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Railway Workshops (Paperback)
Loot Price: R226
Discovery Miles 2 260
You Save: R17
(7%)
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Railway Workshops (Paperback)
Series: Shire Library
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List price R243
Loot Price R226
Discovery Miles 2 260
You Save R17 (7%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 19 working days
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This is the story of an industry that began in the North of
England, with small engineering concerns building engines that
powered early railways like the Stockton and Darlington and
Liverpool & Manchester. Once railway companies had become
firmly established, the industry expanded dramatically as they set
up their own engineering workshops to build and maintain not only
locomotives, but also carriages, wagons and all manner of other
items of equipment.
Locations like Crewe, Derby, Doncaster, Eastleigh and Swindon soon
became famous as 'Railway Towns' with new communities growing up
alongside the extensive railway workshops, housing the thousands of
men and their families. The scale of these operations was enormous,
with works running as self-contained establishments, complete with
their own foundries, machine shops, erecting shops, woodworking and
carriage body shops. Supporting all this were huge office and
design complexes, electric and hydraulic power stations and other
associated activities.
Alongside the works operated by the mainline railways was a large
and important private industry, with famous names like Beyer
Peacock, North British, Robert Stephenson & Hawthorns and
Vulcan Foundry building engines not only for domestic use, but
exporting British railway locomotives and rolling stock all over
the world.
At their height British workshops were turning out over 2000
locomotives a year, for railways at home and abroad, and after the
Second World War more than 47,000 people were still employed in
workshops run by the nationalised British Railways, with a further
13,000 still working for private firms. The dramatic changes to the
railway industry since 1945, which have included the decline of
steam and its replacement by diesel and electric power, the BR
Modernisation Plan, and the eventual privatisation of British Rail
have had a profound effect on the railway workshop industry. But
the shadow of the workshops is a long one, and in many towns and
many families they have left an indelible mark.
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