Midland Railway
From Railways
The Midland Railway (MR) was a railway company in the United Kingdom which existed from 1844 to 1922. It was formed in 1844 by the merger of the Midland Counties Railway, the North Midland Railway, and the Birmingham and Derby Junction Railway.
The Midland Railway owned a large network of railway lines centred on the East Midlands, and its head offices were in Derby. The MR's main line known unsurprisingly as the Midland Main Line connected London St Pancras to the East Midlands and to Sheffield Midland station. The company also owned a main line connecting the East Midlands to Birmingham and Bristol and a main line connecting Derby to Manchester. In the 1870s a dispute with the London and North Western Railway over access rights to the LNWR line to Scotland caused the MR to construct the Settle and Carlisle (S&C) line, the highest main line in England, in order to secure the company's access to Scotland; ironically the dispute with the LNWR was settled before the S&C was built, but Parliament refused to allow the MR to withdraw from the project. They also owned a number of less important lines.
The MR pioneered the use gas lighting of trains in Britain, put third-class carriages on all its trains in 1872, and abolished second-class in 1875 (giving 3rd class passengers the level of comfort formerly afforded to 2nd class passengers -- elsewhere some 3rd class passengers travelled in open wagons) and introduced the first British Pullman supplementary-fare cars. The non-contiguous numbering of classes, with 1st and 3rd class only, continued until 1956, when 3rd class was renamed 2nd.
The company was "Grouped" into the London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS) on January 1, 1923.
[edit] Component Companies
During its lifetime the Midland Railway absorbed the following companies :
- Barnoldswick Railway
- Bedford and Northampton Railway
- Birmingham and Gloucester Railway
- Birmingham West Suburban Railway
- Blackwell Railway
- Bristol and Gloucester Railway
- Dore and Chinley Railway
- Dursley and Midland Junction Railway
- Evesham and Redditch Railway
- Guiseley, Yeadon and Rawdon Railway
- Hemel Hempstead Railway
- Hereford, Hay and Brecon Railway
- Keighley and Worth Valley Railway
- Leeds and Bradford Extension Railway
- Leeds and Bradford Railway
- Leicester and Swannington Railway
- London, Tilbury and Southend Railway
- Manchester, Buxton, Matlock and Midland Junction Railway
- Mansfield and Pinxton Railway
- Midland and South Western Junction Railway
- Morecambe Harbour and Railway Company
- North Western Railway
- Redditch Railway
- Sheffield and Rotherham Railway
- Stonehouse and Nailsworth Railway
- Swansea Vale Railway
- Syston and Peterborough Railway
- Tewkesbury and Malvern Railway
- Ticknall Tramway
- Tottenham and Forest Gate Railway
- Wolverhampton, Walsall and Midland Junction Railway
- Wolverhampton and Walsall Railway
It also absorbed the Marple, New Mills and Hayfield Railway jointly with the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway
[edit] External links
| Major constituent railway companies of the London, Midland and Scottish Railway: |
Caledonian |
Furness |
Lancashire & Yorkshire |
Glasgow & South Western |
London and North Western |
Midland |
North Staffordshire |
|
