Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Map
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Plans
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Before the Railways
- Chapter 2 The First Three Lines: London & Birmingham; Bedford; Dunstable
- Chapter 3 The Great Northern
- Chapter 4 The Midland Comes South
- Chapter 5 Luton Dunstable & Welwyn; Bedford & Cambridge Railway.
- Chapter 6 The Midland Reaches London; Bedford & Northampton
- Chapter 7 Schemes That Failed
- Chapter 8 Railway Openings
- Chapter 9 Contractors and Navvies
- Chapter 10 Travelling By Rail
- Chapter 11 Accidents
- Chapter 12 Railways and Railwaymen
- Chapter 13 Crime
- Chapter 14 The Railway Age - A Summary
- Appendix A Timetables for L.N.W.R. and branches
- Appendix B Timetables for M.R. and branches
- Appendix C Timetables for G.N.R. and branches
- Appendix D Railways in Bedfordshire for which Plans were deposited, but which were never built
- Appendix E Excursions
- Appendix F Railway Accidents
- Appendix G Summary of Bedfordshire lines
- Index of Names
- Index of Subjects
- Bedfordshire Historical Record Society
- Miscellaneous Endmatter
Chapter 3 - The Great Northern
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 July 2023
- Frontmatter
- Map
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Plans
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Before the Railways
- Chapter 2 The First Three Lines: London & Birmingham; Bedford; Dunstable
- Chapter 3 The Great Northern
- Chapter 4 The Midland Comes South
- Chapter 5 Luton Dunstable & Welwyn; Bedford & Cambridge Railway.
- Chapter 6 The Midland Reaches London; Bedford & Northampton
- Chapter 7 Schemes That Failed
- Chapter 8 Railway Openings
- Chapter 9 Contractors and Navvies
- Chapter 10 Travelling By Rail
- Chapter 11 Accidents
- Chapter 12 Railways and Railwaymen
- Chapter 13 Crime
- Chapter 14 The Railway Age - A Summary
- Appendix A Timetables for L.N.W.R. and branches
- Appendix B Timetables for M.R. and branches
- Appendix C Timetables for G.N.R. and branches
- Appendix D Railways in Bedfordshire for which Plans were deposited, but which were never built
- Appendix E Excursions
- Appendix F Railway Accidents
- Appendix G Summary of Bedfordshire lines
- Index of Names
- Index of Subjects
- Bedfordshire Historical Record Society
- Miscellaneous Endmatter
Summary
The Great Northern was a late-comer, and had to fight for both its construction and survival. The Great Northern Railway Bill was bitterly opposed by the London and North Western Railway, by the Midland and by the Eastern Counties. At the outset there were two companies, and the Direct Northern Railway and the London & York were foes in the early 1840s, but combined in the face of the formidable opposition. When the line was built it served few large cities - the first was Peterborough, 76 miles from the Maiden Lane terminus, and then there were only Lincoln and Retford before York was reached by the grace and favour of other lines. The Great Northern was superbly built, which is hardly surprising as William Cubitt was the engineer and Thomas Brassey the contractor. The company were fortunate in having an able chairman in Edmund Denison, MP, who appointed Cubitt after Joseph Locke had had to resign the appointment, partly because he was busy building lines in France.
While the Direct Northern and the London & York were still in competition, they are mentioned in the Bedford Estate correspondence. The Woburn Steward, Thomas Bennett, wrote to the Agent-in-Chief on 19th April 1844:
‘I had only heard that there were two Lines of Rail proposed to York, and a branch among others to Bedford-but I have heard nothing of the merits of the competing lines - the Biggleswade people will undoubtedly make the best fight they can to obtain their line and so will the others; the 17 miles of saving distance is a trifle in favour of the short line, if the longer one should be a much cheaper one to make - as all persons (or at least the great majority) are now aware if a Line of Rail is to go through a Country the more closely it approximates their property or business the better for them. No doubt each line will have its supporters.’
- Type
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- Information
- The Railway Age in Bedfordshire , pp. 13 - 23Publisher: Boydell & BrewerFirst published in: 2023