lines.

Origins edit

There had been earlier attempts to set up main line railways to the south of Ireland but the 1840s efforts of Peter Purcell, a wealthy landowner and mail coach operator, and his associates were ultimately to prove successful with the implementation of a bill passed on 6 August 1844 for the GS&WR. Purcell was actively assisted by engineer John Benjamin MacNeill who had done surveys for the London and Birmingham Railway and had connections in London. The GS&WR's vision to provide a single railway for most of the south of Ireland found favour with United Kingdom Prime Minister Robert Peel as having likely more profitably for wealthy investors and because a single company would be easier to control; these factors likely easing the passing of relevant legislation.[5]

Network edit

Dublin – Cork Main Line edit

William Dargan, Ireland's foremost railway contractor, built much of the GS&WR's main line and a number of its other routes.

The directors chose to begin by construction of the 32.5 mi (52.3 km) stretch of the Dublin – Cork main line as far as Cherryville Junction just west of Kildare and the 23.5 mi (37.8 km) branch to Carlow with contracts shared between McCormack and Dargan. Work began in January 1845 with services commencing on 4 August 1846.[6] Trains were scheduled to take about 2hr 35min for the 56 mi (90 km) stretch to Carlow and coach connections were arranged to Kilkenny, Clonmel, Waterford and the evening mail coach for Cork.[7]

In July 1848 the main line reached Limerick Junction, where it met the Waterford and Limerick Railway and thus linked Dublin and Limerick by rail.[8]

In October 1849 the main line reached the outskirts of Cork, where the GS&WR opened a temporary terminus at Blackpool.[8] The final 1-mile (1.6 km) of line from Blackpool to the centre of Cork includes a 1,355-yard (1,239 m) tunnel and was not completed for another six years.[9] Services through the tunnel began in December 1855, running to and from a second temporary terminus beside the River Lee.[9] Finally the present Cork terminus in Glanmire Road opened in July 1856.[9]

Expansion and competition edit

 
Corridor Train of the GS & WR.

The Irish South Eastern Railway opened between the GS&WR station at Carlow and Bagenalstown in 1848 and reached Lavistown in 1850.[10] From the outset the ISE was worked by the GS&WR.[10] The Waterford and Kilkenny Railway had already reached Lavistown, and thus completion of the ISE enabled GS&WR services to reach Kilkenny.[10] The W&KR reached Waterford in September 1854[11] but its relations with the GS&WR were poor,[12] which impeded traffic between Dublin and Waterford by this route. In 1877 the W&KR took over the Central Ireland Railway and became the Waterford and Central Ireland Railway.[13] The GS&WR took over the W&CIR in 1900,[14] thus belatedly bringing the rail route between Dublin and Waterford under the control and operation of a single company.

 
The Great Southern Railway Terminus in Killarney, County Kerry. Circa 1890

The GS&WR competed with the Midland Great Western Railway for many years. Both ran services between Dublin and the west of Ireland: the GS&WR running southwest to Limerick, Cork and Waterford, and the MGWR running west to Galway, Westport, Ballina, and Sligo. The GS&WR also had designs on rail traffic to the west of Ireland. In 1859 the GS&WR opened a branch line from the Dublin – Cork main line to Athlone where it connected with the MGWR's Dublin – Galway main line.[15] In the latter half of the 20th century Córas Iompair Éireann made this GS&WR branch part of its Dublin – Galway main line.

Waterford, Limerick and Western Railway edit

In 1901 the GS&WR bought the Waterford, Limerick and Western Railway,[16] which gave it both the Waterford – Limerick – Athenry – Claremorris – Collooney cross-country route and the North Kerry line and branches. The WLWR, recently dubbed the Western Rail Corridor, crossed MGWR territory. It complemented the radial MGWR lines from Dublin, enabling Limerick – Galway and Galway – Sligo traffic, and linked intermediate destinations in the west of Ireland. For a very short time[when?] the MGWR exercised running powers over the Athenry – Limerick section of this route.

North Wall extension edit

 
GS&WR North Wall extension depicted on 1912 map

The line was opened in 1877 to resolve limitations with the GS&WR neither having rail access convenient to the cattle market at Cabra nor to the docks at North Wall where there was a requirement for goods, cattle and passenger services. The London and North Western Railway (LNWR) was supportive of the venture as was the rival Midland Great Western Railway (MGWR) who were to receive tolls for part of the route.[17]

The branch opened on 2 September 1877 diverging from the main GS&WR line at Islandbridge Junction before tunneling under Phoenix Park to Cabra where cattle sidings and pens were constructed. After passing under the MGWR line to Broadstone and the MGWR's Liffey Branch[a] to North Wall the route curved back to join the MGWR at Glasnevin Junction. Joint running rights were obtained over the MGWR route until Church Road junction in the North Wall complex, after which the route diverged to the GS&WR's new cattle pens and sidings. Link spurs were available at Newcomen Bridge to Amiens Street station and to the LNWR station at North Wall for passenger ships to Great Britain.[17][18]

Drumcondra link line edit

1891 had seen the connection to the Dublin, Wicklow and Wexford Railway (DW&WR) following the opening of the Dublin loop line from Westland Row with additional traffic to the Liffey branch line. The GS&WR eventually moved on an opportunity to open an alternative route line from at what was to be known as Drumcondra junction which diverged just before the junction to the MGWR at Glasnevin. The route ran to the north of Croke Park then rejoined the MGWR just before Church Road junction in the North wall complex allowing the same access at North Wall for GS&WR services. Opening on 1 April 1901 it avoided the MGWR's Liffey branch tolls. A spur from the Drumcondra link line to the DW&WR at Amiens Street was finally realised on 1 December 1906.[19][b]

GS&WR hotels edit

In an effort to encourage tourism the Killarney Junction Railway, which was operated by the GS&WR, opened a hotel next to Killarney station. This was in 1854, which made it the first railway-owned hotel in Ireland[20] and one of the first of its kind in the World.[citation needed] In the following years the GS&WR established further hotels in County Kerry at Caragh Lake, Kenmare, Parknasilla (about 3/4 of a mile to the southeast of Sneem) and Waterville.[21] The company also owned small commercial hotels at Limerick Junction and near its stations in Dublin and Cork.[21]

In 1925 the hotels became part of Great Southern Hotels, a subsidiary of Great Southern Railways. The Great Southern Hotels Group was dissolved in 2006, when its hotels were sold off separately to private investors.

GS&WR strike edit

In September 1911 the workers of the Great Southern and Western Railway went on strike nationally after two checkers at Kingsbridge goods station in Dublin were suspended for refusing to handle timber that had been delivered by "blackleg" lorry drivers during a strike by the timber merchant's workers.[22] The British Army was brought in to guard tracks and trains, and Protestant strike-breakers from elsewhere in Ireland to do the work of the strikers. The strike was savagely broken in two months, with the railway's proprietor, William Goulding, sacking 10% of the workers for their participation in the strike. Goulding told his associates, "Now that we have the men defeated, we'll never have any more trouble."

People edit

Incidents edit

Lombardstown train crash edit

 
Commemorative plaque in Lombardstown village

A year after the 1911 strike, on 5 August 1912 at 8.50pm, an excursion train from Killarney crashed in Lombardstown, near Mallow in Cork. The driver had been on duty from 3.50am. Of the 200 passengers on board, 96 were seriously injured, one of whom later died as a result.[26]

Kiltimagh train crash edit

On 19 December 1916, in foggy conditions, the driver of a ballast train failed to see a red signal at Kiltimagh, County Mayo. The train, carrying many track workers, crashed into an empty cattle train, killing six people.[27][28]

Aftermath edit

Great Southern Railways edit

An Act passed by the Dáil Éireann in 1924 merged the GS&WR with the Midland Great Western Railway, the Cork, Bandon and South Coast Railway and most other railways wholly within the Irish Free State to form the Great Southern Railway.[3] In January 1925 the GSR merged with the Dublin and South Eastern Railway to form the Great Southern Railways.[3] Cross-border railways were excluded from the mergers.

Córas Iompair Éireann edit

In 1945 further amalgamation with the Grand Canal Company and the Dublin United Tramway Company created Córas Iompair Éireann ("Irish State Transport Company"). CIÉ was nationalised in 1950, but was divided into separate rail and road companies in 1987. Since then, the railways have been operated by Iarnród Éireann ("Irish Rail").

GS&WR routes today edit

GS&WR routes remain some of the most heavily used in Ireland, linking Dublin with Limerick, Cork, and Waterford. The coats of arms of these cities still adorn the facade of Heuston Station.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ It is called the Liffey branch because it diverged from the main line at Liffey Junction; it actually runs mostly alongside the Royal Canal and passes just to the south of Croke Park stadium.
  2. ^ Glasnevin and Drumcondra junctions were remodelled in the 1930s to allow trains from the former MGWR lines access to Amien Street and Westland Row via the Drumcondra link line, while the line from Islandbridge lost access to the Liffey Branch.

References edit

  1. ^ a b The Railway Year Book for 1920. London: The Railway Publishing Company Limited. 1920. p. 147.
  2. ^ Murray & McNeill (1976), p. 15.
  3. ^ a b c Murray & McNeill (1976), p. 106.
  4. ^ Murray & McNeill (1976), p. 11.
  5. ^ Murray & McNeill (1976), pp. 14–15.
  6. ^ Murray & McNeill (1976), pp. 15–16, 186.
  7. ^ Murray & McNeill (1976), pp. 17.
  8. ^ a b Murray & McNeill (1976), p. 18.
  9. ^ a b c Murray & McNeill (1976), p. 178.
  10. ^ a b c Murray & McNeill (1976), p. 21.
  11. ^ Murray & McNeill (1976), p. 64.
  12. ^ Murray & McNeill (1976), pp. 33, 62–63.
  13. ^ Murray & McNeill (1976), p. 62.
  14. ^ Murray & McNeill (1976), p. 68.
  15. ^ Murray & McNeill (1976), p. 24.
  16. ^ Murray & McNeill (1976), p. 107.
  17. ^ a b Murray & McNeill (1976), pp. 48–51.
  18. ^ Shepherd (1994), pp. 36–41.
  19. ^ Shepherd (1994), pp. 37, 107.
  20. ^ Murray & McNeill (1976), p. 26.
  21. ^ a b Murray & McNeill (1976), p. 182.
  22. ^ "The Great Southern Railway Strike of 1911". theirishstory.com. 9 March 2011. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
  23. ^ Murray & McNeill (1976), pp. 15, 196.
  24. ^ Murray & McNeill (1976), p. 196.
  25. ^ Murray & McNeill (1976), p. 197.
  26. ^ "Accident Returns: Extract for Accident at Lombardstown on 5th August 1912 :: The Railways Archive". www.railwaysarchive.co.uk.
  27. ^ Comer, Michael. "The Kiltimagh Railway Disaster of 1916". West On Track. Retrieved 6 January 2023.
  28. ^ "Accident at Kiltimagh on 19th December 1916" (PDF). Railways Archive. Retrieved 6 January 2023.

Sources and further reading edit

  • Ahrons, E. L. (1954). L. L. Asher (ed.). Locomotive and train working in the latter part of the nineteenth century. Vol. six. W Heffer & Sons Ltd.
  • Murray, K.A.; McNeill, D.B. (1976). Great Southern & Western Railway. Dublin: Irish Railway Record Society. ISBN 0-904078-05-1.
  • O'Mahony, John; Praeger, R. Lloyd (1902). The Sunny Side of Ireland – how to see it by The Great Southern and Western Railway. Dublin: Alex Thom & Co.
  • Shepherd, Ernie (1994). The Midland Great Western Railway of Ireland. Leicester, England: Midland Publishing Limited. ISBN 1-85780-008-7.

great, southern, western, railway, irish, gauge, railway, company, ireland, from, 1844, until, 1924, grew, building, lines, making, series, takeovers, until, late, 19th, early, 20th, centuries, largest, ireland, four, railway, networks, peak, mile, network, wh. The Great Southern and Western Railway GS amp WR was an Irish gauge 1 600 mm 5 ft 3 in railway company in Ireland from 1844 2 until 1924 3 The GS amp WR grew by building lines and making a series of takeovers until in the late 19th and early 20th centuries it was the largest of Ireland s Big Four railway networks At its peak the GS amp WR had an 1 100 mile 1 800 km network of which 240 miles 390 km were double track 4 Great Southern and Western Railway1920 map of the railwayOverviewDates of operation1844 31 December 1924SuccessorGreat Southern RailwaysTechnicalTrack gauge1 600 mm 5 ft 3 in Length1 148 miles 2 chains 1 847 6 km 1919 1 Track length1 554 miles 58 chains 2 502 1 km 1919 1 GSWR Ireland route map circa 1902GSWR British Isles connections map circa 1902The core of the GS amp WR was the Dublin Kingsbridge Cork main line Ireland s Premier Line and still one of her most important main line railways The company s headquarters were at Kingsbridge station At its greatest extent the GS amp WR included in addition to the Dublin Cork main line the Dublin Waterford and Mallow Waterford lines and numerous branch lines Contents 1 Origins 2 Network 2 1 Dublin Cork Main Line 2 2 Expansion and competition 2 3 Waterford Limerick and Western Railway 2 4 North Wall extension 2 4 1 Drumcondra link line 3 GS amp WR hotels 4 GS amp WR strike 5 People 6 Incidents 6 1 Lombardstown train crash 6 2 Kiltimagh train crash 7 Aftermath 7 1 Great Southern Railways 7 2 Coras Iompair Eireann 7 3 GS amp WR routes today 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Sources and further readingOrigins editThere had been earlier attempts to set up main line railways to the south of Ireland but the 1840s efforts of Peter Purcell a wealthy landowner and mail coach operator and his associates were ultimately to prove successful with the implementation of a bill passed on 6 August 1844 for the GS amp WR Purcell was actively assisted by engineer John Benjamin MacNeill who had done surveys for the London and Birmingham Railway and had connections in London The GS amp WR s vision to provide a single railway for most of the south of Ireland found favour with United Kingdom Prime Minister Robert Peel as having likely more profitably for wealthy investors and because a single company would be easier to control these factors likely easing the passing of relevant legislation 5 Network editDublin Cork Main Line edit William Dargan Ireland s foremost railway contractor built much of the GS amp WR s main line and a number of its other routes The directors chose to begin by construction of the 32 5 mi 52 3 km stretch of the Dublin Cork main line as far as Cherryville Junction just west of Kildare and the 23 5 mi 37 8 km branch to Carlow with contracts shared between McCormack and Dargan Work began in January 1845 with services commencing on 4 August 1846 6 Trains were scheduled to take about 2hr 35min for the 56 mi 90 km stretch to Carlow and coach connections were arranged to Kilkenny Clonmel Waterford and the evening mail coach for Cork 7 In July 1848 the main line reached Limerick Junction where it met the Waterford and Limerick Railway and thus linked Dublin and Limerick by rail 8 In October 1849 the main line reached the outskirts of Cork where the GS amp WR opened a temporary terminus at Blackpool 8 The final 1 mile 1 6 km of line from Blackpool to the centre of Cork includes a 1 355 yard 1 239 m tunnel and was not completed for another six years 9 Services through the tunnel began in December 1855 running to and from a second temporary terminus beside the River Lee 9 Finally the present Cork terminus in Glanmire Road opened in July 1856 9 Expansion and competition edit nbsp Corridor Train of the GS amp WR The Irish South Eastern Railway opened between the GS amp WR station at Carlow and Bagenalstown in 1848 and reached Lavistown in 1850 10 From the outset the ISE was worked by the GS amp WR 10 The Waterford and Kilkenny Railway had already reached Lavistown and thus completion of the ISE enabled GS amp WR services to reach Kilkenny 10 The W amp KR reached Waterford in September 1854 11 but its relations with the GS amp WR were poor 12 which impeded traffic between Dublin and Waterford by this route In 1877 the W amp KR took over the Central Ireland Railway and became the Waterford and Central Ireland Railway 13 The GS amp WR took over the W amp CIR in 1900 14 thus belatedly bringing the rail route between Dublin and Waterford under the control and operation of a single company nbsp The Great Southern Railway Terminus in Killarney County Kerry Circa 1890The GS amp WR competed with the Midland Great Western Railway for many years Both ran services between Dublin and the west of Ireland the GS amp WR running southwest to Limerick Cork and Waterford and the MGWR running west to Galway Westport Ballina and Sligo The GS amp WR also had designs on rail traffic to the west of Ireland In 1859 the GS amp WR opened a branch line from the Dublin Cork main line to Athlone where it connected with the MGWR s Dublin Galway main line 15 In the latter half of the 20th century Coras Iompair Eireann made this GS amp WR branch part of its Dublin Galway main line Waterford Limerick and Western Railway edit Main article Waterford Limerick and Western Railway In 1901 the GS amp WR bought the Waterford Limerick and Western Railway 16 which gave it both the Waterford Limerick Athenry Claremorris Collooney cross country route and the North Kerry line and branches The WLWR recently dubbed the Western Rail Corridor crossed MGWR territory It complemented the radial MGWR lines from Dublin enabling Limerick Galway and Galway Sligo traffic and linked intermediate destinations in the west of Ireland For a very short time when the MGWR exercised running powers over the Athenry Limerick section of this route North Wall extension edit nbsp GS amp WR North Wall extension depicted on 1912 mapThe line was opened in 1877 to resolve limitations with the GS amp WR neither having rail access convenient to the cattle market at Cabra nor to the docks at North Wall where there was a requirement for goods cattle and passenger services The London and North Western Railway LNWR was supportive of the venture as was the rival Midland Great Western Railway MGWR who were to receive tolls for part of the route 17 The branch opened on 2 September 1877 diverging from the main GS amp WR line at Islandbridge Junction before tunneling under Phoenix Park to Cabra where cattle sidings and pens were constructed After passing under the MGWR line to Broadstone and the MGWR s Liffey Branch a to North Wall the route curved back to join the MGWR at Glasnevin Junction Joint running rights were obtained over the MGWR route until Church Road junction in the North Wall complex after which the route diverged to the GS amp WR s new cattle pens and sidings Link spurs were available at Newcomen Bridge to Amiens Street station and to the LNWR station at North Wall for passenger ships to Great Britain 17 18 Drumcondra link line edit 1891 had seen the connection to the Dublin Wicklow and Wexford Railway DW amp WR following the opening of the Dublin loop line from Westland Row with additional traffic to the Liffey branch line The GS amp WR eventually moved on an opportunity to open an alternative route line from at what was to be known as Drumcondra junction which diverged just before the junction to the MGWR at Glasnevin The route ran to the north of Croke Park then rejoined the MGWR just before Church Road junction in the North wall complex allowing the same access at North Wall for GS amp WR services Opening on 1 April 1901 it avoided the MGWR s Liffey branch tolls A spur from the Drumcondra link line to the DW amp WR at Amiens Street was finally realised on 1 December 1906 19 b GS amp WR hotels editIn an effort to encourage tourism the Killarney Junction Railway which was operated by the GS amp WR opened a hotel next to Killarney station This was in 1854 which made it the first railway owned hotel in Ireland 20 and one of the first of its kind in the World citation needed In the following years the GS amp WR established further hotels in County Kerry at Caragh Lake Kenmare Parknasilla about 3 4 of a mile to the southeast of Sneem and Waterville 21 The company also owned small commercial hotels at Limerick Junction and near its stations in Dublin and Cork 21 In 1925 the hotels became part of Great Southern Hotels a subsidiary of Great Southern Railways The Great Southern Hotels Group was dissolved in 2006 when its hotels were sold off separately to private investors GS amp WR strike editIn September 1911 the workers of the Great Southern and Western Railway went on strike nationally after two checkers at Kingsbridge goods station in Dublin were suspended for refusing to handle timber that had been delivered by blackleg lorry drivers during a strike by the timber merchant s workers 22 The British Army was brought in to guard tracks and trains and Protestant strike breakers from elsewhere in Ireland to do the work of the strikers The strike was savagely broken in two months with the railway s proprietor William Goulding sacking 10 of the workers for their participation in the strike Goulding told his associates Now that we have the men defeated we ll never have any more trouble People editChairmenPeter Purcell a wealthy landowner and mail coach operator was the main mover of the GS amp WR railway and became its first chairman 23 1844 Peter Purcell 1846 George Carr 1849 Sir Edward McDonnel 1860 William Haughton 1878 James C Colvill 1897 Joshua Pim 1901 William Goulding Civil engineersAlternative titles include engineer engineer in chief chief civil engineer 24 1844 Sir John Benjamin Macneill 1847 George Miller Also locomotive engineer 1864 Valentine Browne and Charles G Napier permanent way engineers for Dublin and Cork respectively 1874 William Scott replaced Napier as permanent way engineer Cork 1878 Kennett Bayley 1901 Albert Gordon 1921 John F Sides Locomotive engineersAt different times in its history the GS amp WR variously used the titles Locomotive Engineer Locomotive Superintendent or Chief Mechanical Engineer to describe the same post 25 1844 47 John Dewrance 1847 64 George Miller 1864 83 Alexander McDonnell 1883 86 John Aspinall 1886 96 Henry Ivatt 1896 1911 Robert Coey 1911 13 Richard Maunsell 1913 21 E A Watson 1921 23 J R BazinIncidents editLombardstown train crash edit nbsp Commemorative plaque in Lombardstown villageA year after the 1911 strike on 5 August 1912 at 8 50pm an excursion train from Killarney crashed in Lombardstown near Mallow in Cork The driver had been on duty from 3 50am Of the 200 passengers on board 96 were seriously injured one of whom later died as a result 26 Kiltimagh train crash edit On 19 December 1916 in foggy conditions the driver of a ballast train failed to see a red signal at Kiltimagh County Mayo The train carrying many track workers crashed into an empty cattle train killing six people 27 28 Aftermath editGreat Southern Railways edit An Act passed by the Dail Eireann in 1924 merged the GS amp WR with the Midland Great Western Railway the Cork Bandon and South Coast Railway and most other railways wholly within the Irish Free State to form the Great Southern Railway 3 In January 1925 the GSR merged with the Dublin and South Eastern Railway to form the Great Southern Railways 3 Cross border railways were excluded from the mergers Coras Iompair Eireann edit In 1945 further amalgamation with the Grand Canal Company and the Dublin United Tramway Company created Coras Iompair Eireann Irish State Transport Company CIE was nationalised in 1950 but was divided into separate rail and road companies in 1987 Since then the railways have been operated by Iarnrod Eireann Irish Rail GS amp WR routes today edit GS amp WR routes remain some of the most heavily used in Ireland linking Dublin with Limerick Cork and Waterford The coats of arms of these cities still adorn the facade of Heuston Station See also editHistory of rail transport in Ireland Iarnrod Eireann Rail transport in IrelandNotes edit It is called the Liffey branch because it diverged from the main line at Liffey Junction it actually runs mostly alongside the Royal Canal and passes just to the south of Croke Park stadium Glasnevin and Drumcondra junctions were remodelled in the 1930s to allow trains from the former MGWR lines access to Amien Street and Westland Row via the Drumcondra link line while the line from Islandbridge lost access to the Liffey Branch References edit a b The Railway Year Book for 1920 London The Railway Publishing Company Limited 1920 p 147 Murray amp McNeill 1976 p 15 a b c Murray amp McNeill 1976 p 106 Murray amp McNeill 1976 p 11 Murray amp McNeill 1976 pp 14 15 Murray amp McNeill 1976 pp 15 16 186 Murray amp McNeill 1976 pp 17 a b Murray amp McNeill 1976 p 18 a b c Murray amp McNeill 1976 p 178 a b c Murray amp McNeill 1976 p 21 Murray amp McNeill 1976 p 64 Murray amp McNeill 1976 pp 33 62 63 Murray amp McNeill 1976 p 62 Murray amp McNeill 1976 p 68 Murray amp McNeill 1976 p 24 Murray amp McNeill 1976 p 107 a b Murray amp McNeill 1976 pp 48 51 Shepherd 1994 pp 36 41 Shepherd 1994 pp 37 107 Murray amp McNeill 1976 p 26 a b Murray amp McNeill 1976 p 182 The Great Southern Railway Strike of 1911 theirishstory com 9 March 2011 Retrieved 18 April 2018 Murray amp McNeill 1976 pp 15 196 Murray amp McNeill 1976 p 196 Murray amp McNeill 1976 p 197 Accident Returns Extract for Accident at Lombardstown on 5th August 1912 The Railways Archive www railwaysarchive co uk Comer Michael The Kiltimagh Railway Disaster of 1916 West On Track Retrieved 6 January 2023 Accident at Kiltimagh on 19th December 1916 PDF Railways Archive Retrieved 6 January 2023 Sources and further reading edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Great Southern and Western Railway Ahrons E L 1954 L L Asher ed Locomotive and train working in the latter part of the nineteenth century Vol six W Heffer amp Sons Ltd Murray K A McNeill D B 1976 Great Southern amp Western Railway Dublin Irish Railway Record Society ISBN 0 904078 05 1 O Mahony John Praeger R Lloyd 1902 The Sunny Side of Ireland how to see it by The Great Southern and Western Railway Dublin Alex Thom amp Co Shepherd Ernie 1994 The Midland Great Western Railway of Ireland Leicester England Midland Publishing Limited ISBN 1 85780 008 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Great Southern and Western Railway amp oldid 1193280926, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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