Which was the first railway in Great Britain? Certainly not the one
engineered by George Stephenson - one of the first was laid down at
Wollaton, near Nottingham, open by 1610, long before Stephenson's birth
in 1781. In this comprehensive history, Colin Maggs, one of the
country's foremost railway historians, tells the story of over 400 years
of British railway history. He covers early horse and gravity-worked
lines to those powered by steam, electricity and diesel. The development
of locomotives, rolling stock, signalling and major accidents - often
marking major changes in how the network was run - are all described in
detail. Pivotal moments including the Amalgamation of 1923 when most
railway companies became part of the GWR, LMSR or LNER, nationalisation
and privatisation are set in their historical context. Colin Maggs also
ventures his views on where Britain's railways will go in the future,
including HS2 and beyond. Great Britain's Railways is illustrated with
more than 200 photographs of rolling stock, railway architecture and
period ephemera.