The Times End of the Line: British railway closures from 1948 to Beeching
By (Author) Julian Holland
By (author) Times Books
HarperCollins Publishers
Collins
13th October 2022
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
385.0941
Hardback
256
Width 219mm, Height 282mm, Spine 21mm
1280g
Covering the period from 1948 to 1996, The Times End of the Line chronologically traces the history of more than 400 long forgotten railway lines, region by region, from their opening to closure and a few cases to reopening.
For such a small country, Britain once possessed one of the most extensive rail networks in the world which, by the outbreak of the First World War, it had reached a peak of 23,440 route miles.
Two world wars and nationalisation of the railways brought about significant closures. Then on 27 March 1963 Dr Richard Beechings report, The Reshaping of British Railways, was published. This was the final nail in the coffin for Britains railways which eventually brought closure over the following years to a further 4,500 route miles, 2,500 stations and the loss of 67,700 jobs.
This comprehensive guide will be illustrated with regional maps and rare archive photographs, transporting the reader back to the era of steam when railways still played an important role in daily life.
If the author is Julian Holland, and the subject is railways, you know youre going to be in for a treat Cotswold Life
From a very young age Julian Holland has had a fascination with railways. He is a writer and photographer on many railway books, including the highly acclaimed and award winning The Times Mapping the Railways (2011), Exploring Britains Lost Railways (2013) and Great Railway Journeys of the World (HarperCollins, 2014).