This is all down to a lack of capital expenditure on the railways by success Labour and Conservative governments. |
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He said a single force helped to provide consistency in policing standards across the railways. |
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That is precisely what has been tried on Britain's railways, without conspicuous success. |
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The Government thought it was going to deliver the coal by rail, but the railways are so run down that it cannot get it through. |
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This week has been chaos on the railways as so many lines need to be checked and speed restrictions have been introduced. |
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The Unions have a vested interest in organisations such as the railways and the National Health Service. |
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If the revenues have been going down, the cost of operating the world's largest network of railways has been steadily inching upwards. |
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It was enough to break airline reservation systems and German banking networks and halt Australian railways. |
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However, steel had structural advantages and durability which iron lacked, and the railways adopted steel for their tracks. |
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It showed the network of railways that used to operate in this country many years ago and it made me very sad. |
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The following year a Westphalian made the first serious proposal for the strategic use of railways. |
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The rash of strikes on the railways and elsewhere should quickly disabuse them of that delusion. |
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Rail police warned that people caught trespassing on railways could face up to life in jail. |
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The Association of Model Exhibitors is displaying collectors' items such as cars, railways, doll's houses and wind-up gramophones. |
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State-owned railways and state-funded irrigation schemes helped make farming viable on this far-flung frontier. |
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Problems on the railways were further compounded by electrical faults at Oxenholme on Sunday and Monday. |
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Whether they could do so through Sweden depended on the state of the railways, roads, and telegraph communications. |
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Almost all manias, be they tulips, railways, Japanese real estate, have ended in busts. |
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Regional railways simply cannot compete with cheap, efficient and flexible motor transport. |
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In France, investing in railways is seen as investing in the infrastructure of France. |
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We oppose privatisation, and campaign for the renationalisation of the railways and other public services. |
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When you've spent two weeks zizzing around on the hyper-fast, hyper-efficient French trains, the UK railways just don't compare. |
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The number of bricks used for the huge retaining walls through which railways entered towns and cities is incalculable. |
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Reports of a youth on the line at a level crossing yesterday sparked an alert on the railways. |
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Since 1973 there has been a significant increase in both the number of light railways coming into being and the facilities they offer. |
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Some of these regulations affect light railways and tramways as well as conventional railways. |
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Two railway Acts of the 1860s mention light railways and in 1870 the Tramways Act was passed. |
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It had a track gauge of 60 cm, and this was applied to all light railways constructed by the British. |
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Demand for passenger and freight cars for light railways was met completely by domestic manufacturers. |
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Russia had had wide experience, some of it bitter, with light railways during the Russo-Japanese War. |
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Food rationing, shortages, bombed cities, damaged railways, such things were accepted as the inevitable concomitants of war. |
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Visions of a metro system, light railways, reopened suburban lines and new tram links have been held out in front of us. |
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The use of light locomotives on the estate railways became more widespread after the First World War. |
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However other American railways used different gauges. 4 foot 10 inches was popular, and in the South a round 5 foot was often used. |
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Above all, they had been roused to anger by a recent decision of the Court to nationalize the railways. |
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Increased travel by pugilists, pedestrians, rowers, and wrestlers from the 1840s had a direct link with the railways. |
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Just look at the state of our old folks' homes, our railways and our public loos if you don't believe me. |
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Russian partisans sabotaged railways, destroyed trucks and killed hundreds of Germans in ambush. |
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Two were in the field of motive power both on land with the railways and also at sea where it replaced sail. |
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Pat had a lifelong interest in model railways and was an avid reader on the topic. |
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Britain's railways have come close to a standstill in recent weeks, and the industry is the target of unprecedented criticism. |
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On the main line railways the failure to take any steps towards renationalisation has left members utterly disillusioned. |
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Roads, railways, water supply conduits, power and communication lines, towns and cities were built to a high technical standard. |
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The rapid development of technology has been likened to the coming of the railways for opening up the world. |
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As things turned out, railways and telegraphy made things easier for the police, too. |
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Employees told of massive delays and journeys of up to eight hours to London from York as the railways were in crisis. |
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But the scale and scope of contractorisation now present on the railways needs urgent reform. |
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He is a mechanical fitter by trade and he hopes to return to working on the railways. |
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The former is intended to compensate the host railway for depreciation of the fixed assets associated with use by other railways. |
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In an age when general staff pensions did not exist, the railways might well keep elderly staff on the payroll for nominal duties. |
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After bringing the railways to the city, he fell from grace over dodgy financial dealings. |
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Many Victorian cultural critics thundered that railways dragged deplorable rationalisation and standardisation in their train. |
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The railways may be in turmoil, but business is booming for one tiny bus and coach company. |
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After lunch we would trail around the neighbourhood which involved a lot of exploring of stream beds and ponds and railways. |
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The area developed with the founding of the town of Katoomba in the 1860s to supply quarried ballast to the railways. |
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There is no tombstone to mark his grave, there are no buildings, roads or railways which bear his name. |
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We must practise energy conservation comprehensively and switch over to electricity-based traction for railways and urban transportation. |
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Electric traction was commercially applied first on suburban and metropolitan lines, but was quickly adopted for underground railways. |
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It tells the story of the steam locomotive with displays covering model railways, trainspotting and locomotive engineering. |
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They built barrel bridges, roads, tramways, light railways, trenches, bunkers, pontoon bridges, trestle bridges and the Inglis Bridge. |
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The year 1913 saw the heaviest Belgian investment in tramways and light railways, and in the main this investment took place abroad. |
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At one point I even forgot the band were there, I was so transfixed with the visuals, which included lots of period footage of railways. |
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The Shinkansen was a forerunner of high-speed railways throughout the world. |
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Its customers include national railways, leasing companies, private operators and shippers. |
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The railways are also set to be busy, with special deals for passengers willing to travel off-peak and book in advance. |
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At the same time the theatre management approached the railways and the trains stopped shunting in the evenings. |
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Perhaps the only trades which are exclusive to railways in their nomenclature are platelayers, shunters and signalmen. |
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Arthur, now 73 was working as a shunter in the railways and Alma, 69 worked as a credit assistant at the Morses store in Swindon. |
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Yet in two to three years we will have a battle on our hands to save our existing railways. |
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He preferred the hard board of the third-class compartment, now abolished, rather than the cushioned first class of the railways. |
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It was probably the most sensible thing the Government has ever done on the railways. |
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The California is represented on the marine railways next to a schooner, and both vessels are receiving fresh coats of paint by workmen. |
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This means there's investment in railways and bus terminals as well as increased spending on display signs for motorways and parking. |
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The BCC has entered into several agreements with the railways on taking up a number of railway underbridges and underpass works. |
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The railways gradually phased out the steam locomotives following the introduction of diesel engines and diesel electrical multiple units. |
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Curbs on municipal power resulted in part from concerns about public subsidies to railways. |
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The municipalisation of street railways in Birmingham, however, was far less colourful than municipalisation in Cleveland. |
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At the same time as Birmingham was municipalising its street railways it was also municipalising its electric utilities. |
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The reason being, in West Malaysia, priority was given to the development of roads and railways due to unnavigability of most rivers there. |
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These narrow gauge steam railways have the charm of old-time steam engines, some dating back over 100 years! |
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These would be carried on the narrow gauge railways down to Port Penrhyn, Bangor and loaded onto the ship by hand. |
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His account is a moving testimony to the men of all nationalities, ethnicities and classes who built the railways. |
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And he had the neck to tell me that if it wasn't for the passengers the railways would be very efficient. |
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The cost of travelling by alternative means such as coach or brake was prohibitive over a season, so the railways were vital. |
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That was followed by increased protection for nuclear power plants, bridges and railways. |
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Thousands of miles of major roads and railways and hundreds of bridges were destroyed. |
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It brought with it hospitals, schools, land reclamation, roads, bridges and eventually, ports and railways. |
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Even so there were rumours he might become governor of the BBC and he was sounded out to head up the proposed privatisation of the railways. |
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Because of the slow speeds involved, light railways did not have to have gated railway crossings. |
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High-vis boilersuits in particular are used by those working on roads, near railways or at night, where visibility is a concern. |
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He firmly believed the international standard gauge was indispensable to radical improvement of Japanese railways. |
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For generations, its very name has conjured up the glory days of Britain's railways when steam was king and every town had a station. |
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The first stage of a scheme to encourage off-peak travel on London suburban railways has been launched. |
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Police are using a spy van and off-road bikes to crack down on crime on the railways. |
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Today Britain's railways are a step closer to being run by and for the nation. |
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Strike action on Scotland's railways came a step closer yesterday after the main union rejected an above inflation pay rise. |
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The separation of classes was underlined by the formation of middle-class suburbs, linked to the town centre by trams, omnibuses, or railways. |
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It is run by a man who loves otterhounds, miniature steam railways and the saxophone. |
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The gauge on the railways are all different, so that you can't travel any distance by train without having to change. |
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Violent thunderstorms and rain caused chaos on the region's roads and railways last night. |
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In 10 years time, the system will comprise 16 subways and six light railways. |
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Commuter railways and subways all around the country are on heightened alert as the evening rush hour begins. |
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The railways, too, were once a public utility, but were always treated with a degree of parsimony where funding was concerned. |
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So when the railways began to expand in the south in mid-1850s, there was a clamour for a rail link to the hills. |
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Heritage railways are keen for visitors to have parties or reserve coaches for corporate entertainment. |
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Working-class coarse angling was also becoming more accessible thanks to the railways. |
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New machinery driven by steam power was introduced, and railways and canals were being created. |
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Even today rack railways are not too uncommon in some countries, especially mountainous ones. |
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To go over the Andes by rail entailed very steep gradients indeed, and when I come to write about rack railways I will come back to them. |
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These carriages journeyed on railways throughout the country and traveled to the most remote villages. |
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Joan's father had worked on the railways, so they had enjoyed free rail travel. |
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In addition to using the civil main lines, railways were constructed for purely military purposes, with no commercial value. |
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The only thing that makes his work more complicated is the bad traffic and cars driving along the railways. |
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No remnants of these prairies survive, except for linear strips along railways. |
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Level crossings still pose the greatest risk to life on the railways, a rail safety chief said yesterday. |
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The damage to bridges, roads, railways and telephone lines took months to repair. |
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The result has been the absence of competition for road transport from the railways and inadequate intermodal sea, rail and air transport connections. |
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North and South Korea are working on projects to fully connect two sets of railways across the demilitarized zone that separates the Korean Peninsula at the 38th parallel. |
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The railways emerged in a parlous state, in dire need of a major overhaul. |
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A concerted communist attempt to oust Ross from the railways union was thwarted as a result of lobbying and branch stacking orchestrated by Ferguson. |
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He was an engineer by profession, and used to look after the engines and trucks which ran on the light railways out to the more distant parts of the opencast mine workings. |
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After the nationalisation of the railways in 1948, The British Transport Films Unit was created to record and publicise the work of the nationalised transport industries. |
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Pioneer farming settlements began to spring up, canals were constructed, and the controversial building of roads and railways led to the famous clashes with Native Americans. |
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The first railways were built entirely by hand labour by teams of navvies. |
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The country held symbolic ground-breaking ceremonies to relink railways and roads through the heavily fortified demilitarized zone splitting the peninsula. |
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As railways took over and the canals sank into decline this one was moored here as part of a landing stage in the late 19th century, and forgotten. |
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The sad thing now is that railways have fallen into abeyance and the motor car's taken over, despite the great efforts of Fischer and people like that. |
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Londoners had been heating their houses with coal since the seventeenth century and this came by sea until the mid-nineteenth century, when the railways took over this trade. |
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Though Cleveland had twice as much trackage and ridership as Birmingham, both cities mechanised and municipalised their street railways during the same period. |
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In its heyday in the 1960s, Tempered Spring employed more than 1,000 people making springs for cars, the agricultural industry, the railways and office equipment. |
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Such side tank engines were more common on logging railways. |
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His main interest is the steam locomotives and railways of many countries. |
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The train wasn't quite as crowded, though the police were doing crowd control Japanese railways style to keep the trains moving without too much delay. |
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So whether you have been interested in model railways for years or just starting on a new layout of your own why not come along for a great day out. |
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There were reports of broken water and gas mains around northern Kyushu, and bullet trains and other railways and subways suspended operations, but later resumed running. |
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There was jubilation at the museum last night that the icon of Britain's golden age of steam is coming to York and will continue to run on our railways. |
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In fact the majority of UK funds raised between Confederation and the First World War were used to finance the construction of Canada's two transcontinental railways. |
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The circulars created formidable bureaucratic regulations to collect the tariff, with those importing goods via railways facing particularly onerous requirements. |
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Before the advent of roads or railways, the sheer difficulty in traversing Peru's geography was one of the greatest obstacles to solidifying a national identity. |
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Taken as a whole, the railways of South Africa returned a good profit in the decade before Union, even if interest payments on loans are included. |
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There are advanced plans for light railways in various regions. |
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Of course half of South London had to abandon their cars last night and of course the rain has short-circuited half the signal boxes on our railways this morning. |
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With trippers set to hit the roads and railways as they head for the coast, countryside and beauty spots this Easter, repair work is being kept to the lowest possible level. |
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Telegraph lines were often built alongside the railways, and steamships laid the submarine cables that took the telegraph network across the seas and oceans. |
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Firstly, the week began with the aftermath of the train crash, where seven people died, and a debate has ensued into how safe the railways, in particular level crossings, are. |
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They can be used as acoustic baffles along roads and railways. |
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In terms of its obligations under European Union accession, Bulgaria has to end the monopoly of the state railways, BDZ, and open the market to private railway carriers. |
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State-owned monopolies continued to control electricity and water supply, railways and harbours, broadcasting, air transport, and much steel production. |
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He is permanently monosyllabic unless the subject happens to be narrow-gauge North American railways, and he never uses a word where a silent, dismissive glare would do. |
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David spent more than 20 years working as a signalman on the railways. |
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In the rest of Alberta, highways and private transportation using automobiles and trucks began to challenge the older communications network based on railways. |
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The railways found that, because of the decreasing proportion of hard coal, even greater quantities of coal were required to provide the necessary locomotive running. |
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The latter were virtual subterranean towns equipped with barracks, kitchens, power plants, magazines, and even electric railways to transport men and ammunition. |
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The private sector has been making hay on the railways for far too long. |
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This simple and not too expensive system was installed over hundreds of miles of British main line railways and the lives saved must be considerable. |
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On the whole, the directive is advantageous to the rail network, but it is not advantageous to trams and light railways, nor to community and heritage railways. |
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This it did, and in a short time the western railways had accumulated masses of rolling stock which they were unwilling to relinquish but unable to utilize efficiently. |
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Polls show that most people want the railways re-nationalised. |
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The railways also facilitated the transport of inferior wines. |
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Since 1992, it is one of the official heritage railways of Slovakia and is a key tourist attraction of its local region. |
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In the United States, heritage railways are known variously as tourist, historic, or scenic railroads. |
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Some heritage railways preserve entire railroads in their original state using original structures, track, and motive power. |
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Many heritage railways in the United States host special living history events, like annual reenactments of historic activities. |
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Dry stone retaining walls were once built in great numbers for agricultural terracing and also to carry paths, roads and railways. |
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A close network of tramways and railways covers the face of a singularly dreary stretch of country, where the pastures are scanty and blackened. |
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The arrival of the railways resulted in significant change for the Company. |
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As a result of limestone quarrying, lead mining and coal mining, the Wear valley was amongst the first places to see the development of railways. |
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The county's main transport hub is Shrewsbury, through which many significant roads and railways pass and join. |
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The railways arrived in Wakefield in 1840 when Kirkgate Station was built on the Manchester to Leeds line. |
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He continued to work with Ericsson, and in 1830 they patented a method of ascending steep inclines on railways. |
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The experience led to larger projects, including new railways in Ireland, which then was wholly part of the United Kingdom. |
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Between 1836 and 1838, Vignoles was engineer to the royal commission on railways in Ireland. |
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Commercial production of Welsh slate began in 1820, and the mobility provided by canals and then railways made other materials readily available. |
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The arrival of the railways and the Tube meant that London could expand over a much greater area. |
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In 1914 all the railways were taken under the control of the Railway Executive Committee. |
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Other seaside bathing areas couldn't really get going until the railways were built some years later. |
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You can follow historic railways and canals and follow in the footsteps of packhorse traders on ancient salt routes. |
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Richard Beeching commissioned by the government under Ernest Marples with reorganising the railways. |
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The first stretch of Vectesian railway to be encountered by most visitors from London belonged to none of the island railways. |
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However, RFF does not let these run on French railways, so there are plans to certify Alstom Prima II locomotives for use in the tunnel. |
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At the beginning of the 1800s a harbour was developed, but it was the coming of the railways in 1843 that would have the bigger impact. |
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The city is served by the Tyne and Wear Metro, a system of suburban and underground railways covering much of Tyne and Wear. |
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He has opted to join the 'stay in the EU' camp yet wants to renationalise the railways and reopen the mines. |
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He does not say where he would get all the extra money from to renationalise the railways and utility companies etc. |
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He wants to renationalise the railways to bring proper democratic control over soaring rail fares. |
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A bid to commit the Liberal Democrats to examine renationalising the railways was narrowly defeated yesterday. |
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As Westminster handed control of a rail franchise to the Welsh government, Wales has received a chance to renationalize railways. |
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In order to save fuel during idling, Indian railways are providing a system called Auxiliary Power Unit in Diesel Locomotives. |
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Flat glass in India is majorly used for construction purpose and by the automotive sector along with railways. |
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American and British street railways have been dealt with in similar ways by historians including Warner, Cheape, Ward, McKay, Taylor and Smerk. |
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I like the idea of renationalising the railways but I don't like the idea that most of its passengers will be from North Korea. |
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Rod Stewart has swapped rock and roll for railways to appear on the cover of an American train set magazine. |
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The reason was that the Huddersfield Tramway gauge was 4ft 8'ins, the same as standard gauge on the railways. |
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By the end of the war, the railways had deteriorated for lack of maintenance and were not profitable. |
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Suburban cycle routes exist, which use converted trackbeds of former industrial wagonways and industrial railways. |
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Railway costs could therefore not be tailored to the timely needs of the railways or their passengers. |
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The availability of Ro-Ro vessels is essential for the success of efforts to develop coastal shipping and decongesting roads and railways. |
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The British Raj invested heavily in infrastructure, including canals and irrigation systems in addition to railways, telegraphy, roads and ports. |
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The coming of the railways added railway bridges to the earlier road bridges and also reduced commercial activity on the river. |
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Major roads and railways follow the east coast route and various valley routes radiating northwards from the Carlisle area. |
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The steam locomotive, the City of Truro, was built in 1903 and still runs on UK mainline and preserved railways. |
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Lord Bute then charged fees per ton of coal that was transported out using his railways. |
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Nonetheless, the region was also modernising, with new roads and railways being built, and some places being industrialised. |
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With the arrival of the railways in the 19th century, Derby became a centre of the British rail industry. |
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He carried out studies, around 1838, to show the superiority of the broad gauge for railways, used by Brunel's Great Western Railway. |
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The Crimean War was one of the first conflicts to use modern technologies such as explosive naval shells, railways and telegraphs. |
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He eventually worked on 160 commissions from 60 companies, building railways in other countries such as Belgium, Norway, Egypt and France. |
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As well as working at the locomotive works, Robert was also surveying routes for railways and advised on a tunnel under the River Mersey. |
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In 1839 he visited France, Spain and Italy for three months to advise on railways, meeting the leading French railway engineer Paulin Talabot. |
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In the early part of Brunel's life, the use of railways began to take off as a major means of transport for goods. |
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German, Russian, Australian and British railways experimented using coal dust to fire locomotives. |
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Swengel suggested that these problems contributed to the interest in electrification of railways. |
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This locomotive was more successful but was scrapped with the dieselisation of the Irish railways. |
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Similarly the South Australian state government railways also manufactured steam locomotives locally at Islington Railway Workshops in Adelaide. |
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His decision to use broad gauge for the line was controversial in that almost all British railways to date had used standard gauge. |
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In 2002, a steam locomotive celebration run was organised between Thane and Mumbai to commemorate the 150th year of railways in India. |
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Several heritage railways in the UK have built new steam locomotives in the 1990s and early 21st century. |
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After Brunel's death the decision was taken that standard gauge should be used for all railways in the country. |
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Today's economic position is very different from the 1950s, when its prosperity was based on chocolate manufacturing and the railways. |
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The growth in tourist numbers continued into the age of the motor car, when railways began to be closed or run down. |
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At the outbreak of World War I in 1914, the GWR was taken into government control, as were most major railways in Britain. |
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Other preserved lines, or heritage railways, have reopened some lines previously closed by British Rail. |
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The renationalisation of the railways of Britain continue to have popular support. |
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Having seen off competition from other canal companies, the next major threat was to come from the railways. |
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Representative examples of these carriages survive in service today on various Heritage railways up and down the country. |
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I was there when the public railways had some 600,000 people and it came down to 100,000 in the time I worked in the rail industry. |
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The Labour government did not fulfil its earlier commitment to keep the railways in the public sector. |
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Many other heritage railways and museums also have GWR locomotives or rolling stock in use or on display. |
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For the first time the railways carried more trade between Liverpool and the towns of central Lancashire than the canals. |
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Network Rail is an arms length public body of the Department for Transport with no shareholders, which reinvests its income in the railways. |
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Stephenson became famous, and was offered the position of chief engineer for a wide variety of other railways. |
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Then came railways, canals, road haulage and trucking, electricity, and gas. |
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Often described as the Grand British Experimental Railway the success or failure of which would decide plans for all future railways. |
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The country's railways are administered by the Austrian Federal Railways as part of the route between Feldkirch, Austria, and Buchs, Switzerland. |
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The newly created Ministry of Transport suggested nationalising the railways with a separate, autonomous Scottish region. |
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Given its location, Perth was perfectly placed to become a key transport centre with the coming of the railways. |
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Some of them also had inefficient nationalized railways and heavy industries. |
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It included pledges to renationalise the National Grid, the railways and the Royal Mail, and create publicly owned energy companies. |
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Canal companies were unable to compete against the speed of the new railways, and in order to survive, they had to slash their prices. |
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The railways did provide opportunity too with one Riverside company selling their reaping machines as far afield as Syria and Australia. |
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The remaining money came from three English railways, who ran trains from London over NBR tracks. |
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South London, particularly, has a high concentration of railways as it has fewer Underground lines. |
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Universal motors also formed the basis of the traditional railway traction motor in electric railways. |
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On vesting its headquarters in July 1865 in Oswestry, the company built the Cambrian railways works to the north of the station on Gobowen Road. |
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The coming of the railways later aided artists from Liverpool and Manchester in transporting their art materials to Wales. |
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The Wye remained commercially navigable until the 1850s, when commercial traffic moved to railways. |
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The demand for iron was also fuelled by the Royal Navy, which needed cannon for its ships, and later by the railways. |
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Over the next three decades, iron was needed in ever greater quantities to build the rapidly expanding railways. |
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Canal construction served as a model for the organisation and methods later used to construct the railways. |
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The first use of railways at the quarry came around 1800 when the first internal tramways were in use. |
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Britain's railways were nationalised on 1 January 1948 and the lines were placed under the control of British Railways. |
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This coal was valuable for steam railways and steam ships, and an export trade began, via the Taff Vale Railway and the port of Cardiff. |
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Roads and light railways were extended to the new front line, to allow artillery and ammunition to be moved forward. |
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Before the arrival of railways in the district, travel to the quarries was difficult and workers' houses were built near the quarries. |
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Many were sold off as surplus at the end of hostilities, finding work on small industrial railways. |
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Its engineering firms were in worldwide demand for designing and constructing railways. |
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On 16 February 1965, Beeching announced the second stage of his reorganisation of the railways. |
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By 1968 the railways had not been restored to profitability and Beeching's approach appeared to many to have failed. |
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The new railways all allowed goods, raw materials, and people to be moved about, rapidly facilitating trade and industry. |
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When the two railways arrived in the important market town of Hereford, the LNWR had already built Hereford Barton. |
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Paddington's ownership was transferred to Great Western Trains in 1996, two years after Britain's railways were privatised. |
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Rugby remained a sleepy country market town until the 19th century and the coming of the railways. |
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The financing of railways became an important specialty of London's financiers. |
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But the intent of the merger was to build railways at a reduced cost, by using the existing routes of the canals they owned. |
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Experiments with pneumatic railways failed in their extended adoption by cities. |
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The canal companies, unable or unwilling to upgrade their facilities to compete with railways, used political power to try to stop them. |
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It was hailed as a success, carrying 38,000 passengers on the opening day, and borrowing trains from other railways to supplement the service. |
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The factory complex had three sites in Bridgend, all linked together by a large network of railways. |
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Because they are easily compressed under minimal weight, peat deposits pose major difficulties to builders of structures, roads, and railways. |
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The longest have been constructed for water distribution, followed by tunnels for railways. |
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The Metropolitan and District railways completed the Circle line in 1884, built using the cut and cover method. |
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The railways responded by purchasing about a fourth of the canal system, in part to get the right of way, and in part to buy off critics. |
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Early District Railway stations were similar and on both railways the further from central London the station the simpler the construction. |
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He was involved in railway preservation, and built model railways, which he took to exhibitions around the country. |
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The early railways were a patchwork of local lines operated by small private railway companies. |
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This section would often advertise real railways or acknowledge the assistance of people or organisations. |
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The railways entered a slow decline owing to a lack of investment and changes in transport policy and lifestyles. |
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From Duck and the Diesel Engine onwards, a number of real engines and railways were explicitly featured. |
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The formation of a vintage train is based on the activities by the Furness Railway Trust, but coach restoration is common on heritage railways. |
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Since the rise of seaside resorts with the arrival of the railways in the 19th century, Devon's economy has been heavily reliant on tourism. |
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Devon's coast is lined with tourist resorts, many of which grew rapidly with the arrival of the railways in the 19th century. |
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Of the narrow gauge railways the Ferrovia Circumetnea is the only one that still operates, going round Mount Etna. |
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According to the European Railway Agency, in 2013 Britain had the safest railways in Europe based on the number of train safety incidents. |
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Under his reign, roads, telegraphs, and railways were constructed and improvements in public health advanced. |
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Other forms of transportation, railways and aircraft, also required fossil fuels. |
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This does not include the London Underground, nor other systems which are not part of the national network, such as heritage railways. |
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Russia had already sent 177,000 soldiers to Manchuria, nominally to protect its railways under construction. |
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Built in 1824, it was purchased in 1846 by the railways, which partially backfilled it. |
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The railways were privatised in 1996 and most Kent passenger services were franchised to Connex South Eastern. |
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Flanders has developed an extensive transportation infrastructure of ports, canals, railways and highways. |
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Light railways were built in Jersey and Guernsey to supply coastal fortifications. |
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Consequently they cannot travel outside the tunnel and the two terminals onto the national railways. |
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Though they mostly avoid areas within human sight, wolves have been known to nest near domiciles, paved roads and railways. |
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Monorails, heritage tramways, miniature railways and funiculars also exist in several places. |
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The 19th century saw improvements to Somerset's roads with the introduction of turnpikes, and the building of canals and railways. |
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The 19th century also saw the construction of railways to and through Somerset. |
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At first only available to the rich, the development of both railways and excursion steamers made such holidays more generally available. |
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The Purbeck Mineral and Mining Museum displays an exhibition about ball clays, mining and the associated narrow gauge railways. |
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In 1948, the railways of the United Kingdom, including those on the island, were nationalised as British Railways. |
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The future of the railways is secure until 2017, when the existing National Rail South Western franchise runs out. |
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