Liverpool’s Railways Through Time

liverpool_railways

A book in Amberley Publishing’s “Through Time” series describing Liverpool’s Railways using a selection of archive and present day photographs.

Liverpool has many railway ‘firsts’ in the world: an inter-city service, an electrified overhead railway, a large-scale marshalling yard, a deep-level suburban tunnel and one under a tidal estuary. In Britain it can boast of other firsts: an escalator in a railway station, conversion from steam to electricity and the first main-line electrification, a widely reported death in a railway accident, a proper train shed constructed of iron and glass and automatic signalling and electric signal lights.

Some of these are still working well 185 years later, still fit for purpose, like the railways to Manchester and the Wirral. Liverpool also claims the oldest continuously operated station in the world. But others have totally disappeared along with the dock railway system which serviced the port that used to be the second busiest in the British Empire. However, illuminating traces of former greatness can still be observed and the revitalised Merseyrail system is among the best performers in the country.

RRP £14.99 Copies can be bought from Crosby’s independent bookshop Pritchards (http://www.pritchards-crosby.co.uk/‎) and any good bookshop

Published by Amberley Publishing
ISBN-13: 978-1445644967
96 pages, 23.5 x 16.5 cm

Press coverage in the Liverpool Echo:
www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/news/liverpool-news/take-look-liverpools-railway-history-10708382
and The Champion:
www.champnews.com/newsstory.aspx?story=3073344