The first locomotive engine on the South Wales Railway, named the "Dove," and a tender were hauled from Gloucester on a carriage built purposely, and drawn by eighteen fine grey horses. Four superior black horses hauled the tender. The novelty of the load and the beauty of the teams drew the attention of a number of people. [Sekon 238-40]

Suddenly, from 1840 onwards, railways confronted Welshmen with wholly new opportunities to move, never dreamt of in the past and seized on now with enthusiasm. And at the same time the railways also ministered intelligently to the passion for movement that Welshmen discerned in their English neighbours. [Simmons 340]

"Seventy Miles an Hour" (Sekon, frontispiece).

Railway Lines in Wales

Related Material

Bibliography

"About Us." Ffestiniog and Welsh Highland Railways. Web. 7 July 2017.

"Berwyn Railway Station." British Listed Buildings. Web. 7 July 2017.

Dickinson, Peter. "Berwyn Station." Llangollen Railway. Web. 7 July 2017.

"Ffestiniog Railway." Grace's Guide to British Industrial History. Web. 7 July 2017.

Fisher, Ben, updated by David Tidy. "NGG16 Class Beyer-Garratts." Rolling Stock for the New Welsh Highland Heritage Railway. Web. 7 July 2017.

"George Percival Spooner." Grace's Guide to British Industrial History. Web. 7 July 2017.

Green, Jim. Welsh Railways. Talybont, Ceridigion: 2001.

"The History of the Welsh Highland Railway." Welsh Highland Heritage Railway. Web. 7 July 2017.

"The Line." Llangollen Railway. Web. 7 July 2017.

"Merddin Emrys." Festiniog Railway Heritage Group. Web. 7 July 2017.

Rheilffordd Eryri: Welsh Highland Railway, Train Times and Information, 2015. Web. 7 July 2017.

Sekon, G. A. A History of the Great Western Railway: Being the Story of the Broad Gauge. 2nd ed. London: Digby, Long & Co., 1895. Internet Archive. Contributed by University of California Libraries. (See Ch. XVII on the South Wales railway.) Web. 7 July 2017.

"A Short History of Carrog Station and the Barmouth Line." Carrog Station. Web. 7 July 2017.

Simmons, Jack. The Victorian Railway. Pbk ed. London: Thames and Hudson, 1995.

"Tan y Bwlch." Festipedia (Festiniog Railway Heritage Group). Web. 13 July 2017.


Created 7 July 2017