[326] | TITLES ON RAILWAYS IN BOOK FORMAT | |
| An illustrated survey of the North Staffordshire Railway. | |
| This book has been produced by several enthusiasts working under the collective title of LDR Publications. Its purpose has been simply to make available, to a larger public, part of a comprehensive collection of Black and White photographs of the Swansea area which spam the years from ... | |
| To accompany the popular range of Vanishing World Steam video programmes that spotlight Chinese steam in action, Tele Rail are proud to announce this second lavishly illustrated book featuring stunning colour photographs of Chinese steam, from the collections of the following internationally ... | |
| A witty and nostalgic look at the history of railways, first published in 1964, now available again, for the ideal Christmas gift. For conventional historians, the classic 1066 and All That provided an entertaining alternative account of British history; however, its authors committed the cardinal ... | |
| This is the Second Edition of this book which was first published in 2000 as a companion to the earlier volume London's Disused Underground Stations. | |
| After more than 15 years, Ian Allan re-enters the market for enthusiast 'platform end' books with a brand new annual title listing all the rolling stock operated by UK rail companies by accomplished railway author Colin Marsden, who is also the editor of the popular Modern Locomotives Illustrated ... | Expected: 28th February 2010 |
| This album is a picture history of the heads of the valleys Railways. Remembered fondly by many, it details the severe gradients and unique locomotives that worked the lines. The remarkable feats of victorian engineering, built with a pick and shovel and little else, adorn many pages. From the series Country Railway Routes | |
| The journey begins at Basaleg Junction and runs close to the Ebbw River in the deepening Ebbw Vale. The scenic views are interspersed by fascinating panoramas of collieries long gone, together with pictures of the varied railway architecture employed. The locomotives and trains from a bygone age ... From the series Welsh Valleys | |
| The British Railways Modernisation Plan of 1955 called for the introduction of 25kv AC (alternating current) services over the West Coast main line. The first section of this was energised in 1959. Over the next four decades, the 25kv network expanded, culminating in the electrification of the East ... | |
| The history of this little-known GWR line has never been the subject of a full monograph before, and it is therefore the local history of a particularly attractive part of rural Warwickshire. The book is a collaborative venture between local railway enthusiast Roger Carpenter, who has spent many ... | |
| This is the story of a now-disused branch of the Underground between Holborn and Aldwych. Although just a quarter of a mile long, it was a hopeless enterprise from the early 20th century beginnings and never covered its costs. For such a small stretch of railway, it has a surprisingly colourful ... | |
| Drawing on the extensive archives of the Great Western Railway now housed in Steam: Museum of the Great Western at Swindon, Tim Bryan gives a portrait of life as a railway worker during the age of steam. While to the outsider, particularly to the aspiring engine driver, life on the railways may ... | |
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