Railway Towns
It was never actually as simple as that. Some places well served by railways prospered, other did not. Some with minimal or no railway connections managed to sustain themselves successfully. Others became complex railway hubs, perhaps with railway-based engineering works, extensive shunting yards and warehouses and a large requirement for labour. Some companies built large numbers of dwellings for their workers and their families. Sometimes they even built churches and parks, for example.
Places of this character have often been described as ''railway towns'' but what is actually meant by this term?
In a pioneering attempt in book form to move towards an understanding of what constitutes a railway town, the author considers a wide range of cities, towns, villages and other settlements and asks to what extent they owed their nineteenth and early twentieth century development to the railways.
This book should appeal to students of railway history, British topography and the economic, social and cultural impact of railways.
- Författare
- David Brandon
- ISBN
- 9781399051118
- Språk
- engelska
- Utgivningsdatum
- 2024-05-02
- Förlag
- Pen & Sword Books

