Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

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Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 162,258 pages of information and 244,500 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Caledonian Railway

From Graces Guide
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Train on fire at Abingdon. Picture published in 1894.
1868. Designed by Benjamin Connor.
1873-4.
1874-7.
1877.
1895.
1897.
1899. Express Locomotive designed by Dugald Drummond, constructed by Neilson and Co.

‎‎

Lakehall And Stonehouse Viaduct. 1905.
1905. Four coupled express locomotive engine by John McIntosh.
December 1906.
1908.
June 1909.
August 1911.
1917.
February 1918.
1921.
1923.
January 1923.
January 1923.
1925.

of 302 Buchanan Street, Glasgow.

The Caledonian Railway was a major Scottish railway company operating in Scotland.

It was formed in the early 19th century and it was absorbed almost a century later into the London, Midland and Scottish Railway, in the 1923 railway grouping, by means of the Railways Act 1921. Due to legal complications this did not take place on 1 January 1923 when the majority of the amalgamations took place, but was delayed until 1 July 1923 (along with the North Staffordshire Railway).

The company was well supported by Glasgow and Edinburgh shareholders, however more than half of its shares were held in England. It was an integrated railway company, in that it built and owned both the railway lines and the trains. It had a locomotive works, St. Rollox Works, in Springburn, Glasgow, which became part of British Rail and is currently still in use, as a railway maintenance depot.

A railway link from London to the north of England was developed in piecemeal fashion. From about 1838 the London and Birmingham Railway had linked those two destinations; the Grand Junction Railway linked Birmingham to Warrington; the North Union Railway was projected to reach Preston; and the Grand Junction Railway intended to extend the line to both Glasgow and Edinburgh. They got their engineer Joseph Locke to survey a route from Carlisle. The obvious way was to follow Thomas Telford's coach road through Annandale and Clydesdale

The company was formed in the 1830s to link local railways around Glasgow and Edinburgh to the railway network in England, at Carlisle. It sought to open the only cross-border main line (it was thought that only one main line was needed). Its empire was then extended to cover the triangle: Glasgow, Stirling and Edinburgh; and later reached out to serve Oban, Ballachulish, Dundee, Perth and Aberdeen.

1845 Company was incorporated.

1847 Line integrated in the Caledonian opened as follows;-[1]

  • Carlisle to Beattock, September 10th, 1847;
  • Beattock to Edinburgh and Carstairs to Garriongill, February 15th, 1848;
  • Garnqueen South Junction to Greenhill was opened on August 7th, 1848;
  • Greenhill to Perth, May 22nd, 1848;
  • Perth to Forfar on August 2nd, 1848;
  • Guthrie to Ferryhill, outside Aberdeen, was opened April 1st, 1850;
  • The stretch from Perth to Dundee was opened May 24th 1847;

Extract from 1847 article [2] :-

'The manner in which the pieces of rock, after being blasted or quarried out of their obdurate bed, are conveyed out of the way, is one of the most curious parts of the operations. Two inclined planes of planks, at a slope very little removed from the perpendicular, run from the top the bottom of the cutting. Above are ponderous frames over which ropes pass, one end fastened to a wheel barrow, the other secured to a couple of horses. When a barrowful of stuff is ready a navy fixes the rope firmly to the borrow, secures the load from falling by an extra board, and grasping the handles of his barrow in vice fashion, allows himself, barrow and all, to be drawn up by the horses above; emptying it of its contents, he descends in a similar way, running his barrow down, the horses pulling back and preventing undue acceleration in the hazardous descent. On the lower part of the cutting there are eight machines drilling holes for blasting purposes. These are each worked by nine men, eight of whom turn the driving wheel, while the ninth attends generally to the machine, and keeps the drilling rod at a low temperatare by plentiful supply of water. This drilling machine, invented in America by an Englishman, consists of a ponderous rod sharpened at the lower end, but so shaped that it forms a round hole in the solid rock; the rod alternately raised and depressed by means of the wheel; and, coming down with great force, cuts out a shave of rock at every fall. In the evening, when the holes have been finished, they are charged with gunpowder, the machines removed, and general blasting takes place. The introduction these machines has facilitated operations very much. Beyond the upper portion of the heavy cutting, a hugh [huge] iron tank, open of course at each end, has been laid down, over which it is intended to bring the Evan water, as the level of the line is below that of the stream.'

The reference to the 'iron tank' is interesting, because Snell described it as an aqueduct combined with a road bridge made from wrought iron plates, making it a very early example of such a bridge. The designer was Isaac Dodds.[3]. Note: Evan Water is more commonly known as Elvan Water'

Glasgow passengers passed over the Garnkirk line to Glebe-street until November, 1849, when a line from Milton Junction to Buchanan-street Station was opened.

In the Scottish Lowlands it competed against both the Glasgow and South Western Railway (G&SWR) and the North British Railway but, in the case of the G&SWR, not north of the River Clyde. There was little or no competition north of Oban, Ballachulish, Dundee, Perth and Aberdeen; this area was served mainly by the Highland Railway.

1865 Absorbed the Scottish Central Railway

1866 Absorbed the Scottish North Eastern Railway

1868 Engineer is George Graham.[4]

1872 Two trains had been fitted with the Westinghouse air brake system as an experiment

1875 Two further trains were fitted with the Steel-McInnes air brake system[5]

1888 See Locomotive Stock June 1888.

1889 Engineer is George Graham. Also Thomas M. Barr, (Northern) and Robert Dundas, (Southern). Loco Supt is Dugald Drummond.[6]

1908 Company owns 864 miles of road, and jointly with others 159.5 miles more. [7]

1909 Guy Calthrop is general manager.[8]

1914-23 William Pickersgill was Chief Mechanical Engineer of the Caledonian Railway.

1921 Henry Allan was the chairman of the railway.[9]

1923 Incorporated in the London, Midland and Scottish Railway

See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. The Engineer 1924/11/21
  2. Carlisle Patriot, 19 November 1847
  3. 'A Story of Railway Pioneers' by Major S. Snell, Selwyn & Blount, 1921
  4. 1868 Bradshaw's Railway Manual
  5. The Times, Nov 24, 1876
  6. 1889 Bradshaw's Railway Manual
  7. The Stock Exchange Year Book 1908
  8. 1909 Advertisement
  9. The Engineer 1921/03/04