The British railway system is the oldest in the world. It consists of almost 17,000 km of track.
In 2002, the responsibility for maintenance of the tracks and other infrastructure was transferred from Railtrack, set up by John Major's Conservative government to Network Rail, a "not for dividend" organisation set up by Tony Blair's Labour government.
Train Operating Companies
The trains are operated by 26 companies mainly on a regional franchise basis.
National Framework
The Strategic Rail Authority is, within its statutory framework, the strategic planning, and coordinating body for the rail industry and the guardian of passenger and freight interests.
The official regulator is the Office of the Rail Regulator. It has fined a number of operators for failing to provide adequate or accurate ticketing information. The funding and development body is the Strategic Rail Authority, an 'arms-length' governmental organisation operating under Directions and Guidance from the Secretaries of State for Transport.
Channel Tunnel
The Channel Tunnel connects England to France. At the end of September 2003 the first part of the Channel Tunnel Rail Link was completed, avoiding local commuter lines which had caused delays. Trains can now go through parts of Kent at 180mph, cutting the journey time from London to Paris to two hours twenty minutes. The rest of the link, from north Kent to St Pancras railway station in London, is planned to open in 2007.
Underground Railways
A few places also have metro systems:
- West Midlands - Midland Metro (overground)
- Glasgow - Glasgow Underground - SPT underground, one circle line, nicknamed Clockwork Orange
- Liverpool
- London - London Underground, Docklands Light Railway, Croydon Tramlink - this city has by far the most comprehensive network of 'tube' trains in the UK.
- Manchester - Manchester Metrolink
- Newcastle Upon Tyne - Tyne and Wear Metro
Heritage and Private Railways
There are also a number of heritage and private railways - see List of British heritage and private railways.
Major stations
Major UK railway stations include:
- Birmingham New Street
- Birmingham Snow Hill
- Birmingham Moor Street
- Birmingham International
- Bristol Parkway
- Bristol Temple Meads
- Cardiff Central
- Crewe
- Derby
- Edinburgh Waverley
- Glasgow Central
- Leeds
- London Bridge
- London Blackheath
- London Cannon Street
- London Charing Cross
- London Clapham Junction
- London Euston
- London Fenchurch Street
- London Gatwick Airport
- London King's Cross
- London Liverpool Street
- London Marylebone
- London Paddington
- London St. Pancras
- London Victoria
- London Waterloo
- see also List of London railway stations
- Liverpool Lime Street
- Manchester Piccadilly
- Manchester Victoria
- Manchester Oxford Road
History In Brief
The British railway network is the oldest locomotive-drawn railway system in the world. Great feats of engineering were performed in its creation. Examples from the Victorian era are the building of the Forth Rail Bridge, or the replacement of 177 miles of broad gauge rail with standard gauge in a single weekend from May 21, 1892. However, mighty engineering feats are not a thing of the past. An example is the building of the Channel tunnel for the link to the Continental railway systems, and the Channel Tunnel Rail Link from London to the tunnel. Track replacements take considerably longer, however.
The system was originally built as a patchwork of local rail links operated by small private railway companies. Over the course of the 19th and early 20th centuries these amalgamated or were bought by competitors until only a handful of larger companies remained (see railway mania).
From January 1 1923 the remaining companies were grouped into the "big four", the Great Western Railway, the London and North Eastern Railway, the London, Midland and Scottish Railway and the Southern Railway companies. These were joint stock public companies and they continued to run the railway system until December 31 1947, although nearly bankrupt as a result of the Second World War. From the first moment of the following year, they were nationalised and amalgamated to form British Railways (latterly "British Rail"). During the next fifty years the railways entered a slow decline owing to a lack of investment and changes in transport policy and lifestyles. A major reduction in the network occurred during the mid-1960s after chairman Richard Beeching's review of the railway network (also known as the "Beeching axe"). Many branch lines, particularly rural lines serving communities which relied heavily on their local railways, were closed at that time and this also had the effect of removing a lot of the feeder traffic from the main lines, particularly freight traffic. This move was extremely unpopular at the time, and remains so today.
In the mid 1990s it was decided to privatise British Rail. The track and infrastructure was devolved to a company called Railtrack, whilst ticketing and passenger and freight operations were sold off to individual operators.
The government claimed that privatisation would see an improvement in passenger services: however, the opposite is generally accepted to be true. There were more fatal accidents (particularly the Ladbroke Grove rail disaster and the Hatfield rail crash). Passengers lost confidence in the safety of rail travel.
After the Hatfield crash, speed limits were drastically reduced throughout Britain and train travel was seriously disrupted for months. Railtrack came close to bankruptcy due to the enormous cost of additional safety measures and was effectively re-nationalised, when ownership of the railway system was transferred to the newly-created "not for dividend" organisation Network Rail on October 3, 2002.
For a more detailed history see History of the British railway system
List of historic British railway companies
Early railway companies (1820s-1840s)
- Birmingham and Derby Junction Railway (BDJR)
- Grand Junction Railway (GJR)
- Liverpool and Manchester Railway (LMR)
- London and Birmingham Railway (L&BR)
- North Midland Railway (NMR)
- Midland Counties Railway (MCR)
- Stockton and Darlington Railway (S&D)
- Taff Vale Railway (TVR)
Pre-Grouping (1923)
- Caledonian Railway (CalR)
- Cambrian Railways (CamR)
- Eastern Counties Railway (ECR)
- Furness Railway (FurR)
- Glasgow and South Western Railway (GSWR)
- Great Central Railway (GCR)
- Great Northern Railway (GNR)
- Great Eastern Railway (GER)
- Great Western Railway (GWR)
- Highland Railway (HR)
- Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway (L&YR)
- London and North Western Railway (LNWR)
- London and South Western Railway (LSWR)
- London, Brighton, and South Coast Railway (LBSCR)
- Manchester and Birmingham Railway (M&BR)
- Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway (MSLR)
- Midland Railway (MR)
- North British Railway (NBR)
- North Eastern Railway (NER)
- North Staffordshire Railway (NSR)
- South Eastern and Chatham Railway (SECR)
- Stratford-Upon-Avon & Midland Junction Railway (SMJR)
Grouping (1923 - 1947)
The Big Four
- Great Western Railway (GWR)
- London and North Eastern Railway (LNER)
- London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS)
- Southern Railway (SR)
Nationalisation (1947 - 1996)
- British Railways (later British Rail) (BR)
Privatisation (1996-)
- Railtrack (1996-2002)
- Network Rail (2002-) (A "not for dividend" company limited by guarantee)