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The Great Western Railway (GWR) was a British railway company, linking South West England and South Wales with London. It was founded in 1833, kept its identity through the 1923 grouping, and became part of
British Railways at nationalisation in 1948. Known to some as God's Wonderful
Railway, it gained great fame as the "Holiday Railway", taking huge numbers of people to resorts in the South-West. The
company's livery was dark green locomotives with chocolate and cream carriages.
The Company was founded at a public meeting in Bristol in
1833. Isambard
Kingdom Brunel was appointed as engineer at the age of 27, and made two controversial decisions: to use a broad gauge of seven feet (actually 7ft 0.25in or 2140mm) for the track, which he
believed would offer superior running at high speeds; and to take a route which passed north of the Marlborough Downs, an area with
no significant towns, though it did offer potential connections to Oxford and Gloucester.
The company received its Parliamentary Act in 1835, and the first stretch of line, from
London Paddington to
Taplow near Maidenhead opened in 1838.
The full line to Bristol Temple
Meads opened on completion of the Box Tunnel in 1841. The initial group of locomotives ordered by Brunel to his own specifications proved unsatisfactory, and
20-year-old Daniel Gooch was
appointed as Superintendent of Locomotives. Brunel and Gooch chose to locate
their locomotive works at the village of Swindon, at the point where the gradual
ascent from London turned into the steeper descent to the Avon valley at Bath.
Various other railways were built in the area to connect with the GWR: The Bristol and
Exeter Railway reached Exeter by 1844, The Cheltenham and Great Western Union Railway linked Swindon to Gloucester and Cheltenham in 1845, and the Bristol and Gloucester Railway brought
the broad gauge to Gloucester in 1844. Gloucester was already(?) served by the standard gauge Birmingham and Gloucester
Railway, resulting in a "break of gauge", and the need for all passengers and goods travelling beyond Gloucester to change
trains. This was the beginning of the "gauge war", and resulted in the appointment by Parliament of a Gauge Commission, which
duly recommended in favour of the standard gauge.
The undaunted GWR pressed ahead into the West
Midlands, in hard-fought competition with the London and North Western Railway. Birmingham was reached in 1852, at Snow Hill (although the GWR had initially
considered building to Rugby instead of Birmingham), and
Birkenhead (on standard gauge track) in 1854. The Bristol and Gloucester had been bought by
the Midland Railway in 1846 and
converted to standard gauge in 1854, bringing mixed gauge track (with three rails so that
both broad and standard gauge trains could run on it) to Bristol. By the 1860s the gauge
war was lost; with the merger of the standard-gauge West Midlands Railway into the GWR in 1861 mixed
gauge came to Paddington, and by 1869 there was no broad gauge track north of Oxford.
Meanwhile, further developments were made in the GWR's heartland: The South Devon Railway was
opened in 1849, extending the broad gauge to Plymouth, and the Cornwall Railway took it over the Royal
Albert Bridge and into Cornwall, reaching Penzance by 1867. The South Wales Railway opened
in 1850 and was connected to the GWR via Brunel's ungainly Wye bridge in 1852. The route from Wales to London via Gloucester was roundabout, so work on the Severn Tunnel began in 1873, but unexpected
underwater springs slowed the work down and prevented its opening until 1886.
Through this period the conversion to standard gauge continued, with mixed gauge track reaching Exeter in 1876. By this time most
conversions were bypassing mixed gauge and going directly from broad to standard. The final stretch of broad gauge was converted
to standard in a single weekend in May 1892. The
1890s also saw improvements in service of the generally conservative GWR - restaurant
cars, much improved conditions for third class passengers, and steam heating of trains. The company also built new track to
shorten its previously circuitous routes. After 1902 G. J. Churchward developed a distinctive style of locomotive in 4-4-0 and later 4-6-0
configuration, with flat-topped Belpaire fireboxes, tapered boilers, long smokeboxes and much standardisation of parts. These were the
Star class locomotives. A notable locomotive (not of the
Star class), was 111 The Great Bear, the first 4-6-2 locomotive
in the United Kingdom.
At the outbreak of World War I the GWR, along with the other major
railways, was taken into government control. After the war the government considered permanent nationalisation, but preferred a
compulsory amalgamation of the railways into four large groups. The GWR alone preserved its identity through the grouping, which took effect on January 1, 1923. It subsumed many smaller
companies, mostly handling South Wales coal traffic. Though this appeared to be a great
coup for the GWR, the coal traffic declined significantly as the use of coal as a naval fuel declined, and within a decade the
GWR was itself the largest single user of Welsh coal. The 1920s also saw the introduction
of the GWR's most famous locomotives - the Castle and
King classes
developed by Churchward's successor, C. B. Collett . The 1930s brought hard times, and the records set
by the Castles and Kings were surpassed by other companies, but the company remained in relatively good financial health despite
the Depression.
World War II brought a further period of direct government control, and
by its end a Labour government was in power and planning to nationalise the railways. The GWR became part of British
Railways on January 1, 1948. On
privatisation the "Great Western" name was revived for the Train
Operating Company providing passenger services to the West.
See Also: List of British companies
A Canadian railway company of the same name operated in southern Ontario from
1853 to 1882
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