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History of rail transport in Great Britain

The railway system of Great Britain started with the building of local isolated wooden wagonways starting in the 1560s. A patchwork of local rail links operated by small private railway companies developed in the late 18th century. These isolated links expanded during the railway boom of the 1840s into a national network, although initially being run by over one hundred competing companies. Over the course of the 19th and early 20th centuries, many of these were amalgamated or were bought by competitors until only a handful of larger companies remained. The period also saw a steady increase in government involvement, especially in safety matters, such as the Railway Inspectorate.

Rail passengers in Great Britain from 1829 to 2023
Class 87 electric locomotive and Mark 3 coaches operated by franchisee Virgin Trains

The entire network was brought under government control during the First World War, during which time a number of advantages of amalgamation and central planning were demonstrated. However, the government resisted calls for the nationalisation of the network. In 1923, almost all the remaining companies were grouped into the "Big Four": the Great Western Railway, the London and North Eastern Railway, the London, Midland and Scottish Railway and the Southern Railway. The "Big Four" were joint-stock public companies. During the 1920s and 1930s, rising competition from road transport reduced revenues, leading to a lack of investment and thus a period of slow decline. The "Big Four" cooperated closely during the Second World War and continued to run the railway system up until 31 December 1947.

From the start of 1948, the "Big Four" were nationalised to form British Railways. Though there were few initial changes to services, usage increased and the network became profitable. A rapid introduction of diesel and electric rolling stock to replace steam was enacted under the 1955 Modernisation Plan. However, declining passenger numbers and financial losses in the late 1950s and early 1960s prompted the controversial Beeching cuts, which saw the closure of many branch and main lines alike. High-speed intercity trains were introduced in the 1970s. During the 1980s, severe cuts in rail subsidies and above-inflation increases in fares were enacted, decreasing losses. Following the sectorisation of British Rail, InterCity became profitable.

Between 1994 and 1997, railway operations were privatised, under which the ownership of the track and infrastructure passed to Railtrack, whilst passenger operations were franchised to individual private sector operators (originally there were 25 franchises) and the freight services were sold outright. Since privatisation, passenger volumes have increased to their highest ever level, but whether this is due to privatisation is disputed. The Hatfield accident set in motion a series of events that resulted in the ultimate collapse of Railtrack and its replacement with Network Rail, a state-owned, not-for-dividend company. By 2018, government subsidies to the rail industry in real terms were roughly three times that of the late 1980s, while train fares cost more than under British Rail.

Before 1830: The pioneers edit

A wagonway, essentially a railway powered by animals drawing the cars or wagons, was used by German miners at Caldbeck, Cumbria, England, perhaps from the 1560s.[1] A wagonway was built at Prescot, near Liverpool, sometime around 1600, possibly as early as 1594. Owned by Philip Layton, the line carried coal from a pit near Prescot Hall to a terminus about half a mile away.[2]

Another wagonway was Sir Francis Willoughby's Wollaton Wagonway in Nottinghamshire built between 1603 and 1604 to carry coal.[3]

As early as 1671 railed roads were in use in Durham to ease the conveyance of coal; the first of these was the Tanfield Wagonway.[4] Many of these tramroads or wagon ways were built in the 17th and 18th centuries. They used simply straight and parallel rails of timber on which carts with simple flanged iron wheels were drawn by horses, enabling several wagons to be moved simultaneously. The first public railway in the world was the Lake Lock Rail Road, a narrow gauge railway built near Wakefield, West Yorkshire, England.[5][6][7]

The early wooden railways were improved on in 1793 when Benjamin Outram constructed a mile-long tramway with L-shaped cast iron rails.[8] These rails became obsolete when William Jessop began to manufacture cast iron rails without guiding ledges – the wheels of the carts had flanges instead.[9] Cast iron is brittle and so the rails tended to break easily. Consequently, in 1820, John Birkenshaw introduced a method of rolling wrought iron rails, which were used from then onwards.[10]

 
The first passenger service was at Oystermouth in 1807, photograph from 1870

The first passenger-carrying public railway was opened by the Swansea and Mumbles Railway at Oystermouth in 1807, using horse-drawn carriages on an existing tramline.[11]

In 1802, Richard Trevithick designed and built the first (unnamed) steam locomotive to run on smooth rails.[12]

 
Salamanca of 1812

The first commercially successful steam locomotive was Salamanca, built in 1812 by John Blenkinsop and Matthew Murray for the 4 ft (1,219 mm) gauge Middleton Railway.[13] Salamanca was a rack and pinion locomotive, with cog wheels driven by two cylinders embedded into the top of the centre-flue boiler.[14]

In 1813, William Hedley and Timothy Hackworth designed a locomotive (Puffing Billy) for use on the tramway between Stockton and Darlington.[15] Puffing Billy featured piston rods extending upwards to pivoting beams, connected in turn by rods to a crankshaft beneath the frames which, in turn, drove the gears attached to the wheels. This meant that the wheels were coupled, allowing better traction. A year later, George Stephenson improved on that design with his first locomotive Blücher,[16] which was the first locomotive to use single-flanged wheels.

That design persuaded the backers of the proposed Stockton and Darlington Railway to appoint Stephenson as Engineer for the line in 1821.[17][18] While traffic was originally intended to be horse-drawn, Stephenson carried out a fresh survey of the route to allow steam haulage. The Act was subsequently amended to allow the usage of steam locomotives and also to allow passengers to be carried on the railway. The 25-mile (40 km) long route opened on 27 September 1825 and, with the aid of Stephenson's Locomotion No. 1, was the first locomotive-hauled public railway in the world.[19][20]

1830–1922: Early development edit

 
Frith's The Railway Station, 1862 depiction of Paddington railway station in London

In 1830, the Liverpool and Manchester Railway opened.[21] Being was the world's first inter-city passenger railway and the first to have 'scheduled' services, terminal stations and services as we know them today, it set the pattern for modern railways. The railways carried freight and passengers with also the world's first goods terminal station at the Park Lane railway goods station at Liverpool's south docks, accessed by the 1.26-mile Wapping Tunnel.[22][23] In 1836, at the Liverpool end the line was extended to Lime Street station in Liverpool's city centre via a 1.1 mile long tunnel.[24]

Many of the first public railways were built as local rail links operated by small private railway companies. With increasing rapidity, more and more lines were built, often with scant regard for their potential for traffic. The 1840s were by far the biggest decade for railway growth.[25][26] In 1840, when the decade began, railway lines in Britain were few and scattered but, within ten years, a virtually complete network had been laid down and the vast majority of towns and villages had a rail connection[citation needed] and in some cases even two or three. Over the course of the 19th and early 20th centuries, most of the pioneering independent railway companies amalgamated or were bought by competitors, until only a handful of larger companies remained (see Railway Mania).

Other nations quickly sought to obtain British expertise in this field to develop their own railways. The British-built Patentee class locomotive Le Belge was constructed for the first main line on the European mainland, the Brussels-Mechelen line,[27] while Adler, another Patentee class locomotive, hauled the first commercially successful passengers and goods trains in Germany.[28] To several of these customers, Britain's pioneering railway industry was associated with power, daringness and rapidity.[29]

The period also saw a steady increase in government involvement, especially in safety matters. The 1840 "Act for Regulating Railways"[30] empowered the Board of Trade to appoint railway inspectors. The Railway Inspectorate was established in 1840, to enquire into the causes of accidents and recommend ways of avoiding them.[31] As early as 1844, a bill had been put before Parliament suggesting the state purchase of the railways; this was not adopted. It did, however, lead to the introduction of minimum standards for the construction of carriages[32] and the compulsory provision of 3rd class accommodation for passengers – so-called "Parliamentary trains".[33]

The railway companies ceased to be profitable after the mid-1870s.[34] Nationalisation of the railways was first proposed by William Ewart Gladstone as early as the 1840s, and calls for nationalisation continued throughout that century, with F. Keddell writing in 1890 that "The only valid ground for maintaining the monopoly would be the proof that the Railway Companies have made a fair and proper use of their great powers, and have conduced to the prosperity of the people. But the exact contrary is the case."[35] The entire network was brought under government control during the First World War, and a number of advantages of amalgamation and planning were achieved.[36][37] However, the Conservative members of the wartime coalition government resisted calls for the formal nationalisation of the railways in 1921.

1923–1947: The Big Four edit

On 1 January 1923, almost all the railway companies were grouped into the Big Four: the Great Western Railway, the London and North Eastern Railway, the London, Midland and Scottish Railway and the Southern Railway companies.[38] A number of other lines, already operating as joint railways, remained separate from the Big Four; these included the Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway and the Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway. The "Big Four" were joint-stock public companies and they continued to run the railway system until 31 December 1947.

 
The LNER Class A4 streamlined loco hauled express trains of the 1930s offered a high-speed alternative to road transport

The competition from road transport during the 1920s and 1930s greatly reduced the revenue available to the railways, even though the needs for maintenance on the network had never been higher, as investment had been deferred over the past decade. Rail companies accused the government of favouring road haulage through the construction of roads subsidised by the taxpayer, while restricting the rail industry's ability to use flexible pricing because it was held to nationally agreed rate cards. The government response was to commission several inconclusive reports; the Salter Report of 1933 finally recommended that road transport should be taxed directly to fund the roads and increased Vehicle Excise Duty and fuel duties were introduced. It also noted that many small lines would never be likely to compete with road haulage.[39][40] Although these road pricing changes helped their survival, the railways entered a period of slow decline, owing to a lack of investment and changes in transport policy and lifestyles.

Several highpoints and innovations did occur during this period. Throughout the 1920s and 1930s, the Southern Railway invested heavily into railway electrification;[41] by the end of 1929, the Southern operated over 277+12 route miles (446.6 km) of third rail electrified track and in that year ran 17.8 million electric train miles.[42][43] During 1933, the Great Western Railway introduced the first of its diesel-powered railcars, an early move towards the long term future of the passenger trains.[44][45] On 3 July 1938, the London and North Eastern Railway's Class A4 4468 Mallard set a world speed record of 126 mph (202.8 km/h).[46][47]

During the Second World War, the companies' managements joined together, effectively operating as one company, to assisting the country's war effort. The railway network suffered heavy damage in some areas due to German Luftwaffe bombing, especially in cities such as London and Coventry; 482 locomotives, 13,314 passenger and 16,132 freight vehicles were damaged.[48] This damage put a severe strain on the railways' resources and a substantial maintenance backlog developed. After 1945, for both practical and ideological reasons, the government decided to bring the rail industry into the public sector.[49][50]

1948–1994: British Rail edit

 
British Rail filmstrip showing how the railways were unified under BR

From the start of 1948, the railways were nationalised to form British Railways (latterly "British Rail") under the control of the British Transport Commission.[51] Though there were few initial changes to the service, usage increased and the network became profitable. Regeneration of track and stations was completed by 1954. Rail revenue fell and, in 1955, the network again ceased to be profitable. The mid-1950s saw the hasty introduction of diesel and electric rolling stock to replace steam in a modernisation plan costing many millions of pounds but the expected transfer back from road to rail did not occur and losses began to mount.[52][53] This failure to make the railways more profitable through investment led governments of all political persuasions to restrict rail investment to a drip feed and seek economies through cutbacks.

The desire for profitability led to a major reduction in the network during the mid-1960s. Dr. Richard Beeching was given the task by the government of re-organising the railways ("the Beeching Axe").[54][55] This policy resulted in many branch lines and secondary routes being closed because they were deemed uneconomic; the closure of one-third of all stations, typically serving rural communities, removed much feeder traffic from main line passenger services.[56] The closure of many freight depots that had been used by larger industries such as coal and iron led to much freight transferring to road haulage. The sweeping closures were extremely unpopular with the general public at that time and remain so today.[57][58]

Passenger levels decreased steadily from the late fifties to late seventies.[59] Passenger services then experienced a renaissance with the introduction of the high-speed InterCity 125 trains in the late 1970s and early 1980s.[60][61] The 1980s saw severe cuts in government funding and above-inflation increases in fares, but the service became more cost-effective. Investment was made into the electrification of the East Coast Main Line (ECML) and the InterCity 225 electric high speed train introduced during the late 1980s.[62][63] In the mid 1980s, British Rail begun to replace its large fleet of first generation DMUs with a new rolling stock, namely the Pacer and Sprinter families.[64][65]

During 1972, British Rail was reorganised; under sectorisation, three passenger sectors were created: InterCity, operating principal express services; London & South East (renamed Network SouthEast in 1986) operating commuter services in the London area; Provincial (renamed Regional Railways in 1989) responsible for all other passenger services.[65] Following sectorisation, InterCity became profitable and one of Britain's top 150 companies, operating city centre to city centre travel across the nation from Aberdeen and Inverness in the north to Poole and Penzance in the south.[66]

Between 1994 and 1997, British Rail was privatised by the Conservative government under John Major.[67][68] Ownership of the track and infrastructure passed to Railtrack, passenger operations were franchised to individual private sector operators (originally there were 25 franchises) and the freight services sold outright (six companies were set up, but five of these were sold to the same buyer).[69][70][71]

1995 onwards: Post-privatisation edit

 
The Great Western Railway's London terminus at Paddington
 
Rail modal share 1952–2017[72]
 
GB rail subsidy 1985–2019 in 2018 prices, showing a short decline after privatisation, followed by a steep rise following the Hatfield crash in 2000 then a further increase to fund Crossrail and HS2

Since privatisation, numbers of passengers have grown rapidly; by 2010 the railways were carrying more passengers than at any time since the 1920s.[73][74] and by 2014 passenger numbers had expanded to their highest level ever, more than doubling in the 20 years since privatisation. Train fares cost more than under British Rail.[75]

The railways have become significantly safer since privatisation and are now the safest in Europe.[76] However, the public image of rail travel was damaged by some prominent accidents shortly after privatisation. These included the Southall rail crash (where a train with its faulty Automatic Warning System disconnected passed a stop signal),[77] the Ladbroke Grove rail crash (also caused by a train passing a stop signal)[78][79] and the Hatfield accident (caused by a rail fragmenting due to the development of microscopic cracks).[80][81]

Following the Hatfield accident, the rail infrastructure company Railtrack imposed over 1,200 emergency speed restrictions across its network and instigated an extremely costly nationwide track replacement programme. The consequential severe operational disruption to the national network and the company's spiralling costs set in motion the series of events which resulted in the ultimate collapse of the company and its replacement with Network Rail, a state-owned, not-for-dividend company.[82][83]

Since April 2016, the British railway network has been severely disrupted on many occasions by wide-reaching rail strikes, affecting rail franchises across the country.[84] The industrial action began on Southern services as a dispute over the planned introduction of driver-only operation,[85] and has since expanded to cover many different issues affecting the rail industry;[86] as of February 2018, the majority of the industrial action remains unresolved, with further strikes planned.[87] The COVID-19 pandemic of the early 2020s caused a massive drop in passenger numbers,[88][89][90]

As of 2018, government subsidies to the rail industry in real terms were roughly three times that of the late 1980s.[91]

See also edit

History by era

References edit

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Sources edit

General edit

  • Simmons, Jack; Biddle, Gordon, eds. (1999). The Oxford Companion to British Railway History: From 1603 to the 1990s (2nd ed.).
  • White, H. P. (1986). Forgotten Railways. Newton Abbot, Devon: David St. John Thomas. ISBN 978-0-946537-13-6.
  • Westwood, John. Illustrated History of the Railroads. Brompton Books.

Pre-1830 edit

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  • Ransom, P.J.G. (July 1989). The Victorian Railway and How It Evolved. London: William Heinemann. ISBN 978-0-434-98083-3.
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  • . Archived from the original on 5 December 2006. Retrieved 24 November 2006.
  • Dendy Marshall, C.F. (1929). "The Rainhill Locomotive Trials of 1829". Transactions of the Newcomen Society. 9.
  • Dowd, Steven (May 1999). . Journal of the International Bond & Share Society. Archived from the original on 8 October 2006. Retrieved 24 November 2006.
  • "The Broad Gauge Story". Journal of the Monmouthshire Railway Society. Summer 1985. Retrieved 24 November 2006.

1830–1922 edit

  • McKenna, Frank (1975). "Victorian Railway Workers". History Workshop (1): 26–73 – via JSTOR.
  • Ransom, P.J.G. (July 1989). The Victorian Railway and How It Evolved. London: William Heinemann. ISBN 978-0-434-98083-3.
  • Science Museum (November 1972). The Pre-grouping Railways: Their Development and Individual Characters: Part 1. London: The Stationery Office Books. ISBN 978-0-11-290153-2.
    • Heap, Christine; Van Riemsdijk, John (November 1980). The Pre-grouping Railways: Their Development and Individual Characters: Part 2. London: The Stationery Office Books. ISBN 978-0-11-290309-3.
    • Heap, Christine; Van Riemsdijk, John (November 1985). The Pre-grouping Railways: Their Development and Individual Characters: Part 3. London: The Stationery Office Books. ISBN 978-0-11-290432-8.
  • British Railways Pre-Grouping Atlas and Gazetteer (5th ed.). Shepperton: Ian Allan. 1980. ISBN 978-0-7110-0320-0.

1923–1947 edit

  • Tourret, R. (November 2003). GWR Engineering Work, 1928-1938. Tourret Publishing. ISBN 978-0-905878-08-9.
  • O.S. Nock (1967). History of the Great Western Railway Volume Three 1923-48. Ian Allan. ISBN 978-0-7110-0304-0.
  • Moody, G.T. (1963). Southern Electric 1909–1963. London: Ian Allan Publishing.
  • Nock, O.S. (1982). A History of the LMS. Vol. 1: The First Years, 1923-1930. George Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-0-04-385087-9.
  • Nock, O.S. (1982). A History of the LMS. Vol. 2: The Record Breaking 'Thirties, 1931-1939. George Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-0-04-385093-0.
  • White, H.P. (1969). Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain: Southern England v. 2. David & Charles. ISBN 0-7153-4733-0.

1948–1994 edit

  • Henshaw, David (1994). The Great Railway Conspiracy: The Fall and Rise of Britain's Railways Since the 1950s (2nd ed.). Hawes, North Yorkshire: Leading Edge Press. ISBN 978-0-948135-48-4.
  • Gourvish, Terry (2002). British Rail: 1974-97: From Integration to Privatisation. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-926909-9.
  • . The National Archives. Archived from the original on 14 October 2006. Retrieved 25 November 2006.

Further reading edit

  • Bagwell, Philip. The transport revolution 1770–1985 (Routledge, 1988) covers all forms.
  • Bagwell, Philip S. The Railway Clearing House: In the British Economy 1842–1922 (Taylor & Francis, 2022).
  • Bogart, Dan, et al. "Railways, divergence, and structural change in 19th century England and Wales." Journal of Urban Economics 128 (2022): 103390. online
  • Bradley, Simon. The railways: nation, network and people. 2015
  • Brandon, David L., and Alan Brooke. The Railway Haters: Opposition To Railways, From the 19th to 21st Centuries (Pen and Sword, 2019).
  • Casson, Mark. The world's first railway system: enterprise, competition, and regulation on the railway network in Victorian Britain (Oxford UP, 2009).
  • Clapham, J. H. An economic history of modern Britain; The early railway age, 1820–1850 (1930) online
  • Crafts, Nicholas, Timothy Leunig, and Abay Mulatu. "Were British railway companies well managed in the early twentieth century? " Economic History Review 61.4 (2008): 842-866. online
    • Crafts, Nicholas, Timothy Leunig, and Abay Mulatu. "Corrigendum: Were British railway companies well managed in the early twentieth century?" Economic History Review 64.1 (2011): 351-356. online
  • Dobrzynski, Jan. British railway tickets (Bloomsbury, 2013).
  • Ellis, Cuthbert Hamilton. British Railway History. An outline from the accession of William IV to the Nationalisation of Railways, 1830–1876 (vol 1. G. Allen and Unwin, 1954)
    • Ellis, Cuthbert Hamilton. British Railway History: An Outline from the Accession of William IV to the Nationalization of Railways, 1877–1947. Vol. 2 (G. Allen and Unwin, 1959); see online review.
  • Farrington, Karen. Great Victorian Railway Journeys: How Modern Britain Was Built by Victorian Steam Power (2012).
  • Glynn, John J. "The development of British railway accounting: 1800–1911." Accounting Historians Journal 11.1 (1984): 103–118. online
  • Gourvish, Terence Richard. Railways and the British economy, 1830–1914 (Macmillan International Higher Education, 1980).
  • Gourvish, Terence Richard et al. British Railways 1948-73: A business history (Cambridge University Press, 1986).
  • Gourvish, Terry. British Rail 1974–1997: From Integration to Privatisation (Oxford UP, 2002).
  • Gourvish, Terence R. "A British Business Elite: the chief executive managers of the railway industry, 1850–1922." Business History Review 47.3 (1973): 289-316.
  • Haywood, Russell. Railways, urban development and town planning in Britain: 1948–2008 (Routledge, 2016).
  • Jenkins, Simon. Britain's 100 Best Railway Stations (2017)
  • Leunig, Timothy. "Time is money: a re-assessment of the passenger social savings from Victorian British railways." Journal of Economic History 66.3 (2006): 635-673. online; calculates railways accounted for 1/6 sixth of economy-wide productivity growth in 1843 to 1912.
  • Letherby, Gayle, and Gillian Reynolds. Train tracks: work, play and politics on the railways (Routledge, 2020).
  • Letherby, Gayle, and Gillian Reynolds. "Making connections: the relationship between train travel and the processes of work and leisure." Sociological Research Online 8.3 (2003): 32-45.
  • McLean, Iain. "The origin and strange history of regulation in the UK: three case studies in search of a theory." ESF/SCSS Exploratory Workshop The Politics of Regulation (2002) online.
  • McLean, Iain, and Christopher Foster. "The political economy of regulation: interests, ideology, voters, and the UK Regulation of Railways Act 1844." Public Administration 70.3 (1992): 313-331.
  • Maggs, Colin. Great Britain's Railways: A New History (Amberley, 2018).
  • Perkin, Harold. The age of the railway (1970) online
  • Reid, Douglas A. "The ‘Iron Roads' and ‘the Happiness of the Working Classes’ The Early Development and Social Significance of the Railway Excursion." Journal of Transport History 17.1 (1996): 57-73.
  • Simmons, Jack, and Gordon Biddle. eds. The Oxford Companion to British Railway History. From 1603 to the 1990s (Oxford University Press, 1997) online review
  • Strangleman, Tim. Work identity at the end of the line?: privatisation and culture change in the UK rail industry (Springer, 2004).
  • Turnock, David. An historical geography of railways in Great Britain and Ireland (Routledge, 2016).
  • Vaughan, Adrian. Railwaymen, Politics and Money: the great age of railways in Britain (John Murray, 1997) online.
  • Vaughan, Adrian. Obstruction Danger: Significant British Railway Accidents, 1890–1986 (Motorbooks International, 1989). online
  • Wojtczak, Helena. Railwaywomen: Exploitation, betrayal and triumph in the workplace (Hastings Press, 2005).
  • Wragg, David. A Historical Dictionary of Railways in the British Isles (Casemate, 2009).
  • Wragg, David. The Race to the North: Rivalry & Record-Breaking in the Golden Age of Stream (Pen and Sword, 2013).

Historiography, restoration and memory edit

  • Beeston, Erin. Spaces of Industrial Heritage: a history of uses, perceptions and the re-making of Liverpool Road Station (University of Manchester, 2020) online.
  • Biddle, Gordon. "British Railway History: Jack Simmons' Last Thoughts." Journal-Railway And Canal Historical Society 34.5 (2003): 324-326 online.
  • Boughey, Joseph. "From Transport's Golden Ages to an Age of Tourism: LTC Rolt, Waterway Revival and Railway Preservation in Britain, 1944–54." Journal of Transport History 34.1 (2013): 22-38.
  • Boyes, Grahame, and Matthew Searle. "A Bibliography of the History of Inland Waterways, Railways and Road Transport in the British Isles, 2007." Interchange 39 (2006): 4-20.
  • Burman, Peter, and Michael Stratton, eds. Conserving the railway heritage (Taylor & Francis, 1997).
  • Carter, Ian, ed. British railway enthusiasm (Manchester University Press, 2017).
  • Mom, Gijs. "What kind of transport history did we get? Half a century of JTH and the future of the field." Journal of Transport History 24.2 (2003): 121–138.
  • Reeves, Christopher D. "Policy for conservation of heritage railway signal boxes in Great Britain." Historic Environment: Policy & Practice 7.1 (2016): 43-59 online.
  • Strangleman, Tim. "Constructing the Past: Railway History from below or a Study in Nostalgia?." Journal of Transport History 23.2 (2002): 147–158.
  • Taylor, James. "Business in Pictures: Representations of Railway Enterprise in the Satirical Press in Britain 1845–1870." Past & Present 189.1 (2005): 111–145; cartoons unveiled big business as greedy and corrupt. online.

history, rail, transport, great, britain, railway, system, great, britain, started, with, building, local, isolated, wooden, wagonways, starting, 1560s, patchwork, local, rail, links, operated, small, private, railway, companies, developed, late, 18th, century. The railway system of Great Britain started with the building of local isolated wooden wagonways starting in the 1560s A patchwork of local rail links operated by small private railway companies developed in the late 18th century These isolated links expanded during the railway boom of the 1840s into a national network although initially being run by over one hundred competing companies Over the course of the 19th and early 20th centuries many of these were amalgamated or were bought by competitors until only a handful of larger companies remained The period also saw a steady increase in government involvement especially in safety matters such as the Railway Inspectorate Rail passengers in Great Britain from 1829 to 2023Class 87 electric locomotive and Mark 3 coaches operated by franchisee Virgin TrainsThe entire network was brought under government control during the First World War during which time a number of advantages of amalgamation and central planning were demonstrated However the government resisted calls for the nationalisation of the network In 1923 almost all the remaining companies were grouped into the Big Four the Great Western Railway the London and North Eastern Railway the London Midland and Scottish Railway and the Southern Railway The Big Four were joint stock public companies During the 1920s and 1930s rising competition from road transport reduced revenues leading to a lack of investment and thus a period of slow decline The Big Four cooperated closely during the Second World War and continued to run the railway system up until 31 December 1947 From the start of 1948 the Big Four were nationalised to form British Railways Though there were few initial changes to services usage increased and the network became profitable A rapid introduction of diesel and electric rolling stock to replace steam was enacted under the 1955 Modernisation Plan However declining passenger numbers and financial losses in the late 1950s and early 1960s prompted the controversial Beeching cuts which saw the closure of many branch and main lines alike High speed intercity trains were introduced in the 1970s During the 1980s severe cuts in rail subsidies and above inflation increases in fares were enacted decreasing losses Following the sectorisation of British Rail InterCity became profitable Between 1994 and 1997 railway operations were privatised under which the ownership of the track and infrastructure passed to Railtrack whilst passenger operations were franchised to individual private sector operators originally there were 25 franchises and the freight services were sold outright Since privatisation passenger volumes have increased to their highest ever level but whether this is due to privatisation is disputed The Hatfield accident set in motion a series of events that resulted in the ultimate collapse of Railtrack and its replacement with Network Rail a state owned not for dividend company By 2018 government subsidies to the rail industry in real terms were roughly three times that of the late 1980s while train fares cost more than under British Rail Contents 1 Before 1830 The pioneers 2 1830 1922 Early development 3 1923 1947 The Big Four 4 1948 1994 British Rail 5 1995 onwards Post privatisation 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 8 1 General 8 2 Pre 1830 8 3 1830 1922 8 4 1923 1947 8 5 1948 1994 9 Further reading 9 1 Historiography restoration and memoryBefore 1830 The pioneers editMain article History of rail transport in Great Britain to 1830 A wagonway essentially a railway powered by animals drawing the cars or wagons was used by German miners at Caldbeck Cumbria England perhaps from the 1560s 1 A wagonway was built at Prescot near Liverpool sometime around 1600 possibly as early as 1594 Owned by Philip Layton the line carried coal from a pit near Prescot Hall to a terminus about half a mile away 2 Another wagonway was Sir Francis Willoughby s Wollaton Wagonway in Nottinghamshire built between 1603 and 1604 to carry coal 3 As early as 1671 railed roads were in use in Durham to ease the conveyance of coal the first of these was the Tanfield Wagonway 4 Many of these tramroads or wagon ways were built in the 17th and 18th centuries They used simply straight and parallel rails of timber on which carts with simple flanged iron wheels were drawn by horses enabling several wagons to be moved simultaneously The first public railway in the world was the Lake Lock Rail Road a narrow gauge railway built near Wakefield West Yorkshire England 5 6 7 The early wooden railways were improved on in 1793 when Benjamin Outram constructed a mile long tramway with L shaped cast iron rails 8 These rails became obsolete when William Jessop began to manufacture cast iron rails without guiding ledges the wheels of the carts had flanges instead 9 Cast iron is brittle and so the rails tended to break easily Consequently in 1820 John Birkenshaw introduced a method of rolling wrought iron rails which were used from then onwards 10 nbsp The first passenger service was at Oystermouth in 1807 photograph from 1870The first passenger carrying public railway was opened by the Swansea and Mumbles Railway at Oystermouth in 1807 using horse drawn carriages on an existing tramline 11 In 1802 Richard Trevithick designed and built the first unnamed steam locomotive to run on smooth rails 12 nbsp Salamanca of 1812The first commercially successful steam locomotive was Salamanca built in 1812 by John Blenkinsop and Matthew Murray for the 4 ft 1 219 mm gauge Middleton Railway 13 Salamanca was a rack and pinion locomotive with cog wheels driven by two cylinders embedded into the top of the centre flue boiler 14 In 1813 William Hedley and Timothy Hackworth designed a locomotive Puffing Billy for use on the tramway between Stockton and Darlington 15 Puffing Billy featured piston rods extending upwards to pivoting beams connected in turn by rods to a crankshaft beneath the frames which in turn drove the gears attached to the wheels This meant that the wheels were coupled allowing better traction A year later George Stephenson improved on that design with his first locomotive Blucher 16 which was the first locomotive to use single flanged wheels That design persuaded the backers of the proposed Stockton and Darlington Railway to appoint Stephenson as Engineer for the line in 1821 17 18 While traffic was originally intended to be horse drawn Stephenson carried out a fresh survey of the route to allow steam haulage The Act was subsequently amended to allow the usage of steam locomotives and also to allow passengers to be carried on the railway The 25 mile 40 km long route opened on 27 September 1825 and with the aid of Stephenson s Locomotion No 1 was the first locomotive hauled public railway in the world 19 20 1830 1922 Early development editMain article History of rail transport in Great Britain 1830 1922 nbsp Frith s The Railway Station 1862 depiction of Paddington railway station in LondonIn 1830 the Liverpool and Manchester Railway opened 21 Being was the world s first inter city passenger railway and the first to have scheduled services terminal stations and services as we know them today it set the pattern for modern railways The railways carried freight and passengers with also the world s first goods terminal station at the Park Lane railway goods station at Liverpool s south docks accessed by the 1 26 mile Wapping Tunnel 22 23 In 1836 at the Liverpool end the line was extended to Lime Street station in Liverpool s city centre via a 1 1 mile long tunnel 24 Many of the first public railways were built as local rail links operated by small private railway companies With increasing rapidity more and more lines were built often with scant regard for their potential for traffic The 1840s were by far the biggest decade for railway growth 25 26 In 1840 when the decade began railway lines in Britain were few and scattered but within ten years a virtually complete network had been laid down and the vast majority of towns and villages had a rail connection citation needed and in some cases even two or three Over the course of the 19th and early 20th centuries most of the pioneering independent railway companies amalgamated or were bought by competitors until only a handful of larger companies remained see Railway Mania Other nations quickly sought to obtain British expertise in this field to develop their own railways The British built Patentee class locomotive Le Belge was constructed for the first main line on the European mainland the Brussels Mechelen line 27 while Adler another Patentee class locomotive hauled the first commercially successful passengers and goods trains in Germany 28 To several of these customers Britain s pioneering railway industry was associated with power daringness and rapidity 29 The period also saw a steady increase in government involvement especially in safety matters The 1840 Act for Regulating Railways 30 empowered the Board of Trade to appoint railway inspectors The Railway Inspectorate was established in 1840 to enquire into the causes of accidents and recommend ways of avoiding them 31 As early as 1844 a bill had been put before Parliament suggesting the state purchase of the railways this was not adopted It did however lead to the introduction of minimum standards for the construction of carriages 32 and the compulsory provision of 3rd class accommodation for passengers so called Parliamentary trains 33 The railway companies ceased to be profitable after the mid 1870s 34 Nationalisation of the railways was first proposed by William Ewart Gladstone as early as the 1840s and calls for nationalisation continued throughout that century with F Keddell writing in 1890 that The only valid ground for maintaining the monopoly would be the proof that the Railway Companies have made a fair and proper use of their great powers and have conduced to the prosperity of the people But the exact contrary is the case 35 The entire network was brought under government control during the First World War and a number of advantages of amalgamation and planning were achieved 36 37 However the Conservative members of the wartime coalition government resisted calls for the formal nationalisation of the railways in 1921 1923 1947 The Big Four editMain article History of rail transport in Great Britain 1923 1947 On 1 January 1923 almost all the railway companies were grouped into the Big Four the Great Western Railway the London and North Eastern Railway the London Midland and Scottish Railway and the Southern Railway companies 38 A number of other lines already operating as joint railways remained separate from the Big Four these included the Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway and the Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway The Big Four were joint stock public companies and they continued to run the railway system until 31 December 1947 nbsp The LNER Class A4 streamlined loco hauled express trains of the 1930s offered a high speed alternative to road transportThe competition from road transport during the 1920s and 1930s greatly reduced the revenue available to the railways even though the needs for maintenance on the network had never been higher as investment had been deferred over the past decade Rail companies accused the government of favouring road haulage through the construction of roads subsidised by the taxpayer while restricting the rail industry s ability to use flexible pricing because it was held to nationally agreed rate cards The government response was to commission several inconclusive reports the Salter Report of 1933 finally recommended that road transport should be taxed directly to fund the roads and increased Vehicle Excise Duty and fuel duties were introduced It also noted that many small lines would never be likely to compete with road haulage 39 40 Although these road pricing changes helped their survival the railways entered a period of slow decline owing to a lack of investment and changes in transport policy and lifestyles Several highpoints and innovations did occur during this period Throughout the 1920s and 1930s the Southern Railway invested heavily into railway electrification 41 by the end of 1929 the Southern operated over 277 1 2 route miles 446 6 km of third rail electrified track and in that year ran 17 8 million electric train miles 42 43 During 1933 the Great Western Railway introduced the first of its diesel powered railcars an early move towards the long term future of the passenger trains 44 45 On 3 July 1938 the London and North Eastern Railway s Class A4 4468 Mallard set a world speed record of 126 mph 202 8 km h 46 47 During the Second World War the companies managements joined together effectively operating as one company to assisting the country s war effort The railway network suffered heavy damage in some areas due to German Luftwaffe bombing especially in cities such as London and Coventry 482 locomotives 13 314 passenger and 16 132 freight vehicles were damaged 48 This damage put a severe strain on the railways resources and a substantial maintenance backlog developed After 1945 for both practical and ideological reasons the government decided to bring the rail industry into the public sector 49 50 1948 1994 British Rail edit nbsp British Rail filmstrip showing how the railways were unified under BRMain article History of rail transport in Great Britain 1948 1994 From the start of 1948 the railways were nationalised to form British Railways latterly British Rail under the control of the British Transport Commission 51 Though there were few initial changes to the service usage increased and the network became profitable Regeneration of track and stations was completed by 1954 Rail revenue fell and in 1955 the network again ceased to be profitable The mid 1950s saw the hasty introduction of diesel and electric rolling stock to replace steam in a modernisation plan costing many millions of pounds but the expected transfer back from road to rail did not occur and losses began to mount 52 53 This failure to make the railways more profitable through investment led governments of all political persuasions to restrict rail investment to a drip feed and seek economies through cutbacks The desire for profitability led to a major reduction in the network during the mid 1960s Dr Richard Beeching was given the task by the government of re organising the railways the Beeching Axe 54 55 This policy resulted in many branch lines and secondary routes being closed because they were deemed uneconomic the closure of one third of all stations typically serving rural communities removed much feeder traffic from main line passenger services 56 The closure of many freight depots that had been used by larger industries such as coal and iron led to much freight transferring to road haulage The sweeping closures were extremely unpopular with the general public at that time and remain so today 57 58 Passenger levels decreased steadily from the late fifties to late seventies 59 Passenger services then experienced a renaissance with the introduction of the high speed InterCity 125 trains in the late 1970s and early 1980s 60 61 The 1980s saw severe cuts in government funding and above inflation increases in fares but the service became more cost effective Investment was made into the electrification of the East Coast Main Line ECML and the InterCity 225 electric high speed train introduced during the late 1980s 62 63 In the mid 1980s British Rail begun to replace its large fleet of first generation DMUs with a new rolling stock namely the Pacer and Sprinter families 64 65 During 1972 British Rail was reorganised under sectorisation three passenger sectors were created InterCity operating principal express services London amp South East renamed Network SouthEast in 1986 operating commuter services in the London area Provincial renamed Regional Railways in 1989 responsible for all other passenger services 65 Following sectorisation InterCity became profitable and one of Britain s top 150 companies operating city centre to city centre travel across the nation from Aberdeen and Inverness in the north to Poole and Penzance in the south 66 Between 1994 and 1997 British Rail was privatised by the Conservative government under John Major 67 68 Ownership of the track and infrastructure passed to Railtrack passenger operations were franchised to individual private sector operators originally there were 25 franchises and the freight services sold outright six companies were set up but five of these were sold to the same buyer 69 70 71 1995 onwards Post privatisation editMain articles History of rail transport in Great Britain 1995 to date Impact of the privatisation of British Rail and 2016 18 United Kingdom rail strikes nbsp The Great Western Railway s London terminus at Paddington nbsp Rail modal share 1952 2017 72 nbsp GB rail subsidy 1985 2019 in 2018 prices showing a short decline after privatisation followed by a steep rise following the Hatfield crash in 2000 then a further increase to fund Crossrail and HS2Since privatisation numbers of passengers have grown rapidly by 2010 the railways were carrying more passengers than at any time since the 1920s 73 74 and by 2014 passenger numbers had expanded to their highest level ever more than doubling in the 20 years since privatisation Train fares cost more than under British Rail 75 The railways have become significantly safer since privatisation and are now the safest in Europe 76 However the public image of rail travel was damaged by some prominent accidents shortly after privatisation These included the Southall rail crash where a train with its faulty Automatic Warning System disconnected passed a stop signal 77 the Ladbroke Grove rail crash also caused by a train passing a stop signal 78 79 and the Hatfield accident caused by a rail fragmenting due to the development of microscopic cracks 80 81 Following the Hatfield accident the rail infrastructure company Railtrack imposed over 1 200 emergency speed restrictions across its network and instigated an extremely costly nationwide track replacement programme The consequential severe operational disruption to the national network and the company s spiralling costs set in motion the series of events which resulted in the ultimate collapse of the company and its replacement with Network Rail a state owned not for dividend company 82 83 Since April 2016 the British railway network has been severely disrupted on many occasions by wide reaching rail strikes affecting rail franchises across the country 84 The industrial action began on Southern services as a dispute over the planned introduction of driver only operation 85 and has since expanded to cover many different issues affecting the rail industry 86 as of February 2018 the majority of the industrial action remains unresolved with further strikes planned 87 The COVID 19 pandemic of the early 2020s caused a massive drop in passenger numbers 88 89 90 As of 2018 government subsidies to the rail industry in real terms were roughly three times that of the late 1980s 91 See also editEconomic history of the United Kingdom History of rail transport Rail transport in Great Britain Rail freight in Great Britain List of early British railway companies History of rail transport in Ireland British postal system List of railway lines in Great Britain List of closed railway lines in Great Britain British narrow gauge railways British industrial narrow gauge railways Railway electrification in Great Britain British electric multiple units British railcars and diesel multiple unitsHistory by eraHistory of rail transport in Great Britain to 1830 History of rail transport in Great Britain 1830 1922 History of rail transport in Great Britain 1923 1947 History of rail transport in Great Britain 1948 1994 History of rail transport in Great Britain 1995 to dateReferences edit Warren Allison Samuel Murphy and Richard Smith An Early Railway in the German Mines of Caldbeck in G Boyes ed Early Railways 4 Papers from the 4th International Early Railways Conference 2008 Six Martlets Sudbury 2010 pp 52 69 Jones Mark 2012 Lancashire Railways The History of Steam Newbury Countryside Books p 5 ISBN 978 1 84674 298 9 Hylton Stuart 2007 The Grand Experiment the Birth of the Railway Age 1820 1845 Ian Allan Publishing ISBN 978 0 7110 3172 2 Ellis Hamilton 1968 The Pictorial Encyclopedia of Railways The Hamlyn Publishing Group p 12 Bayliss D A 1981 Retracing the First Public Railway Living History Local Guide No 4 page needed Dawson Paul L 15 November 2015 Secret Wakefield Amberley Publishing Limited page needed Ambler D W 1989 The History and Practice of Britain s Railways A New Research Agenda Ashgate page needed Schofield R B 2000 Benjamin Outram 1764 1805 an engineering biography Cardiff Merton Priory ISBN 1 898937 42 7 page needed Hadfield Charles Skempton Alec Westley 1979 William Jessop Engineer David and Charles page needed Specification of John Birkinshaw s Patent for an Improvement in the Construction of Malleable Iron Rails to be used in Rail roads with Remarks on the comparative Merits of Cast Metal and Malleable Iron Rail ways Michael Longridge Newcastle E Walker 1821 Remark the 1838 edition online here does not contain the quoted sentences Mumbles railway was remarkable BBC News 25 March 2007 Trevithick Francis 1872 Life of Richard Trevithick With an Account of His Inventions Volume 1 E amp F N Spon Ellis Hamilton 1968 The Pictorial Encyclopaedia of Railways The Hamlyn Publishing Group p 20 Nabarro Gerald 1972 Steam Nostalgia Locomotive and Railway Preservation in Great Britain London Routledge and Kegan Paul p 139 ISBN 0 7100 7391 7 Puffing Billy Spartacus Educational Archived from the original on 15 November 2006 Retrieved 24 November 2006 History of the locomotives Archived from the original on 5 December 2006 Retrieved 24 November 2006 Kirby 2002 p 184 Tomlinson 1915 p 74 Bowes Alderman 1883 George Stephenson the Locomotive and the First Public Railway A Lecture Delivered at the Salford Royal Museum and Library John Heywood page needed Casserley H C 1976 Preserved locomotives 4th ed London Ian Allan p 16 ISBN 071100725X Making the Liverpool and Manchester Railway Science and Industry Museum Retrieved 9 June 2019 City Line to Northern Line Connection Feasibility Study PDF merseytravel gov uk Retrieved 4 March 2018 Wapping and Crown Street Tunnels Engineering Timelines Retrieved 14 September 2016 Merseyside Tales Liverpool Lime Street station s development Liverpool Echo 7 April 2012 Retrieved 16 February 2017 Campbell Gareth 2014 Government Policy during the British Railway Mania and the 1847 Commercial Crisis British Financial Crises since 1825 Oxford University Press pp 58 75 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199688661 003 0004 ISBN 978 0 19 968866 1 Casson Mark 2009 The World s First Railway System Enterprise Competition and Regulation on the Railway Network in Victorian Britain OUP Oxford pp 29 289 298 320 ISBN 9780199213979 Retrieved 6 December 2019 La Construction des LOCOMOTIVES a VAPEUR en Belgique www tassignon be in French Markus Hehl Der Adler Deutschlands erste Dampflokomotive Weltbild Augsburg 2008 p 32 Peter Heigl Adler Stationen einer Lokomotive im Laufe dreier Jahrhunderte Buch amp Kunstverlag Oberpfalz Amberg 2009 ISBN 978 3 935719 55 1 p 30 1840 Railway Regulation Act originally published by HMSO link is to The Railways Archive Hall Stanley 28 September 1990 Railway Detectives The 150 year Saga of the Railway Inspectorate Shepperton Ian Allan Ltd ISBN 978 0 7110 1929 4 1844 Railway Regulation Act originally published by HMSO link is to The Railways Archive MacDermott E T History of the Great Western Railway London Great Western Railway 1927 Vol 1 part 2 page 640 Mitchell Brian Chambers David Crafts Nicholas August 2009 How good was the profitability of British Railways 1870 1912 PDF University of Warwick Archived PDF from the original on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 20 March 2020 Keddell F 1890 The Nationalisation of Our Railway System Its Justices and Advantages London The Modern Press Derrick Bruno 8 September 2011 Railways and the mobilisation for war in 1914 nationalarchives gov uk AMBULANCE TRAINS BRINGING THE FIRST WORLD WAR HOME railwaymuseum org uk 1 February 2019 HM Government 1921 Railways Act 1921 HMSO Retrieved 25 November 2006 via The Railways Archive Stamp Josiah 31 January 1933 Road And Rail A Defence Of The Salter Report The Times Salter Arthur 1934 Toward a Planned Economy New York John Day White 1969 pp 181 183 White 1969 p 193 Moody 1963 pp 56 75 Great Western railcars The Park Royal bodied railcars numbers 1 to 4 The Great Western Archive Retrieved 2 March 2020 Judge C W 2008 The history of Great Western A E C diesel railcars Southampton Noodle ISBN 978 1 906419 11 0 OCLC 233788958 Hughes Geoffrey 2001 Sir Nigel Gresley The Engineer and his Family The Oakwood Press p 147 ISBN 0 85361 579 9 Semmens P W B 1989 Speed on the East Coast Main Line Patrick Stephens p 64 ISBN 978 0850599305 Catching Up advert by the Big Four The Railway Magazine Vol 92 no 564 Westminster Railway Publishing Co July August 1946 p xi Her Majesty s Government 1947 Transport Act 1947 Her Majesty s Stationery Office Archived from the original on 25 March 2012 Retrieved 25 November 2006 via The Railways Archive The Nationalised Railway 1948 1992 The Railways Archive Archived from the original on 17 September 2008 Retrieved 6 September 2008 Her Majesty s Government 1947 Transport Act 1947 Her Majesty s Stationery Office Retrieved 25 November 2006 via The Railways Archive British Railways Board history The National Archives Archived from the original on 14 October 2006 Retrieved 25 November 2006 British Transport Commission 1954 Modernisation and Re Equipment of British Rail British Transport Commission Archived from the original on 31 October 2006 Retrieved 25 November 2006 via The Railways Archive British Transport Commission 1963 The Reshaping of British Railways Part 1 Report Her Majesty s Stationery Office Retrieved 25 November 2006 via The Railways Archive British Transport Commission 1963 The Reshaping of British Railways Part 2 Maps Her Majesty s Stationery Office Retrieved 25 November 2006 via The Railways Archive Beeching Report Proposes Closing Nearly a Third of Britain s 7 000 Railway Stations The Times No 55661 28 March 1963 p 8 Did Dr Beeching get it wrong with his railway cuts 50 years ago BBC News 27 March 2013 Lord Stoneham 1963 The Economics and Social Aspects of the Beeching Plan House of Lords Archived from the original on 5 June 2011 via railwaysarchive co uk The UK Department for Transport Archived 17 October 2004 at the Wayback Machine DfT specifically Table 6 1 from Transport Statistics Great Britain 2006 Archived 8 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine 4MB PDF file Marsden Colin J 1983 British Rail 1983 Motive Power Combined Volume London Ian Allan ISBN 978 0 7110 1284 4 New train speeds into service BBC News 4 October 1976 Retrieved 15 May 2019 FROM THE ARCHIVES Class 91s promise unfulfilled Rail Magazine Retrieved 14 May 2022 Semmens Peter 1990 Speed On The East Coast Main Line A Century and a Half of Accelerated Services Patrick Stephens Ltd p 235 ISBN 0 85059 930 X Shore A G L April 1987 British Rail Diesel Multiple Unit Replacement Programme Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers Part D Transport Engineering 201 2 115 122 doi 10 1243 PIME PROC 1987 201 165 02 S2CID 109194039 a b Thomas David St John Whitehouse Patrick 1990 BR in the Eighties Newton Abbot David amp Charles ISBN 978 0 7153 9854 8 OL 11253354M Wikidata Q112224535 The fall and rise of Britain s railways Rail Staff News 19 December 2013 Retrieved 11 November 2016 Her Majesty s Government 1903 Railways Act 1993 Her Majesty s Stationery Office Retrieved 26 November 2006 via The Railways Archive Strangleman Tim 2002 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Retrieved 30 November 2006 Pank Philip 18 October 2010 Rail safety still an issue 10 years after Hatfield The Times p 11 Archived from the original on 12 January 2021 Retrieved 22 August 2016 Network Rail Our History Network Rail Retrieved 30 November 2006 Accounting for Producer Needs The case of Britain s rail infrastructure PDF Centre for Management and Organisational History p 18 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 12 October 2015 Strikes under way in train safety row BBC News 8 January 2018 Southern rail strike causes disruption BBC News 26 April 2016 Strikes under way in train safety row BBC News 8 January 2018 RMT announces new strike on Southern rail BBC News 22 February 2018 Cut rail fares to counter Covid slump in train travel watchdog urges The Guardian 18 August 2020 Retrieved 15 December 2020 Coronavirus Train services to be cut amid falling demand BBC News 20 March 2020 Retrieved 15 December 2020 Impact of Covid 19 on the railways could the pandemic bloster rail travel www railway technology com 11 August 2020 Retrieved 15 December 2020 Rahman Grace 7 November 2018 How much does the government subsidise the railways by Full Fact Retrieved 5 December 2019 Sources editGeneral edit Simmons Jack Biddle Gordon eds 1999 The Oxford Companion to British Railway History From 1603 to the 1990s 2nd ed White H P 1986 Forgotten Railways Newton Abbot Devon David St John Thomas ISBN 978 0 946537 13 6 Westwood John Illustrated History of the Railroads Brompton Books Pre 1830 edit Hadfield Charles Skempton A W January 1979 William Jessop Engineer Newton Abbot M amp M Baldwin ISBN 978 0 7153 7603 4 Kirby Maurice W 4 July 2002 The Origins of Railway Enterprise The Stockton and Darlington Railway 1821 1863 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 89280 3 Schofield R B October 2000 Benjamin Outram 1764 1805 An Engineering Biography Cardiff Merton Priory Press ISBN 978 1 898937 42 5 Ransom P J G July 1989 The Victorian Railway and How It Evolved London William Heinemann ISBN 978 0 434 98083 3 Tomlinson William Weaver 1915 The North Eastern Railway Its rise and development Andrew Reid and Company OCLC 504251788 The History of the Railway in Britain Historic Herefordshire Online Retrieved 24 November 2006 The Old Times History of the Locomotive Archived from the original on 5 December 2006 Retrieved 24 November 2006 Dendy Marshall C F 1929 The Rainhill Locomotive Trials of 1829 Transactions of the Newcomen Society 9 Dowd Steven May 1999 The Liverpool amp Manchester Railway Journal of the International Bond amp Share Society Archived from the original on 8 October 2006 Retrieved 24 November 2006 The Broad Gauge Story Journal of the Monmouthshire Railway Society Summer 1985 Retrieved 24 November 2006 1830 1922 edit McKenna Frank 1975 Victorian Railway Workers History Workshop 1 26 73 via JSTOR Ransom P J G July 1989 The Victorian Railway and How It Evolved London William Heinemann ISBN 978 0 434 98083 3 Science Museum November 1972 The Pre grouping Railways Their Development and Individual Characters Part 1 London The Stationery Office Books ISBN 978 0 11 290153 2 Heap Christine Van Riemsdijk John November 1980 The Pre grouping Railways Their Development and Individual Characters Part 2 London The Stationery Office Books ISBN 978 0 11 290309 3 Heap Christine Van Riemsdijk John November 1985 The Pre grouping Railways Their Development and Individual Characters Part 3 London The Stationery Office Books ISBN 978 0 11 290432 8 British Railways Pre Grouping Atlas and Gazetteer 5th ed Shepperton Ian Allan 1980 ISBN 978 0 7110 0320 0 1923 1947 edit Tourret R November 2003 GWR Engineering Work 1928 1938 Tourret Publishing ISBN 978 0 905878 08 9 O S Nock 1967 History of the Great Western Railway Volume Three 1923 48 Ian Allan ISBN 978 0 7110 0304 0 Moody G T 1963 Southern Electric 1909 1963 London Ian Allan Publishing Nock O S 1982 A History of the LMS Vol 1 The First Years 1923 1930 George Allen amp Unwin ISBN 978 0 04 385087 9 Nock O S 1982 A History of the LMS Vol 2 The Record Breaking Thirties 1931 1939 George Allen amp Unwin ISBN 978 0 04 385093 0 White H P 1969 Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain Southern England v 2 David amp Charles ISBN 0 7153 4733 0 1948 1994 edit Henshaw David 1994 The Great Railway Conspiracy The Fall and Rise of Britain s Railways Since the 1950s 2nd ed Hawes North Yorkshire Leading Edge Press ISBN 978 0 948135 48 4 Gourvish Terry 2002 British Rail 1974 97 From Integration to Privatisation Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 926909 9 British Railways Board history The National Archives Archived from the original on 14 October 2006 Retrieved 25 November 2006 Further reading editMain article History of rail transport in Great Britain 1830 1922 References Bagwell Philip The transport revolution 1770 1985 Routledge 1988 covers all forms Bagwell Philip S The Railway Clearing House In the British Economy 1842 1922 Taylor amp Francis 2022 Bogart Dan et al Railways divergence and structural change in 19th century England and Wales Journal of Urban Economics 128 2022 103390 online Bradley Simon The railways nation network and people 2015 Brandon David L and Alan Brooke The Railway Haters Opposition To Railways From the 19th to 21st Centuries Pen and Sword 2019 Casson Mark The world s first railway system enterprise competition and regulation on the railway network in Victorian Britain Oxford UP 2009 Clapham J H An economic history of modern Britain The early railway age 1820 1850 1930 online Crafts Nicholas Timothy Leunig and Abay Mulatu Were British railway companies well managed in the early twentieth century Economic History Review 61 4 2008 842 866 online Crafts Nicholas Timothy Leunig and Abay Mulatu Corrigendum Were British railway companies well managed in the early twentieth century Economic History Review 64 1 2011 351 356 online Dobrzynski Jan British railway tickets Bloomsbury 2013 Ellis Cuthbert Hamilton British Railway History An outline from the accession of William IV to the Nationalisation of Railways 1830 1876 vol 1 G Allen and Unwin 1954 Ellis Cuthbert Hamilton British Railway History An Outline from the Accession of William IV to the Nationalization of Railways 1877 1947 Vol 2 G Allen and Unwin 1959 see online review Farrington Karen Great Victorian Railway Journeys How Modern Britain Was Built by Victorian Steam Power 2012 Glynn John J The development of British railway accounting 1800 1911 Accounting Historians Journal 11 1 1984 103 118 online Gourvish Terence Richard Railways and the British economy 1830 1914 Macmillan International Higher Education 1980 Gourvish Terence Richard et al British Railways 1948 73 A business history Cambridge University Press 1986 Gourvish Terry British Rail 1974 1997 From Integration to Privatisation Oxford UP 2002 Gourvish Terence R A British Business Elite the chief executive managers of the railway industry 1850 1922 Business History Review 47 3 1973 289 316 Haywood Russell Railways urban development and town planning in Britain 1948 2008 Routledge 2016 Jenkins Simon Britain s 100 Best Railway Stations 2017 Leunig Timothy Time is money a re assessment of the passenger social savings from Victorian British railways Journal of Economic History 66 3 2006 635 673 online calculates railways accounted for 1 6 sixth of economy wide productivity growth in 1843 to 1912 Letherby Gayle and Gillian Reynolds Train tracks work play and politics on the railways Routledge 2020 Letherby Gayle and Gillian Reynolds Making connections the relationship between train travel and the processes of work and leisure Sociological Research Online 8 3 2003 32 45 McLean Iain The origin and strange history of regulation in the UK three case studies in search of a theory ESF SCSS Exploratory Workshop The Politics of Regulation 2002 online McLean Iain and Christopher Foster The political economy of regulation interests ideology voters and the UK Regulation of Railways Act 1844 Public Administration 70 3 1992 313 331 Maggs Colin Great Britain s Railways A New History Amberley 2018 Perkin Harold The age of the railway 1970 online Reid Douglas A The Iron Roads and the Happiness of the Working Classes The Early Development and Social Significance of the Railway Excursion Journal of Transport History 17 1 1996 57 73 Simmons Jack and Gordon Biddle eds The Oxford Companion to British Railway History From 1603 to the 1990s Oxford University Press 1997 online review Strangleman Tim Work identity at the end of the line privatisation and culture change in the UK rail industry Springer 2004 Turnock David An historical geography of railways in Great Britain and Ireland Routledge 2016 Vaughan Adrian Railwaymen Politics and Money the great age of railways in Britain John Murray 1997 online Vaughan Adrian Obstruction Danger Significant British Railway Accidents 1890 1986 Motorbooks International 1989 online Wojtczak Helena Railwaywomen Exploitation betrayal and triumph in the workplace Hastings Press 2005 Wragg David A Historical Dictionary of Railways in the British Isles Casemate 2009 Wragg David The Race to the North Rivalry amp Record Breaking in the Golden Age of Stream Pen and Sword 2013 Historiography restoration and memory edit Beeston Erin Spaces of Industrial Heritage a history of uses perceptions and the re making of Liverpool Road Station University of Manchester 2020 online Biddle Gordon British Railway History Jack Simmons Last Thoughts Journal Railway And Canal Historical Society 34 5 2003 324 326 online Boughey Joseph From Transport s Golden Ages to an Age of Tourism LTC Rolt Waterway Revival and Railway Preservation in Britain 1944 54 Journal of Transport History 34 1 2013 22 38 Boyes Grahame and Matthew Searle A Bibliography of the History of Inland Waterways Railways and Road Transport in the British Isles 2007 Interchange 39 2006 4 20 Burman Peter and Michael Stratton eds Conserving the railway heritage Taylor amp Francis 1997 Carter Ian ed British railway enthusiasm Manchester University Press 2017 Mom Gijs What kind of transport history did we get Half a century of JTH and the future of the field Journal of Transport History 24 2 2003 121 138 Reeves Christopher D Policy for conservation of heritage railway signal boxes in Great Britain Historic Environment Policy amp Practice 7 1 2016 43 59 online Strangleman Tim Constructing the Past Railway History from below or a Study in Nostalgia Journal of Transport History 23 2 2002 147 158 Taylor James Business in Pictures Representations of Railway Enterprise in the Satirical Press in Britain 1845 1870 Past amp Present 189 1 2005 111 145 cartoons unveiled big business as greedy and corrupt online Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of rail transport in Great Britain amp oldid 1217103388, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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