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READING - 1915Broad Street, Reading
SALTASH - 1890Royal Albert Bridge, River Tamar, Saltash, Corwall
RYDE - 1908Ryde Pier
VENTNOR - 1908Ventnor Station, Isle of Wight
Chilham Station - 1909Chilham Station Kent
Earlswood Station - 1910Earlswood Station Surrey
Goldaming Station - 1907Goldaming Station Surrey
Barnstable Town - 1912Barnstable station North Devon
KINGSWOOD - 1926Kingswood Station Surrey
Dawlish Railway - 1906Dawlish seafront The Great Western Main Line Devon
GRANDLE - 1908Graydle Station
Monsalw Dale - 1915Monsale Dale Viaduct Derbyshire
FALMOUTH - 1906Landing stage Falmouth Cornwall
Bramley-Wonersh StationThe Bramley-Wonersh station Surrey
Churston Ferrers - 1906Churston Station Devon
Camberley Station - 1909Camberley Station Surrey
Lynmouth Lift - 1920Lynmouth lift Devon
Finchurst Station - 1908Finchurst Station Kent
Dawlish Warren - 1902Dawlish Warren Station Devon
Brimscombe - 1890Brimscombe Gloucestershire
Dawlish Warren Station Devon
Lynmouth Lift - 1908Lynmouth lift Devon
Milford Station - 1908Milford Station Surrey
Ashtead Station - 1913Ashtead station
Beddgelert South - 1925Welsh Highland Railway in Beddgelert, Gwynedd
Britannia Bridge - 1890Britannia Bridge, designed by Robert Stephenson
Babbacombe Cliff RailwayThe Babbacombe Cliff Railway which links Babbacombe Downs with Oddicombe Beach
Aberglaslyn - WalesView of Welsh Higland Railway at Aberglaslyn Pass
ASKRIGG - 1912View of Askrigg Yorkshire
Ashtead Station - 1910Ashtead Station
British army officers travelling to the French battlefrontA French artists impression of a group of British army officers travelling by rail to the Western front during the First World War
LILLIPUTIAN TRAINThe Lilliputian steam locomotive train, in its day the smallest in the world, on the Romney, Hythe and District Railway, Kent, England, being spruced up for the holidays
Invicta Steam EngineThe Invicta steam locomotive built by George Stephenson, used on the Canterbury and Whitstable Railway, the first regular steam passenger railway in the world
Hythe StationSmartly-dressed adults and children watch a steam train pulling out of Hythe station, near Folkestone, Kent
Mini Railway Ride 1940SA train on the miniature Ravensglass-Eskdale Railway, Cumberland, at the station, carries several carriages full of passengers
Sheep Block RoadDesperate French motorists in the early days of motoring come up against a flock of sheep on a country road : a passing train suggests its quicker by rail
The streamlined rail car for Great Western suburban trafficBritains first streamlined rail car. The rail cars were introduced for services between Reading and Slough. The shape came about from extensive wind resistance experimentation
Railway of the futureThe railway of the future, travelling 300 miles an hour. Mr E. W Chalmers Kearneys working model of his high speed railway, where, he claimed, 300 mph could be obtained in safety
Salisbury Rail CrashThe dining coach where most people perished in a train crash at Salisbury in 1906
RAIL / TUNNEL / 1831LIVERPOOL - MANCHESTER RAILWAY Inside a tunnel along the course of the historic rail link, opened in September 1830
Rail / St Helens / 1832LIVERPOOL - MANCHESTER RAILWAY The Intersection bridge on the St Helens & Runcorn Gap railway, crossing the Liverpool to Manchester line
Rail / Manchester / 1830LIVERPOOL - MANCHESTER RAILWAY A view of Water Street station, Manchester
Rail / Liverpool / 1830LIVERPOOL - MANCHESTER RAILWAY The railway office in Liverpool at Crown Street station
Rail / Wapping Tunnel / 1830LIVERPOOL - MANCHESTER RAILWAY Warehouses at the end of the Wapping Tunnel
Rail / Moorish Arch / 1830LIVERPOOL - MANCHESTER RAILWAY A Moorish style arch, looking from the Wapping Tunnel
Rail / Rainhill BridgeLIVERPOOL - MANCHESTER RAILWAY Rainhill Bridge, known as The Chairmans Bridge, built of sandstone
Rail / Olive Mount / 1831LIVERPOOL - MANCHESTER RAILWAY Excavation along the narrow two-mile cutting through the rock of Mount Olive
Roosevelt &railroad BillTHEODORE ROOSEVELT 26th American President and the Railroad Bill: " Must the donkey do all the work?"