A Historical Dictionary of Railways in the British Isles
By David Wragg
()
About this ebook
David Wragg
DAVID WRAGG has written many books on railway, aviation and defence subjects, including Wartime on the Railways, The Southern Railway Story, The LMS Story and The Steam Locomotive Story (all The History Press). He has also written on these subjects for The Sunday Telegraph, The Spectator and The Scotsman.
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A Historical Dictionary of Railways in the British Isles - David Wragg
Architect of mainline railway electrification, Sir Herbert Ashcombe Walker (1868-1949) has been regarded by many as one of the greatest railwaymen of all time, and was famous for ensuring that projects were always good value for money. (NRM BTC collection 3592/64)
First published in Great Britain in 2009 by
Wharncliffe Local History
an imprint of
Pen and Sword Books Limited,
47 Church Street, Barnsley,
South Yorkshire. S70 2AS
Copyright © David Wragg, 2009
ISBN: 978 1 844680 47 4
eISBN: 9781844683031
The right of David Wragg to be identified as
Author of this Work has been asserted by him
in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988.
A CIP catalogue record of this book is available from the
British Library.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a
retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical,
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CONTENTS
Acknowledgements
Introduction
A-Z Listing
THE HISTORICAL DICTIONARY
Chronology
Bibliography
Under Midland Railway ownership, the Belfast & Northern Counties Railway became the Northern Counties Committee, an arrangement continued by the LMS after grouping. This 2-6-4T locomotive was built by the LMS for the NCC in 1947, and is in working preservation today. (Irish Steam Railway Preservation Society)
Oliver Bulleid is remembered for his wide-bodied passenger carriages and for his air-smoothed Merchant Navy, Battle of Britain and West Country locomotive classes, but he left after nationalisation, angered by the rebuilding of his locomotives. (NRM 119/97)
When first opened in 1900, the Central London Railway, predecessor of today’s Central Line, used electric locomotives to haul its trains, as well as overhead wires in the sidings, but the locomotives caused vibration in buildings along the route. (London Transport Museum)
They were replaced by Britain’s first multiple unit trains in 1903, the ancestor of the modern tube train, using the third rail system in the tunnels until modernised and converted to the standard London third and fourth rail system in the late 1930s. (London Transport Museum)
Churchward was chief mechanical engineer for the Great Western before and after grouping and built Britain’s first Pacific locomotive, The Great Bear, although he is supposed never to have liked it and later converted it to a Castle-class 4-6-0. He also built 70-ft long carriages renowned for their comfort. (NRM 2086/76)
Double-deck trains seem an obvious way to carry more passengers without lengthening platforms, but the British loading gauge imposes limitations of its own. This is one of Bulleid’s two experimental double-deck electric multiple units, showing how upper and lower deck compartments were interleaved. (NRM 548/83)
An interior shot shows just how passenger accommodation was compromised with low headroom: in the foreground the steps to the upper level can just be seen. Ventilation on the upper deck was another problem. (NRM 58/98)
The East Coast Main Line was developed by three different companies, the Great Northern, North Eastern and the North British, later joined by the Midland, but collaboration ensured seamless end to end running and later its own dedicated passenger rolling stock. This is a 1922 advertisement. (Bradshaw)
Nor were services between London and Scotland the sole aim, as Edinburgh and Newcastle were linked to the South Coast and South Wales, and with Truro and Penzance in Cornwall, something which later saw close collaboration between the LNER and the GWR. (Bradshaw)
Although the speed record was unofficial, later verification suggests that the GWR 4-40 locomotive, City of Truro, really was the first to run at more than 100 mph. She was also amongst the first to be preserved at York, seen there in 1938. (HMRS ACW234)
The supreme accolade for any locomotive designer must be to have one of his creations named after him, and this is Sir Nigel Gresley with the eponymous A4 locomotive. (NRM DON/313)
Even during the 1930s, Britain’s railways were being challenged by their European, and especially German, counterparts in terms of high speed scheduled services, but the speed record of 126 mph set by Gresley’s famous A4 Pacific Mallard, remains unbroken by a steam engine. (HMRS AEU 528)
Many years later, the Inter-City 125 or High Speed Train, also set a world speed record for diesel traction, which remains unbroken. (GNER/Rail Images)
An engraving showing the London & Blackwall Railway shortly after its opening. It reputedly ran over 700 arches. The carriages were low-slung to prevent them toppling over the viaduct. (London Transport Museum)
‘Lynton for Lynmouth’, the country-end of the Lynton & Barnstaple narrow gauge railway, one of the very few lines to be closed by the Southern Railway. (HMRS AAC127)
Sir James Milne guided the Great Western through the difficult years of the Second World War, and afterwards wisely decided to retire rather than work for the nationalised railway. (NRM 446/62)
The sparse population has always made railway operation in Ireland less profitable than in Great Britain, which is one reason why this Great Southern & Western Railway locomotive remained in service from 1879 until 1964, serving the GSWR’s successor, the Great Southern Railways after Irish grouping in 1925, and finally, CIE. (Irish Steam Railway Preservation Society)
Unlike many railways, the Great Western was very concerned about branch line service, and in an attempt to improve their appeal and their economics, introduced a fleet of diesel railcars, such as this. These were also expected to improve competition with local bus services. (HMRS M20002)
The most obvious aspect to the public of the railways involvement in shipping was their ferry services. At the top end of these was the Southern Railway’s ferry Canterbury, an all first-class ship devoted solely to the passengers of the ‘Golden Arrow’ Pullman train and its French counterpart, the Fleche d’Or. (NRM BTC collection 305/59)
The Southern Railway created the world’s largest electrified system, with most of the work completed between grouping and the outbreak of the Second World War. This is Guildford in August 1939, with trains running to London Waterloo, left via Cobham, centre, on the direct line with an up fast from Portsmouth Harbour running via Woking, and right, via Aldershot and Ascot. (NRM Box 512)
Sir William Stanier standing beside his locomotive No.10000, an early attempt at streamlining, in 1930. Later, this number was used for the prototype LMS diesel-electric locomotive. (SCM 11502/74)
The most ambitious of the ferries were the train ferries that carried the Southern Railway’s through sleeping car service from London Victoria to Paris Nord, ‘without change en route’ as the advertisement in Bradshaw states. (Bradshaw)
One of the greatest father and son partnerships ever was that of George Stephenson, pictured, and his son Robert, but the working relationship came under strain as the father failed to keep in step with developments. (NRM BTC 643/56)
Like his father, Robert Stephenson worked closely with Hudson, the ‘Railway King’. (NRM BTC 255/69)
The West Coast Main Line was another joint venture, although just the London & North Western and the Caledonian Railways were involved in this 1922 timetable, when corridor carriages were still something to boast about. (Bradshaw)
Acknowledgements
In writing any book such as this, an author is always indebted to those who help with such important matters as, for example, the quest for photographs. In this case, I am especially grateful to Mr A E W ‘Bert’ Colbourn of the Historic Model Railway Society for the use of their considerable archive of material, while thanks are also due the staff of the National Railway Museum at York.
Introduction
The railways were one of the many great influences that shaped not just our country, but many others as well, making travel easier and cheaper than ever before, and not just travel: not only did the railways dramatically cut the cost of moving goods, they created whole new markets and broadened the range of products available to the consumer, bringing fish and dairy products daily to the big cities while they were still fresh. The cities themselves were able to grow, thanks to the railways. In 1920, Golders Green, on the Northern Line in London, was a muddy crossroads, but for well over half-a-century it has been a prosperous but built-up suburb and shopping centre. Seaside resorts sprung up, again because of the railway.
In preparing a reference book on the history of railways, it is easy enough to know where to start, but where should one finish? One could stick to the mainland, but the Isle of Wight is part of England and was part of the London, Brighton & South Coast and London & South Western Railways, who operated not only the ferry from Portsmouth to Ryde jointly, but also the line between Rye Pier Head and Ryde St John’s, and then of course the entire system passed to the Southern Railway in 1923. Northern Ireland is part of the United Kingdom, but then too for most of the first hundred years of railways was the whole of Ireland, and in any case both the Midland Railway and the London & North Western Railway had lines on both sides of the Irish Sea, so obviously Ireland has to be included. Viewed in this light skipping the Isle of Man seems unfair, and it would be bizarre to include the Isle of Man and then exclude the Channel Islands, since the constitutional arrangements are similar.
There are several dictionaries that give railway technical terms, so this doesn’t need to be another, except for such curiosities as wheel notation, for example, so it is easier to deal with the mass of railway companies, the prominent figures in the development of our railway system, and the impact of the railways on some of the major centres in the British Isles.
Then which period should be covered? Since this is a book on history, perhaps a good place to stop would be the privatised railway, not least because so many of the franchises change every seven years or so, and sometimes less if the franchisee runs into difficulties.
In fact, few books, if any, have covered railways in every corner of the British Isles, giving an overview of railway operation not just in England, Scotland and Wales, or even of Ireland as well, but also the Isle of Man, Jersey and Guernsey. In each case, public railways have been the defining characteristic, so private railways have been dropped, as have the German occupation lines in Jersey. On the other hand, matters such as the role of the railways in wartime, and major accidents, have also been included. A chronology at the end provides a list of the major events in railway history in the British Isles, and there is a select bibliography for further reading.
Readers’ Note
Please note that within each A-Z entry any items featured in other listings (crossreferences) are shown in bold type when mentioned for the first time.
A–Z Listing
Aberdeen
Accidents (in chronological order)/Accident Investigation
Clayton Tunnel; Staplehurst; Abergele; Wigan; Abbots Ripon; Tay Bridge; Penistone; Armagh; Preston; Wellingborough; Salisbury; Grantham; Shrewsbury; Hawes Junction; Aisgill; Quintinshill; Abermule; Sevenoaks; Charfield; Battersea Park; Castlecary; Norton Fitzwarren; Bethnal Green; Harrow; Princess Victoria; Lewisham; Hither Green; Moorgate; King’s Cross; Clapham Junction.
Adams, William
Advanced Passenger Train (APT)
Air Transport and Railways
Alexandra (Newport & South Wales) Docks & Railway
Allen, Cecil J
Allport, Sir James Joseph
Arrol, Sir William
Ashfield, Albert Henry Stanley, Lord
Aspinall, Sir John Audley Frederick
Baker, Sir Benjamin
Baker, William
Baker Street & Waterloo Railway/Bakerloo Line
Ballycastle Railway
Barlow, Peter William
Barlow, William Henry, 1812-1902
Barry Railway
Beattie, J H
Beeching, Lord
Belfast & County Down Railway
Belfast & Northern Counties Railway
Belfast, Holyrood & Bangor Railway
Big Four
Birmingham
Birmingham & Derby Junction Railway
Birmingham & Gloucester Railway
Bishop’s Castle Railway
Blackfriars
Blackpool
Blyth & Tyne Railway
Board of Trade
Boat trains
Bombing
Bonsor, Sir H Cosmo, Bt
Booth, Henry, 1788-1869
Bouch, Sir Thomas, 1822-80
Bournemouth
Bradshaw, George
Bradshaw’s Railway Guide
Brampton Railway(s)
Brassey, Sir Thomas
Brecon & Merthyr Tydfil Junction Railway
Brighton
Bristol
Bristol & Exeter Railway
Bristol & Gloucester Railway
British Railways/British Rail
British Transport Commission
Broad Street
Brunel, Isambard Kingdom
Bulleid, Oliver Vaughan Snell
Burry Port & Gwendraeth Valley Railway
Bus services
Caledonian Railway
Callander & Oban Railway
Cambrian Railway
Camp Coaches
Canals
Cannon Street
Canterbury & Whitstable Railway
Cardiff
Cardiff Railway
Carmarthenshire Railway
Cavan & Leitrim Light Railway
Central London Railway/Central Line
Channel Tunnel
Charing Cross
Charing Cross Euston & Hampstead Railway
Chartered Institute of Transport
Cheshire Lines Committee
Chester & Holyhead Railway
Churchill, Viscount
Churchward, George Jackson
Circle Line
City & South London Railway
Clarence & Hartlepool Junction Railway
Cleobury Mortimer & Ditton Priors Light Railway
Club trains
Cockermouth, Keswick & Penrith Railway
Collett, Charles, 1871-1952
Colne Valley & Halstead Railway
Commuting
Competition
Cook, Thomas, 1808-1902
Coras Iompair Eireann, CIE
Cork & Macroom Direct Railway
Cork & Muskerry (Light) Railway
Cork, Blackrock & Passage Railway
Cork Brandon & South Coast Railway
Cornwall Railway
Corris Railway
County Donegal Railways Joint Committee
Crewe
Cubitt, Sir William, Benjamin, Joseph, 1785-1861
Dean, William
Dearne Valley Railway
Derby
District Line
Docklands Light Railway
Doncaster
Donegal Railway
Double-Deck Trains
Dover
Drummond, Dugald, 1840-1912
Dublin & Belfast Junction Railway
Dublin & South Eastern Railway
Dundalk, Newry & Greenore Railway
Dundee & Arbroath Railway
Dundee & Newtyle Railway
East & West Yorkshire Junction Railway
East & West Yorkshire Union Railway
East Coast Main Line/ECML
East Lincolnshire Railway
Eastern Counties Railway
East Kent Light Railway
East Lancashire Railway
East London Railway
Edinburgh
Edinburgh & Dalkeith Railway
Edinburgh & Glasgow Railway
Edinburgh, Perth & Dundee Railway
Edmondson, Thomas
Electrification
Elliot, Sir John
Ellis, Cuthbert Hamilton
Ellis, John, 1789-1862
Euston
Exeter
Express trains
Fairbairn, Sir William
Fairbairn, Charles Edward
Fairlie, Robert Francis
Fay, Sir Sam
Fenchurch Street
Fenton, Sir Myles
Ferries and Shipping Services Rivers and estuaries; Cross-Channel and Irish Sea operations
Festiniog Railway
Forth Railway Bridge
Fowler, Sir Henry
Fowler, Sir John
Fox, Sir Charles, Sir Charles Douglas, Sir Francis
Freshwater, Yarmouth & Newport Railway
Furness Railway
Galbraith, William Robert
Galt, William
Geddes, Sir Eric Campbell
Giant’s Causeway, Portrush & Bush Valley Railway & Tramway
Gladstone, William Ewart
Gladstone’s Act
Glasgow
Glasgow & South Western Railway
Glasgow, Paisley, Kilmarnock & Ayr Railway
Glasgow Subway
Gloucester
Glyn, George Carr/Lord Wolverton
Glyn Valley Tramway
Golden Valley Railway
Gooch, Sir Daniel
Gooch, Thomas Longridge
Graham, George
Grand Junction Railway
Great Central Railway
Great Eastern Railway
Great North of England Railway
Great North of Scotland Railway
Great Northern & City Railway
Great Northern & Western Railway
Great Northern Railway
Great Northern Railway of Ireland
Great Southern & Western Railway (Ireland)
Great Southern Railways
Great Western Railway (1): 1837-1922
Great Western Railway (2): 1923-1947
Greathead, James Henry
Gresley, Herbert Nigel, later Sir
Grouping (Great Britain) 1923
Grouping (Irish Free State) 1925
Guernsey Railways & Tramways
Hackworth, Timothy
Hammersmith & City Railway
Hampstead Line/Hampstead & Highgate
Harrison, Sir Frederick
Hawksworth, Frederick
Headcodes
Hedley, William
High Speed Trains
Highland Railway
Historical Model Railway Society
Holborn Viaduct
Horncastle Railway
Hudson, George
Hughes, George
Huish, Mark
Hull
Hull & Barnsley Railway
Hull & Selby Railway
Humber Commercial Railway & Dock
Hurcomb, Cyril William/Baron Hurcomb of Campden Hill
Iarnrod Eireann, IE, 129
Inglis, Sir James Charles
Inverness & Perth Junction Railway
Irish North Western Railway
Irish Railway Clearing House
Isle of Man
Isle of Man Railway
Isle of Wight
Isle of Wight Central Railway
Isle of Wight Railway
Jersey Eastern Railway
Jersey Railway
Jubilee Line
Kent & East Sussex Railway
Kilmarnock & Troon Railway
Kilsyth & Bonnybridge Railway
King’s Cross
Kirtley, Matthew
Laing, Samuel
Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway
Lancashire, Derby & East Coast Railway
Lancaster & Carlisle Railway
Lauder Light Railway
Leeds
Leeds & Selby Railway
Leeds Northern Railway
Leek & Manifold Valley Light Railway
Leicester & Swannington Railway
Letterkenny & Burtonport Extension Railway
Liddell, Charles H
Light railways
Limited Expresses
Liskeard & Looe Railway
Listowel & Ballybunnion Railway
Liverpool
Liverpool & Manchester Railway
Liverpool Overhead Railway
Liverpool Street
Llanelly & Mynydd Mawr Railway
Lloyd George, David, Earl
Locke, Joseph
London
London & Birmingham Railway
London & Blackwall Railway
London & Croydon Railway
London & Greenwich Railway
London & North Eastern Railway
London & North Western Railway
London & South Western Railway
London Bridge
London, Brighton & South Coast Railway
London, Chatham & Dover Railway
London Electric Railway
London, Midland & Scottish Railway
London Passenger Transport Board/London Transport/London Transport Executive
London Tilbury & Southend Railway
Londonderry & Lough Swilly Railway
Longmoor Military Railway
Lynton & Barnstaple Railway
McAlpine, Sir Robert
McIntosh, John Farquharson
Mallard, 175
Manchester
Manchester & Birmingham Railway
Manchester & Leeds Railway
Manchester, Sheffield & Lincolnshire Railway
Manchester South Junction & Altrincham Railway
Mania
Mansell, Richard C
Mansfield Railway
Manx Electric Railway
Manx Northern Railway
Marylebone
Maryport & Carlisle Railway
Maunsell, Richard Edward Lloyd
Mawddwy Railway
Mersey Railway
Metro-land
Metropolitan District Railway
Metropolitan Railway
Mid-Suffolk Light Railway
Middleton Railway
Midland & Great Northern Joint Railway
Midland & South Western Junction Railway
Midland Counties Railway
Midland Great Western Railway
Midland Railway
Milne, Sir James
Ministry of/Department of Transport
Missenden, Sir Eustace
Monorail
Museums
Naming of trains
Nationalisation
National Union of Railwaymen
Neath & Brecon Railway
Neverstop Railway
Newcastle
Newcastle & Carlisle Railway
Nock, Oswald Stevens
Norfolk Railway
North & South Western Junction Railway
North British Railway
North Eastern Railway
North Lindsey Light Railway
North London Railway
North Midland Railway
North Staffordshire Railway
North Sunderland Railway
North Union Railway
Northern & Eastern Railway
Northern Counties Committee
Northern Ireland Railways
Northern Line
Notation of wheels
Nottingham & Grantham Railway
Nottingham Suburban Railway
Oakley, Sir Henry
Oxford, Worcester & Wolverhampton Railway
Padarn Railway
Paddington
Parliamentary Trains
Pearson, Charles
Peel, Sir Robert
Penzance
Piccadilly Line/Great Northern Piccadilly & Brompton Railway
Pick, Frank
Plymouth
Pole, Sir Felix
Police
Pollitt, Sir William
Port Talbot Railway & Docks
Portpatrick & Wigtownshire Joint Railway
Portsmouth
Post Office Railway
Preston
Preston & Wyre Railway
Princetown Railway
Race to the North
Racing Rivals
Railbuses and railcars
Railway Air Services
Railway Clearing House
Railway Companies Association
Railway Mania
Railways at War
Rainhill Trials
Ramsbottom, John
Raven, Sir Vincent Litchfield
Reading
Rhondda & Swansea Bay Railway
Rhymney Railway
Road-rail vehicles
Road Transport and the Railways
Robertson, General Sir (later Baron) Brian
Robinson, John George
Romney, Hythe & Dymchurch Railway
St Pancras
Scottish Central Railway
Settle & Carlisle Railway
Severn Tunnel
Shipping services
Shrewsbury & Hereford Railway
Shropshire & Montgomeryshire Light Railway
Shropshire Union Railways & Canal
Silver Arrow
Sleigo, Leitrim & Northern Counties Railway
Snaefell Mountain Railway
Snowdon Mountain Railway
Solway Junction Railway
Somerset & Dorset Joint Railway
South Devon Railway
South Eastern & Chatham Railways Managing Committee
South Eastern Railway
South Staffordshire Railway
South Wales Mineral Railway
South Wales Railway
Southampton
Southern Railway
Southwold Railway
Stamp, Sir Josiah Charles/Baron Stamp of Shortlands
Stanier, Sir William Arthur
Stephenson, George
Stephenson, Robert
Stirling, Patrick
Stockton & Darlington Railway
Stratford & Moreton Railway
Stratford-upon-Avon & Midland Junction Railway
Stroudley, William
Surrey Iron Railway
Swansea & Mumbles Railway
Swansea Harbour Trust
Szlumper, Albert W
Szlumper, Gilbert
Taff Vale Railway
Talyllyn Railway
Tay Bridge
Teign Valley Railway
Telford, Thomas
Thornton, Sir Henry Worth
Timoleague & Courtmacsherry Light Railway
Tottenham & Forest Gate Railway
Tralee & Dingle Light Railway
Transport Salaried Staffs’ Association
Trevithick, Richard
Ulster Transport Authority
Underground Electric Railways
Vale of Rheidol Light Railway
Van Railway
Victoria
Victoria Line
Volks Railway
Walker, Sir Herbert
Wantage Tramway
War and Railways: The First World, The Second World War
Waterford & Kilkenny Railway
Waterford, Limerick & Western Railway
Waterloo
Waterloo & City Railway
Watkin, Sir Edward
Wedgwood, Sir Ralph Lewis
Welshpool & Llanfair Light Railway
West Clare Railway
West Coast Main Line
West Cornwall Railway
West Highland Railway
West London and West London Extension Railways
West Midland Railway
West Somerset Railway
Weston, Clevedon & Portishead Light Railway
Wharncliffe, Lord/James Archibald StuartWortley-Mackenzie
Wheel, Axle Notation
1) Diesel and Electric
2) Steam
Whitby & Pickering Railway
Whitechapel & Bow Joint Railway
Whitelaw, William
Wirral Railway
Wrexham, Mold & Connah’s Quay Railway
Yerkes, Charles Tyson
York
York & North Midland Railway
York, Newcastle & Berwick Railway
Yorkshire Dales Railway
THE HISTORICAL DICTIONARY
A
Aberdeen
Prior to the advent of the railway, Aberdeen was isolated and the most reliable means of transport was by sea. Such was the enthusiasm for the new mode of transport that the Harbour Board made a site available close to the centre of the city for a terminus. While a prospectus was issued for the Aberdeen Railway as early as 1844, proposing a link with the Northern Junction Railway at Forfar, difficulties in construction with a viaduct collapsing and a bridge being swept away in a flood, as well as the financial crisis of 1848, meant that the line did not open until 1850.
Meanwhile, the Great North of Scotland Railway approached the city from the north, using much of the route of the Aberdeen Canal which was abruptly drained for the purpose. The GNSR did not share the Guild Street terminus of the AR but instead stopped at Waterloo Quay, 1½ miles away. It was not until 1867 that a connecting line through the Denburn Valley was completed and a joint station opened. This was replaced in 1915 by the present station, completed in sandstone.
The opening of the railway benefited both the fishing industry and agriculture, with Aberdeenshire farmers specialising in cattle fattening. Instead of sending live cattle by sea, butchered meat could be sent south by rail. Initially the city was reached from the south by the West Coast route, but after the completion of the bridges over the Forth and Tay, overnight fish and meat trains could reach the London markets at Billingsgate and Smithfield. A small network of commuter services was also established around Aberdeen, with workmen’s trains to the Stoneywood paperworks by 1870, and later a suburban service linking the city with Dyce, so that by the turn of a century, two million passengers a year were being carried. Nevertheless, these were short distance passengers and stations were close together, with eight in the six miles to Dyce, so the service was vulnerable when motorbus competition appeared after the First World War, and the suburban service ended in 1937.
Post nationalisation, many of the railway lines radiating from Aberdeen closed, with the exception of the line south to Dundee and Edinburgh and that to Inverness. Traffic through the port largely ended during the 1970s while road transport took over the fish traffic, and North Sea oil support vessels largely pushed most of the fishing fleet north to Peterhead. The oil business did bring some freight traffic, and in 1984 the station at Dyce re-opened both to serve the city’s airport and also an expanding suburb.
Accidents/Accident Investigation
The Railway Regulation Act 1840 required the railway companies to report all accidents no matter how minor involving personal injury to passengers, but not necessarily staff, to the Board of Trade, which had the duty to appoint inspectors with the power to enter and inspect railway premises, track and rolling stock, but strangely did not have the power at this stage to actually investigate an accident! Even the subsequent Railway Regulation Act 1842 did not authorise the inspectors, who, with one exception, were all serving or recently retired officers from the Royal Engineers, to investigate all accidents, only serious accidents had to be investigated, meaning those inflicting serious injury to a member of the public. Nevertheless, at the time accidents generally resulted in serious injury, simply because of the circumstances. Frail wooden bodies on brittle iron under-frames meant that even a minor collision could be serious, and this was compounded by the use of oil or gas-fired lighting within the carriages, a practice that persisted on some lines into the twentieth century. One essential provision of the 1842 Act was that no passenger-carrying railway line could be opened without the approval of an inspector. If an inspector was not satisfied, opening and operations could be delayed. The premature opening of a line before an inspector had given his approval made the railway company liable to a fine of £20 for each day of operation. This was a year’s pay for many a working man at the time. The inspector’s powers were used, with one of the most notable early cases being when the London & South Western Railway extended its line from Nine Elms to Waterloo in 1848. The inspector was concerned about the safety of one of the bridges and refused to allow the line to open as planned on 1 July, so opening was deferred for ten days.
Inevitably, when so much depended on the judgement of a single inspector, some veered on the side of caution. In 1850, the Manchester, Sheffield & Lincolnshire Railway, a predecessor of the Great Central, complained about an inspector’s recommendation that it should not be allowed to open Torksey Bridge, and was allowed to proceed once other engineers declared that the inspector had been over-cautious.
In 1880, it took an accident on a very short stretch of line opened by the Midland Railway in 1872, before it was discovered that this line, an important link in the network, had never been submitted for inspection. The company paid accumulated fines totalling £60,000 (more than £3 million today). Under pressure from the Board of Trade, the Midland acknowledged its error, ensured that the line was of a suitable standard and then sought a formal inspection, after which the BoT waived the fines.
The army officers on whom the burden of investigation fell were certainly far better qualified to investigate a railway accident than any intelligent layman, but they too had much to learn about the new sciences, brought into widespread use by the railways. Metallurgy was little understood, and non-destructive testing simply not available. The inspectors were helped in the case of boiler explosions by the Board of Trade seconding experts from its Marine Department. Then there was so much to discover about signalling and the management of a busy stretch of railway line. The inspectors were not above criticism, but they have been universally regarded as having been diligent and honest, and they built up a massive body of experience and expertise through their work. The reports were never secret and always presented to Parliament, and after 1860 they could be bought by the public. Yet, their recommendations remained no more than advice. It was also the case that sometimes a new precautionary device would resolve one danger, and yet introduce a new one that would not be immediately apparent until exposed by a further accident. This was trial and error, simply because so much had to be learnt. The system endured the passage of time, including grouping and nationalisation, so that officers of the Royal Engineers continued in this role until 1982.
In chronological order, the major accidents over the years have included:
Clayton Tunnel, London, Brighton & South Coast Railway, 25 August 1861:
Three trains left Brighton for London within a very short period of time. The signalling failed and allowed the second train to approach the southern end of the tunnel before the first had cleared it, and entered before the signalman could stop the train with a red flag. The signalman was given the all clear indicating that the first train had cleared the tunnel and assumed that the second was also through, but the driver had glimpsed the red flag and stopped before setting back to see if all was well. The signalman then gave the white flag, which on the LB&SCR meant ‘all clear’ to the third train, which entered the tunnel at full speed and collided with the second train as it reversed to the entrance, killing 21 passengers and injuring 176.
Staplehurst, South Eastern Railway, 9 June 1865:
A bridge carrying the line over a stream near Staplehurst was being repaired, with little signalling and the workmen judging from the timetable how much time they had between trains when replacing the bridge timbers. The foreman checked the schedule for the boat train for the wrong day, as timings varied because at the time the harbour at Folkestone was tidal, and had less time than expected. The boat train hit the bridge at full speed while some of the bridge timbers had been removed. The locomotive and first carriage crashed down onto the bridge girders and almost got across, but the coupling between the first and second carriages broke and the frail wooden carriage crashed down into the stream, breaking up, killing 10 persons and injuring another 49, all of which was witnessed by a notable passenger, Charles Dickens.
Abergele, London & North Western Railway, 20 August 1867:
At the time, trains worked by time interval rather than by fixed signals. At Llandulas a goods train was being shunted, and six wagons and a guard’s van sitting on the main line were accidentally bumped and sent down a gradient of 1 in 147: near Abergele they ran into the ‘Irish Mail’, paraffin barrels being carried in the last two wagons burst and the locomotive and four leading carriages of the express were drenched in paraffin, which was ignited by the firebox. No one on the locomotive or four leading carriages survived the resulting inferno, which killed 34.
Wigan, London & North Western Railway, 1 August 1873:
The night express from Euston to Scotland, double-headed with 24 four-wheeled carriages, was derailed as it passed through the station at 50mph, with the couplings breaking between the seventeenth and eighteenth carriages, while the locomotive pulled the rest of the carriages through the station trailing the derailed seventeenth carriage. The sparks from this alerted the driver of the second locomotive to the problem and he managed to stop the train. There was no continuous brake, and the last six carriages ran on unbraked, mounting the platform ramp and demolishing part of the station, while one landed upside down and collapsed, crushing its passengers. All in all, 13 were killed and 30 injured, possibly by the track widening out of gauge.
Abbots Ripon, Great Northern Railway, 21 January 1876:
A southbound coal train ran past signals frozen into the ‘clear’ position, but was stopped by hand lamp signals, but while being shunted off the main line, an express also raced through the frozen signal and into the back of the coal train. A northbound express then ran into the wreckage, scattered over both up and down lines. There were 13 killed and 24 injured.
Tay Bridge, North British Railway, 28 December 1879: see Tay Bridge.
Penistone, Manchester, Sheffield & Lincolnshire Railway, July 1884:
The locomotive axle broke on an express from Manchester to Grimsby and the severity of the jolt broke a defective coupling between the tender and the leading carriage, fitted with the non-automatic type of vacuum brake, leaving the train without any braking at all. While the locomotive and tender remained on the line, the carriages rolled over and down the embankment, killing 24 passengers and injuring more than 60.
Armagh, Great Northern Railway of Ireland, 12 June 1889:
A heavy and overcrowded excursion train was worked by a locomotive not powerful enough, and stalled on a 1 in 75 gradient, whereupon the driver decided to divide the train. The train was fitted with a non-automatic vacuum brake, and once uncoupled, the only brake available to these carriages was a handbrake. As it set off with the rest of the train, the locomotive slipped back slightly, bumped into the uncoupled carriages, knocked off the handbrake, and ten carriages with 600 passengers aboard began to run back down the gradient, where they ran into a second train running at around 25mph. In the collision, 78 passengers were killed and 250 injured, many of them children.
Preston, London & North Western Railway, 15 August 1896:
After the railway races to Scotland, schedules were very tight. The 8pm from Euston to Scotland was double-headed but neither driver had worked the train before or driven an express not booked to stop at Preston, where a sharp curve at the northern end had a 15mph speed restriction. The two drivers took the curve at around 50mph, derailing the entire train, but fortunately, thanks to the improved construction of rolling stock and the lack of any obstacle, only one person was killed.
Wellingborough, Midland Railway, 2 September 1898:
A barrow fell off a platform onto the line just as a St Pancras to Manchester express approached. The bogie of the locomotive was derailed, and the locomotive then struck a cross over, which completely derailed the locomotive which swung round blocking the path of the rest of the train, which crashed into it killing 7 persons.
Salisbury, London & South Western Railway, 30 June 1906:
With keen competition between the LSWR and the Great Western for the ocean liner traffic between Plymouth and London, speeds were high. After an engine change at Templecombe, the driver of an up-express ran through Salisbury station, which had sharp curves at both ends, at high speed and the train was derailed. Out of just 43 passengers aboard, 24 were killed.
Grantham, Great Northern Railway, 9 September 1906:
A down passenger and mail express from King’s Cross raced through the station instead of stopping, and then passed several signals at danger, before taking the junction with the line to Nottingham too fast. The locomotive tender derailed first, dragging the locomotive and the following carriages off the line, with most either wrecked or burnt out in the fire that followed, while 14 persons, including the enginemen, were killed. No explanation has ever been uncovered for this accident.
Shrewsbury, London & North Western Railway, 15 October 1907:
The night mail from Crewe to the West of England was due to stop and let a Great Western Railway locomotive take over from the LNWR one, which was driven around the tight curve on the station approach at around 60 mph, derailing itself and killing 18 people, including the footplatemen.
Hawes Junction, Midland Railway, 24 December 1910:
The signalman during the early hours was preoccupied with a large number oif light engine movements by banking locomotives that had assisted heavy trains to Aisgill summit. He forgot about two locomotives, coupled together to return to Carlisle, which he had moved on to the down main line. The midnight express from St Pancras to Glasgow approached under clear signals, and the crews of the two locomotives thought the signals were for them and moved off. They were overtaken by the express and in the resulting collision, cylinders containing compressed oil gas for carriage lighting burst open and caused a fire that killed 12 passengers. Track circuiting would have avoided this accident.
Aisgill, Midland Railway, 2 September 1913:
Two southbound sleeper expresses were given poor quality coal and steamed poorly as a result. The first raised so little steam that it could not operate the vacuum brake ejector, and the brakes engaged, stalling the train on a 1 in 100 gradient. The driver of the second train was so determined to force his train onwards that he misread the signals at Mallerstang, and in the darkness did not see anything ahead of him until it was too late, and he crashed into the rear carriage of the stalled train, causing fire to break out with the loss of 16 lives.
Quintinshill, Caledonian Railway, 22 May 1915:
The signalman due to start his shift at 6 am usually travelled on the 6.10 am down from Carlisle if he knew it was to be run into a siding at Quintinshill to allow the night express from Euston through. To cover up his late arrival, the night shift man would write the entries onto a piece of paper so that his colleague could copy them into the register after he arrived. On the day of the accident, the siding was occupied, so to clear the line for the express the local was run onto the up line. The signalman then forgot about the local, which he had just travelled on, and concentrated on transferring the paper entries into the register. He accepted an up troop special, and gave the all-clear. He then accepted the London to Glasgow and Edinburgh express. The troop train collided with the local train and the wreckage was immediately torn into by the express from London, which was double-headed. Fire broke out, and it is believed that 227 were killed and 246 injured, but the exact death toll will never be known as the military records were destroyed in the fire.
Abermule, Cambrian Railway, 26 January 1921:
On a single line section, one driver was given the single line tablet for the wrong section, which he failed to check. His train met an up-express from Aberystwyth, colliding head-on, with the loss of 17 lives and another 36 people injured.
Sevenoaks, Southern Railway, 24 August 1927:
The old South Eastern & Chatham Railway lines were often ballasted with shingle from the beach at Dungeness, which were round and smooth and did not offer stability, especially when wet. The K-class 2-6-4 tank engines were also known to roll dangerously. An express from Cannon Street to Dover hauled by one such engine started to roll and then derailed on the curve between Dunton Green and Sevenoaks, with a Pullman car striking the central pier of a bridge and jamming itself across the track, so that the rest of the carriages piled up against it. This accident killed 13 persons and injured anothet 61.
Charfield, London, Midland & Scottish Railway, 10 December 1937:
A Leeds to Bristol mail train was running at full speed as a goods train was being shunted into a siding. The enginemen on the mail were sure that the distant signal showed clear and hit the goods train under an overbridge, where the carriages piled up and the resultant fire burned for twelve hours, killing 15 people.
Battersea Park, Southern Railway, 2 April 1937:
The lock and block system used on the busy Southern lines was modified to allow a signalman to free the interlocking if the apparatus failed to reduce delays to traffic. When the signalman at Battersea found himself in difficulty, he cleared his instrument on the up local line, allowing a train to come forward into a section already occupied: in the resulting collision between two electric multiple unit trains, 10 people were killed and another 80 injured.
Castlecary, London & North Eastern Railway, 10 December 1937:
Points choked with snow meant that a goods train could not be diverted into a siding, and a Dundee to Glasgow train behind it ran past signals in a heavy snow storm, but managed to stop, although its last carriage was out of sight of the signal box. The signalman assumed that it had run straight through, forgetting about the obstruction on the line, and accepted an express from Edinburgh to Glasgow, which was running too fast for the conditions, which ran into the back of the train from Dundee and in the collision, 35 persons were killed and 179 injured.
Norton Fitzwarren, Great Western Railway, 4 November 1940:
The Great Western was one of the pioneers of automatic train control, although its system allowed the locomotive driver to cancel a warning, retaining full control of the train if he decided that an emergency brake application was unnecessary.
On the night of 4 November 1940, the driver of an overnight passenger train from Paddington to the West of England was routed onto the down relief line as he was running late. On the GWR, drivers sat on the right hand side of the cab, and the driver thought that the signals on the main line, set at ‘clear’ for a down newspaper train, were for his train, but the signals for the relief line were set at danger. When the alarm sounded, he cancelled it. The newspaper train began to overhaul his train and the two trains passed as they ran through the station. Only then did the driver of the passenger train realise his mistake and apply the brakes. A trap point took the relief line running into a dead end with soft ground on the other side. Although the driver braked hard there was not enough room for him to stop, and his locomotive ploughed into the soft ground and six of the carriages behind it were derailed, scattering over the tracks.
As with most wartime trains, there was severe overcrowding with an estimated 900 passengers on the train, of whom 27 were killed and another 75 injured.
Bethnal Green, London Passenger Transport Board, 3 March 1943:
The worst loss of life on the British railway system of the war years had little to do with enemy action. The still unopened Central Line station at Bethnal Green was being used as an air raid shelter, and as the warning sounded, the local population headed for what they thought would be safety. A woman carrying a baby tripped as she went down a short staircase of just nineteen steps, with the press of those behind meaning that others fell. Within a few minutes 173 people, 62 of them children were killed by suffocation and crush injuries.
Harrow, British Railways, 8 October 1952:
The up-Perth sleeping car express was running late on a misty morning while the low-sun made it difficult for the driver and fireman to see the signals, which they overran at speed and collided with a local train sitting in the station. A down Euston to Manchester and Liverpool express ran into the wreckage, knocking down a footbridge and scattering carriages over a platform on which people were waiting for a Bakerloo tube train. At least 122 persons were killed.
Princess Victoria, British Railways, 31 January 1953:
One of the first drive-on/drive-off car ferries, Princess Victoria left Stranraer for Larne in a bad storm. As she made her crossing, water started to enter the vehicle deck and as she rolled in the storm, surged across the deck. Her engines failed and she signalled that she was ‘not under command’. Despite a Royal Navy destroyer being sent to her aid, she sank, with the loss of 133 out of the 177 persons aboard, including her master and three prominent Ulster politicians, with just 34 passengers and ten crew surviving.
Lewisham, British Railways, 4 December 1957:
The driver of a Cannon Street to Ramsgate express was so concerned about the steaming of his locomotive that he overran two caution signals at full speed and did not brake until he had passed a red, crashing into the back of an electric multiple unit suburban train stopped at a signal under the flyover carrying the Nunhead line. The steam locomotive then struck the columns of the flyover, which collapsed on top of the wreckage, contributing to the 90 lives lost.
Hither Green, British Railways, 5 November 1967:
The line from Charing Cross to Hastings required special narrow-body rolling stock, and until electrified had diesel multiple units. One evening a down train was derailed by a broken rail, killing 49 people and injuring another 78. The casualty figures would have been far higher but for it being a Sunday evening on this busy commuter line.
Moorgate, London Transport, 28 February 1975:
An early morning Northern Line tube train on the City & Northern Branch ran into the station at full speed, overshot and went into the sand drag at the end and, still in tunnel, hit the cul-de-sac wall at the end, the first two carriages concertinaed. There were 43 persons killed and another 74 injured. The cause of the crash has never been fully explained.
King’s Cross, London Transport, 18 November 1987:
A small fire under an up escalator from the Piccadilly Line platforms developed gradually over fifteen minutes until there was a sudden flash-over and a fireball swept up the escalator and into the booking hall which was below street level. The complex nature of the underground station meant that trains continued to arrive and disgorge passengers for some minutes after the fire started. In the inferno, 31 people died. It was later concluded that the fire had been started when a burning cigarette end was dropped through the escalator steps and it ignited grease, dust and rubbish under the escalator. A smoking ban was introduced on all London Underground trains and stations as a result.
Clapham Junction, British Railways, 12 December 1988:
A train had been brought to a stand on a stretch of line recently re-signalled while the signal behind the train continued to show clear. The stretch of track had a tight curve and the driver of the following up train from Bournemouth could not see the stopped train, and ran into it at high speed. This very busy section of line had quadruple tracks, arranged fast up, on which the accident occurred, fast down, slow up and slow down, and wreckage was scattered across adjoining tracks from the accident on the fast up, with a fast down train running into it, while a slow down to Portsmouth only just missed being hit. The cause was found to be a loose wire in the signal. The accident cost 35 lives and another 70 passengers were injured.
Adams, William, 1823-1904.
Starting his career as a marine engineer, Adams helped build the North London Railway works at Bow, becoming their locomotive superintendent in 1858. In 1863, he invented the Adams bogie, which moves sideways while restrained by springs as well as pivot, and which allowed locomotives to enter curves more quickly and smoothly. He moved to the Great Eastern Railway in 1873 and in 1878 to the London & South Western Railway, staying there until ill health forced him to retire in 1895. His locomotives for the LSWR were elegant and economical in both fuel and maintenance, initially with outside cylinders, but he later adopted front-coupled locomotives. He introduced the ‘Vortex’ blast pipe, invented by his nephew Henry. His outstanding locomotives included 4-4-0s for expresses and mixed traffic, and 4-4-2 tanks for suburban services, although he was also famous for long-lasting 0-4-4 tanks, a number of them lasting in daily service on the