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9780007435999

The Times Mapping the Railways The Journey of Britain's Railways Through Maps from 1819 to the Present Day

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780007435999

  • ISBN10:

    0007435991

  • Edition: Reprint
  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2011-11-01
  • Publisher: Collins Geo
  • Purchase Benefits
List Price: $48.00

Summary

Follow the development, decline and later revival of Britain's railways through a unique collection of old and new maps, descriptions and photographs. The story outlines early ‘waggonways' through the rise of steam and dieselisation to today's electric trains. Over sixty railways maps; Railways appear in almost every type of map available throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Detailed Parliamentary plans were drawn up for hundreds of proposed railway schemes (many of which never got past the drawing board). Once built, the Ordnance Survey then plotted the lines onto their national maps of Britain. Cartographers such as John Barthomolew & Son, Cruchley and Bradshaw, were commissioned to draw vast numbers of railway maps during the boom years. Maps were produced as an aid to the management of the railways; to promote the railway companies' networks; and to enable passengers to plan their journeys, then understand the passing scene as they gazed from the carriage window. 30 mileposts describe the history of the railways; Alongside the maps are a series of ‘milepost' features which give a detailed description of key events and eras in the history of Britain's railways. The nineteenth century saw the foundations laid for our modern railway network, with huge building projects constructing thousands of miles of track, bridges, and tunnels. This expansion slowed in the early twentieth century as competition from the car and the lorry began to bite. The railways made an enormous contribution to the World Wars, then underwent massive re-equipment after nationalisation, before changing drastically following the famous ‘Beeching Report' of 1963. The modern era has seen an expansion of the network again, with the Channel Tunnel built, and branch lines closed in the 1960s re-opening for business in the later years of public ownership and the first two decades of the privatised railway.

Author Biography

Julian Holland (Author) : Julian Holland Specialist railway author , whose recent titles include The Lost Joy of Railways, Amazing and Extraordinary Railway Facts, and Discovering Scotland’s Lost Railways. David Spaven Rail consultant by profession, a geographer by background, and a railway enthusiast since childhood. Currently co-writing Waverley Route: The Life, Death and Re-Birth of the Borders Railway.

Supplemental Materials

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