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Books > Business & Economics > Industry & industrial studies > Transport industries > Railway transport industries > Railway trades
In Logomotive Ian Logan's photographs are assembled into chapters
and picture essays recalling the great days of lines such as the
Santa Fe, the Union Pacific, and the Kansas City Southern. Some of
his journeys are presented as travelogues in which he meets the Fat
Controller, gets to sound the horn, and wanders into freight yards
to see the last generation of streamline locomotives rusting amid
the weeds. Animal motifs, Native American allusions, advertising
slogans, names of famous trains such as the Super Chief and the
Wabash Cannonball provide the subject matter for other picture
features.
The increasingly busy lives of people in modern society cause a
high dependence on the transportation sector. Traffic congestion,
road maintenance, and a myriad of other problems have led
stakeholders to seriously examine alternatives to traditional road
traveling. Emerging Challenges and Opportunities of High Speed Rail
Development on Business and Society is an authoritative reference
source on the promising aspects of high speed railway
transportation to supplement road travel. Highlighting empirical
research, implementations plans, and future opportunities, this
book is ideally designed for government officials, researchers,
upper-level students, and technology developers working in the
field of transportation.
The British Rail corporate image and its Rail Blue livery was one
of the longest-lived colour schemes carried by the trains of
Britain in the forty-eight-year life of the nationalised railway
network. Launched in 1965, after Beeching, the then new corporate
image was an attempt by the BR design panel to raise the profile of
the railway system countrywide and to sweep away the dull steam-era
image as the swinging sixties got underway. By the mid-1970s,
virtually all BR locomotives and multiple units were carrying Rail
Blue livery, while most of the passenger coaches were in matching
blue/grey. As the British Rail network was sectorised from the late
1980s in preparation for eventual privatisation, new bold, bright
livery schemes for the fleet swept away the familiar, but by then
somewhat jaded BR image. The BR blue era is now looked upon with
affection as a golden age when the system was operated by an
immense variety of locomotives and rolling stock, all now part of
history in the same way that the steam era was viewed when the BR
blue era ruled on Britain's railways.
In 1977, the iconic Swindon Works was building locomotives. By
1986, it was shut down. In The End of the Line, Ron Bateman
recounts the fight to save Swindon Works, its 3,500 jobs and the
livelihood of the entire community it represented. Initially
joining through the Works Training School in 1977, Ron witnessed
this tragic struggle and the crushing blow dealt to the industry
that had defined Swindon for generations. Combining personal
recollections with information and interviews from many other
insiders and railmen, this book provides the only comprehensive
chronicle on the final decade of 147 years of railway engineering
and a fateful milestone in the history of Swindon.
Here, in a pictorial history, Jim Shaughnessy turns an eloquent
photographer's eye to the Delaware & Hudson, the line that
began in 1823 as a canal system to transport Pennsylvania coal to
New York State. The D&H extended from Montreal to the coal
fields of northeastern Pennsylvania. It was active for 170 years,
when the route was sold in 1993 to the Canadian Pacific Railway
Corporation. The line made early railroad fame by importing from
England the famous Stourbridge Lion, the first steam locomotive in
America. This occurred during a great expansion into gravity, an
interesting phase which took advantage of the mountainous terrain.
The nineteenth century saw a period of economic growth and
amalgamation, which was shaped by extremely able and ambitiou
company presidents. Eventually the D&H advertised itself as
"the Bridge Line to New England and Canada." Mountainous terrain
around the coal mines challenged the line with heavy grades, so it
was natural for one of its presidents, L. F. Loree, to be
fascinated with experimental traction power. The many Loree
locomotives, leaders in progressive design, are pictured and
described herein. Because a good railroad history is always an
economic history of a region, this book will surely please
historian, too. Delaware & Hudson is a definitive work,
encompassing the mining of the region and detailing the steamboat
operations on Lakes George and Champlain. Syracuse University Press
is pleased to reissue this exemplary study of a railroad. Delaware
& Hudson has-and will-continue to raise the standards for all
future railroad books.
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