Coal and iron making first brought railways to what is now called South
Yorkshire. The industrial towns of Sheffield, Rotherham, Barnsley and
Doncaster attracted the Victorian pioneers, who built a myriad of often
competing lines to the collieries and factories. The carriage of people
was almost an afterthought, but once there was demonstrable demand, the
passenger routes followed, linking the growing centres of population and
connecting with the major cities in adjoining counties and further
afield. Perhaps most historically of all, the immense challenge of
piercing the Pennines at Woodhead was met with the construction of the
Great Central's line from Sheffield to Manchester, later famously
electrified and then regrettably closed. This photographic collection
presents a selection of images from across this diverse county from the
1970s to the present day, from the dying days of the pits to the era of
the internet-enabled trains of the twenty-first century. Many of these
pictures feature infrastructure and locations that have long since
disappeared from the railway map.