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4 Extra Debut. The advent of trains shunted vocabulary onto new tracks. It also did odd things to time. Read by Stephen Tompkinson. From 2015.

The great sweep of change which the railways initiated also shunted our vocabulary onto new tracks; and it did some odd things to the nation’s understanding of time.

A magnificent account of Britain's railways and how track and carriage united a nation.

Series of readings including an exploration of many aspects of the railway revolution:

* The challenges of 'railway time'
* The nuances of first, second and third class
* The difficulties of lighting and heating and passenger comfort
* What to eat when travelling and the history of refreshment stops
* The commercial opportunities they brought - The establishment of WH Smith and Son, who became the nation’s first high street bookstore.

Architecture and engineering are also covered, alongside the impact on social classes and gender.

Passengers may have a love-hate relationship with our railways, but few of us know much about the journey taken to get to where we are now.

Written by: Simon Bradley.

Abridged in five parts by Jill Waters.

Read by Stephen Tompkinson.

Producer: Jill Waters

A Waters Company production for BBC Radio 4, first broadcast in November 2015.

15 minutes

Last on

Mon 22 Sep 202509:30

Credits

RoleContributor
AuthorSimon Bradley
ReaderStephen Tompkinson
AbridgerJill Waters
ProducerJill Waters

Broadcasts

  • Mon 30 Nov 201509:45
  • Tue 1 Dec 201500:30
  • Mon 22 Sep 202509:30