- Grand Junction Railway
The Grand Junction Railway (GJR) was an early railway company in the
United Kingdom , which existed between 1833 and 1846. The line built by the company was the first trunkrailway to be completed inEngland , and arguably the world's first long-distance railway.Opening
Authorised by Parliament in 1833 and designed by
George Stephenson andJoseph Locke , it opened for business on4 July 1837 , running for 82 miles (132 km) fromBirmingham throughWolverhampton (viaPerry Barr and Bescot),Stafford ,Crewe , and Warrington, then via the existingWarrington and Newton Railway to join theLiverpool and Manchester Railway at a triangular junction at Newton Junction. The GJR established its chief engineering works at Crewe, moving there from Edge Hill, near Liverpool.Shortly after opening with a temporary Birmingham terminus at Vauxhall, services were routed to and from Curzon Street station, which it shared with the
London and Birmingham Railway (LBR) whose platforms were adjacent, providing a link between Liverpool,Manchester andLondon . The route between Curzon Street station and Vauxhall primarily consisted of the Birmingham Viaduct. It consisted of 28 arches, each convert|31|ft|m|0|lk=on wide and convert|28|ft|m|0 tall and crossed theRiver Rea . [cite book| first=E.C. |last=Osborne |coauthors=W. Osborne |title=Osborne's guide to the Grand Junction, or Birmingham, Liverpool and Manchester Railway |pages=101-2 |year=1838]Mail trains
It was on this railway that the sorting of mail en route was first done. Mail was first sorted in a converted horse-box, in January 1838, at the suggestion of Frederick Karstadt, a Post Office surveyor. Karstadt's son was one of two mail clerks who did the sorting. [cite book|author=Johnson, Peter|title=The British Travelling Post Office|publisher=
Ian Allan |location=London|year=1985|isbn=0-711-01459-0|pages=p. 13] Later, carriages had a net attached, for catching mail bags at intermediate stations without stopping the train.Mergers
In 1840 the GJR absorbed the "
Chester and Crewe Railway " shortly before it opened. Seeing itself as part of a grand railway network, it encouraged the development of the "North Union Railway " which took the tracks onward toPreston , and it also invested in theLancaster and Carlisle Railway and theCaledonian Railway . In 1845 the GJR merged with the Liverpool and Manchester Railway, and consolidated its position by buying the North Union Railway in association with theManchester and Leeds Railway .Profits
The GJR was very profitable, paying dividends of at least 10% from its opening and having a final capital value of over £5.75 million when it merged with the London and Birmingham Railway and
Manchester and Birmingham Railway companies to became theLondon and North Western Railway in 1846, and theLondon Midland and Scottish Railway in 1922.The line today
Today, the lines which made up the GJR form the central section of the
West Coast Main Line .Locomotives of the GJR
:"Main article:
Locomotives of the London and North Western Railway "One locomotive "Columbine" has been preserved at theScience Museum (London) . This was GJR No. 49 and LNWR No. 1868 [http://www.flickr.com/photos/61132483@N00/239568722]The GJR in popular culture
*In the 2007 adaptation of "Cranford", a (fictitious) railway line owned by the Grand Junction Railway is the subject of gossip when the railway line bypasses the village of Cranford.
ee also
*
Grand Junction Railroad (Boston, Massachusetts)References
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