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Railway Map of London and the Home Counties 1897

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Of all the great innovations of the nineteenth century it was the railways that contributed the most.

In London new railway lines ran to the docks where ships were discharging previously unseen raw materials from an Empire that straddled the globe.

By rail these goods could now be dispersed all over the country to factories and towns with rapidly increasing populations.

London, the hub of the Empire, had become the world's greatest commercial centre and, for the first time, people were able to live in the healthier suburbs and travel into the city to work.

The Victorians were passionate railway builders both underground and overground and all the outlying towns, long since devoured by the metropolis, were connected to the great terminus's by remarkable engineering feats that involved tunnels, cuttings, embankments, bridges and viaducts all of which were constructed by thousands of manual labourers.

This map shows what they achieved and when they had finished London had the finest railway network in the world at a time when you could set your clock by a passing steam train.

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Product Details
Old House Books
1873590113 / 9781873590119
Sheet map, folded
912.421
30/06/2010
United Kingdom
1 pages, colour map
176 x 258 mm, 275 grams
General (US: Trade) Learn More