This ebook was transcribed by Les Bowler.
RAILWAY ADVENTURES AND ANECDOTES: EXTENDING OVER MORE THAN FIFTY YEARS.
EDITED BY RICHARD PIKE.
THIRD EDITION.
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"The only _bona fide_ Railway Anecdote Book published on either side of the Atlantic."--_Liverpool Mercury_.
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LONDON: HAMILTON, ADAMS, AND CO. NOTTINGHAM: J. DERRY.
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1888.
NOTTINGHAM: J. DERBY, PRINTER, WHEELER GATE AND HOUNDS GATE.
PREFACE.
Although railways are comparatively of recent date we are so accustomed to them that it is difficult to realize the condition of the country before their introduction. How different are the present day ideas as to speed in travelling to those entertained in the good old times. The celebrated historian, Niebuhr, who was in England in 1798, thus describes the rapid travelling of that period:--"Four horses drawing a coach with six persons inside, four on the roof, a sort of conductor besides the coachman, and overladen with luggage, have to get over seven English miles in the hour; and as the coach goes on without ever stopping except at the principal stages, it is not surprising that you can traverse the whole extent of the country in so few days. But for any length of time this rapid motion is quite too unnatural. You can only get a very piece-meal view of the country from the windows, and with the tremendous speed at which you go can keep no object long in sight; you are unable also to stop at any place." Near the same time the late Lord Campbell, travelling for the first time by coach from Scotland to London, was seriously advised to stay a day at York, as the rapidity of motion (eight miles per hour) had caused several through-going passengers to die of apoplexy.
It is stated in the year 1825, there was in the whole world, only one railway carriage, built to convey passengers. It was on the first railway between Stockton and Darlington, and bore on its panels the motto--"Periculum privatum, publica utilitas." At the opening of this line the people's ideas of railway speed were scarcely ahead of the canal boat. For we are told, "Strange to say, a man on horseback carrying a flag headed the procession. It was not thought so dangerous a place after all. The locomotive was only supposed to go at the rate of from four to six miles an hour; an ordinary horse could easily keep ahead of that. A great concourse of people stood along the line. Many of them tried to accompany the procession by running, and some gentlemen on horseback galloped across the fields to keep up with the engine. At a favourable part of the road Stephenson determined to try the speed of the engine, and he called upon the horseman with the flag to get out of his way! The speed was at once raised to twelve miles an hour, and soon after to fifteen, causing much excitement among the passengers."
George Stephenson was greatly impressed with the vast possibilities belonging to the future of railway travelling. When battling for the locomotive he seemed to see with true prescience what it was destined to accomplish. "I will do something in course of time," he said, "which will astonish all England." Years afterwards when asked to what he alluded, he replied, "I meant to make the mail run between London and Edinburgh by the locomotive before I died, and I have done it." Thus was a similar prediction fulfilled, which at the time he uttered it was doubtless considered a very wild prophecy, "Men shall take supper in London and breakfast in Edinburgh."
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: Railway Adventures and Anecdotes extending over more than fifty years
- 2: The Railway Adventures and Anecdotes
- 3: Expensive Parliamentary 102
- 4: 193 Chase after a Runaway Engine
- 5: Immense 161 Frauds
- 6: Or Staking out a Railway 172 Locomotive
- 7: Merthyr Tydvil 17
- 8: For the Duke of Newcastle's colliery near Sheffield
- 9: And Murdoch set out alone to try his experiment
- 10: Railway from merstham to wandsworth
- 11: The Merthyr locomotive was made jointly by Trevithick
- 12: The celebrated engineer Trevithick constructed
- 13: Are not these tramroads laid down all over England
- 14: The commercial interest would derive considerable advantage
- 15: Opening of the darlington and stockton railway
- 16: Who drove the 'Experiment' between Darlington and Shildon
- 17: And that they could not be worked by locomotive engines
- 18: Would prevent the progress of a locomotive engine
- 19: Liverpool and manchester railway
- 20: Just as George Stephenson was the lion of the new railroad
- 21: ' and receiving no answer but a broad Northumbrian
- 22: And are moved by bright steel legs called pistons
- 23: Stephenson had constructed artificial ones of woodwork
- 24: Bellhouse is also preparing will be placed
- 25: The tunnel was lighted with gas
- 26: The grand cars appeared actually of diminutive dimensions
- 27: Huskisson had just shaken hands
- 28: Huskisson at the house of the Rev
- 29: Our carriages then moved forward to Liverpool
- 30: With the intention of returning to Manchester
- 31: The ministerial car had on the way been pelted
- 32: Huskisson the day became overcast
- 33: Huskisson after his accident was removed to Manchester
- 34: Blackburne got quickly to Eccles without any adventures
- 35: Huskisson was not buried at Chichester
- 36: The automaton belches forth an explosion of steam
- 37: Such was the velocity with which we darted through the air
- 38: I went to Stockton at four o'clock by coach on the railroad
- 39: But they are making a branch to Warrington
- 40: Prior to the stockholders' anniversary of January 15th
- 41: It was provided with a negro fireman
- 42: A locomotive during the Rainhill year
- 43: And the concoctors of every other scheme
- 44: Leaving from two to three feet slack
- 45: ' opposition to making surveys
- 46: Tried to place himself between the staff and the telescope
- 47: Evidence of a general salesman
- 48: And although the navvies were her principal customers
- 49: A ride from boston to providence in 1835
- 50: Along costly viaducts or under disagreeable tunnels
- 51: Prejudice against carrying coals by railways
- 52: When instead of receiving large dividends
- 53: And music met us at the Loughborough station
- 54: A locomotive exploded upon the Liverpool and Manchester line
- 55: Sir Edward C bowed the chapfallen petitioner out
- 56: And calmness of the Nemesis of the Greek drama Paddington
- 57: Gigantic power of locomotive engines
- 58: Novel notice to defaulting shareholders
- 59: After narrating the circumstance to George Stephenson
- 60: Ironmasters have been pitted against each other
- 61: With which Parliament surround railway legislation
- 62: An expensive parliamentary bill
- 63: That this small porker must travel as 'two dogs
- 64: The stoker immediately sounded his whistle
- 65: As the enforced deviation would cost 60
- 66: The Right Honourable Henry Labouchere
- 67: A printed picture of troubles consequent on a break of gauge
- 68: Hutchings was executed soon after it reached Maidstone
- 69: He is the Duke of Northumberland
- 70: In some cases the lithographic stones were stolen
- 71: Or the collapse of the mania of 1844 5
- 72: Delivered the second quantity in Manchester
- 73: This agreement was not carried into effect
- 74: The apprehensions of the enginemen were removed
- 75: Wordsworth was a kind hearted man
- 76: And the Peamounter Gang that's a Gang
- 77: Don't speak against tunnels again
- 78: Lady Zetland remained at Rugby
- 79: A distance of 14 miles from Warrington
- 80: Seriously injure many of the country booksellers
- 81: We came through Chalk Farm Tunnel very steadily
- 82: The Lancashire and Yorkshire Company object to this plan
- 83: A chase after a runaway engine
- 84: Highlander and a railway engine
- 85: Pressed from beneath the embankment
- 86: And he there saw the man Robert Duncan
- 87: By the Regulation of Railways Act
- 88: Improvement in third class travelling
- 89: Sheffield and Rotherham Independent
- 90: Many concussions give no warning of their approach
- 91: After disposing of their berries
- 92: The widow Graff and her children had found it out
- 93: The man who was walking was named Thomas Edmonson
- 94: Narrow escapes from being lynched
- 95: The first railway in the crimea
- 96: Had to be carried from Balaclava to the camp
- 97: Beattie left a widow and four children to deplore his loss
- 98: But he always travelled first class
- 99: Younghusband has sarcastically bequeathed a farthing
- 100: A short distance from Maidstone
- 101: Au old lady was going from Brookfield to Stamford
- 102: Of seven and sixpence and five shillings respectively
- 103: At length a fresh train started from Doncaster
- 104: ' here named Waddington but myself
- 105: And an English navvy in his white smock jacket
- 106: Beau got himself up into a charming tableau
- 107: Beau now looked up for the first time
- 108: And the line was kept out of harm's way at Didcot
- 109: But he be one of the railway genelmen
- 110: They kum just as we war a garing to chapel
- 111: Ordered all passenger trains to pass through Lynn
- 112: How many kilogrammes are allowed
- 113: Dana came along to collect tickets
- 114: While the stranger resumed his kids
- 115: Railway accidents were great misfortunes
- 116: And noticing also the portmanteau
- 117: And Chuckley Slough appeared to view
- 118: To an extent rendered possible by the Bessemer process
- 119: Relations of old George residing in Derby
- 120: I am journeying toward Cincinnati
- 121: The wolves remained in a semicircle a few yards distant
- 122: Bavarian guards and bavarian beer
- 123: And was then brought back to Giessen
- 124: Makes the journey from London to Peterborough
- 125: A train stopped by caterpillars
- 126: For the best of all reasons because the Tsar so ordered it
- 127: We append the following from the Albany Journal
- 128: A line running from Llanymynech to Shrewsbury
- 129: And jumped savagely at the stoker on the engine
- 130: And your old locomotives may toot and be hanged
- 131: During the construction of the Bilbao line
- 132: And I at once set him down as a swindler or a pickpocket
- 133: Without incurring responsibility
- 134: And every requisite for printing tickets
- 135: My hoss was got by old man Butt's roan pacing hoss
- 136: A station about a mile and a half beyond Abergele
- 137: The very instant the collision took place
- 138: And go afore Dannel in the morning
- 139: That the Central army of workers heard of it
- 140: A second squad of Chinamen followed
- 141: Responsible for the gangers doing their duty
- 142: Should the locomotive superintendent dictate to him
- 143: And he and his fireman held on
- 144: The driver of this second train
- 145: Even if she was alone and unprotected
- 146: Perhaps you'll tell me that them cows is buffalers
- 147: And telegraph wire proved excellent material for gridirons
- 148: A railroad official of Indianapolis had
- 149: Which was put in the luggage van and lost
- 150: Which spans the mouth of the Tay
- 151: Said to the gaoler who was about to lock him up
- 152: The body has been shipped to Galion for burial
- 153: The booking clerk and buckland
- 154: The Wheelwrights removed to Utica
- 155: Wilkins against the city did not succeed
- 156: He is now at Toulon awaiting her return
- 157: Blushing gay lieutenant befogged
- 158: The shrewdest gravedigger suggested that
- 159: The operating expenses are 30 dols
- 160: Buckland had been seen in the neighbourhood
- 161: Winans succeeded in making a contract
- 162: Brassey knew very little French
- 163: Not long ago young Hicks went to Syracuse
- 164: The safest seat in a railway carriage
- 165: And declared that it was a swindle
- 166: On a Georgia railroad there is a conductor named Snell
- 167: Awful death on a railroad bridge
- 168: Which had strayed from an adjoining field
- 169: Dummy ran along the platform a short distance
- 170: After blocking the line the guard joined the stoker
- 171: Only the old Cabo stood stock still
- 172: He was persuaded to join his family at Brighton
- 173: The marquis of hartington on george stephenson
- 174: But this was not the case with George Stephenson
- 175: And shouting 'What a dust I am kicking up
- 176: He then set himself to improve the locomotive
- 177: He did not work from greed or self glorification
- 178: The collector stoutly denied it
- 179: And he gave the valise a resounding thump
- 180: In referring thus to the railway works
