Description

As towns and cities rose and fell in dominance and road transport became a heavy contender, many railway lines were closed during the twentieth century. Though much of their architecture is lost, countless clues to our railway past still remain, in the form of embankments, cuttings, tunnels, converted wayside buildings and old railway furniture such as signal posts. Ghosts of the disused routes are preserved in the form of cycle tracks and footpaths.
This colourfully illustrated book helps you decipher these features and understand their original functions, revealing the hidden history of railways written across the landscape. It demonstrates how old routes can be traced on maps, their effect on the landscape and the history which can be revealed by tracing their often apparently obscure remains on the ground, helping you to follow the tracks of our railway past.

Table of Contents

The Railway in the Landscape
Keeping a Level Track
Serving the Community
Industrial Remains
Signalling
Trackside Furniture
Further Reading
Places to Visit
Index

Product details

Published 19 Mar 2020
Format Paperback
Edition 1st
Extent 64
ISBN 9781784423711
Imprint Shire Publications
Illustrations Fully illustrated throughout
Dimensions 210 x 149 mm
Series Shire Library
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Author

Trevor Yorke

Trevor Yorke is a professional author and artist w…

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