User:ColourSarge/Sandbox/LMS Rewrite

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This is a sandbox article, created to test a new format for articles on the "Big Four" railway companies and BR. Text underneath each section heading in (brackets and italics) is intended to be a guide as to the content which would appear in each section - it would not form part of the finished article. To join the discussion on this new format, please go to Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_UK_Railways#Goals_-_.27Big_Four.27_articles

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London, Midland and Scottish Railway
LMS crest, carved into the stonework at Leeds station
LMS crest, carved into the stonework at Leeds station
Timeline
Created: 1st January 1923
Abolished: 31st December 1947
Created by: Railways Act 1921
Abolished by: Transport Act 1947
Predecessors
London and North Western Railway
Midland Railway
Caledonian Railway
Highland Railway
Glasgow & South Western Railway
North Staffordshire Railway
Furness Railway
Corporate
Headquarters: Euston station, London
President: Lord Stamp
Operations
Route mileage 7,790 miles
Non railway interests
Hotels
Shipping
Airlines
Road Haulage


See also: London Midland for the new (2007) railway company

The London Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS[1]) was a British railway company. It was formed on 1 January 1923 as a result of the Railways Act 1921 which required the grouping of over 300 separate railway companies into just four.

The resulting company was an unweidly construction, with numerous interests other than railway operations. The LMS claimed to be the largest joint stock and largest transport organisation in the world, and the largest commercial undertaking in Europe, although they did not specify the basis of these claims.

In 1938, the LMS operated 6,870 route miles (11,056 km) of railway (excluding its lines in Northern Ireland), but its profitability was generally disappointing, with a rate of return of only 2.7%. Along with the other members of the "Big Four" British railway companies (GWR, LNER and SR), the LMS was nationalised on 1 January 1948, becoming part of the state-owned British Railways.

[edit] Geography

[edit] Overview

Contemporary 1935 map of LMS system.  Other railways' lines are omitted.
Contemporary 1935 map of LMS system. Other railways' lines are omitted.

The Railways Act 1921 created four large railway companies which were in effect geographical monopolies, albeit with competition at their boundaries, and with some lines either reaching into competitor territory, or being jointly operated.

The LMS operated services in and around London, the Midlands, the North West of England, Mid/North Wales, and Scotland. The company also operated a seperate network of lines in Northern Ireland.

The principal routes were the West Coast Main Line and the Midland Main Line, which had been the main routes of the two largest consituent companies, the London and North Western Railway and the Midland Railway respectively.

[edit] Joint Lines

The LMS operated a number of lines jointly with the other main railway companies, a situation which arose when the former joint owners of a route were placed into different post-grouping companies. Most of these were situated at or near the boundaries between two or more of the companies, however there were some notable examples which extended beyond this hinterland zone.

Together with the London and North Eastern Railway, the LMS ran the former Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway network. Exceeding 180 track miles, this was the largest jointly operated network in Great Britain, and extended from Peterborough to the East Anglian coast.

The LMS also operated a significant joint network with the Southern Railway, in the shape of the former Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway. This network connected the English cities of Bath and Bournemouth, and wound its way through territory nominally allocated to a third railway company, the Great Western.

[edit] Areas of competition

Being geographically the largest, and the most central of the four main post-grouping railway companies, the LMS shared numerous boundaries with both the LNER and GWR, although it's overlap with the Southern Railway was limited due to the general lack of direct routes through London.

Competition with the LNER was mainly in terms of the premium London to Scotland traffic, with the rival LMS (West Coast) and LNER (East Coast) routes competing to provide ever better standards of passenger comfort and faster journey times. The LNER also competed with the LMS for traffic between London, the East Midlands, South Yorkshire and Manchester, with the former Midland Main line from St Pancras (LMS) and Great Central Main Line from Marylebone (LNER) both providing express services between these destinations.

The London to Birmingham corridor was fiercely contested with the LMS running expresses over its West Coast Main Line via Rugby, and the Great Western Railway running services via Banbury.

[edit] Northern Ireland

thumb|right|The NCC system in 1932

The LMS was also the only one of the Big Four companies to operate rail services in Northern Ireland, serving locations such as Belfast, Londonderry, Ballymena, Portrush and Larne.

On 1 July 1903, the Midland Railway took over the Belfast and Northern Counties Railway and operated it under the name of Midland Railway (Northern Counties Committee). On grouping, the network became part of the LMS, again operating under the name of the Northern Counties Committee, and consisted of 201 miles of 5'3" gauge track with a further 63 miles of 3' gauge line.

Further information: Northern Counties Committee

[edit] Geographical oddities

In 1912, the Midland Railway purchased the London, Tilbury and Southend Railway which operated between London Fenchurch Street and Shoeburyness, with a loop serving Tilbury. This part of the country would later come under the control of the LNER, although this particular route, being part of the Midland Railway, was incorporated into the LMS. This arrangement did however provide a choice for residents of Southend, who could take services from either Southend Victoria to London Liverpool Street or from Southend Central to Fenchurch Street.

[edit] Overseas operations


[edit] History

(formation, early history, golden years, WWII, post-war)

The LMS was formed from the following major companies:

There were also some 24 subsidiary railways, leased or worked by the above companies, and large number of joint railways (including the UK's largest Joint Railway, the Midland & Great Northern, and one of the most famous, the Somerset and Dorset). In Ireland there were three railways:

  • Dundalk, Newry and Greenore Railway 26.5 miles (42.6 km)
  • Northern Counties Committee 265.25 miles (426.9 km)
  • Joint Midland and Great Northern of Ireland Railway 91 miles (146 km), with interests in Ireland

Most of the above operated in what became Northern Ireland

The total route mileage of the LMSR in 1923 was 7790 miles (12,537 km).

For complete list of all railways see List of constituents of the LMS.

[edit] Early history

The early history of the LMS is dominated by infighting between its two largest constituents (and previously fierce rivals), the Midland and the North Western, each of which believed that their company's way was the right — and only — way of doing business. Generally, the Midland prevailed, with the adoption of many Midland practices, such as the livery of crimson lake for passenger locomotives and rolling stock. Perhaps most notable was the continuation of the Midland Railway's small engine policy.

[edit] Electrification

[edit] The Stanier revolution

The arrival of the new Chief Mechanical Engineer William Stanier, who was head-hunted from the Great Western Railway by Josiah Stamp in 1933, heralded a change in the LMS. Stanier introduced new ideas rather than continuing with the company's internal conflict.

[edit] Nationalisation

The war-damaged LMS was nationalised in 1948 by the Transport Act 1947, becoming part of British Railways. It formed the London Midland Region and part of the Scottish Region. British Railways subsequently transferred the lines in Northern Ireland to the Ulster Transport Authority in 1949. The lines in Great Britain were rationalised through selective closure in the 1950s to 70s but the main routes survive and some have been developed for 125 mph inter-city services.



[edit] Operations

(premium services, pioneering use of technology, non-railway operations, most profitable services, quirky and non-standard operations (i.e. narrow gauge or rope worked etc), safety record)

[edit] Railway Operations

Although the LMS operated a number of famous express trains, and also provided commuter services throughout it's area of operations, a significant portion of the company's business was the transportation of freight between the major industrial centres of London, the Midlands, the North West and the Clyde.

  • Named trains of the London, Midland and Scottish Railway - see discussion

Particularly notable were the TotonBrent coal trains, which took coal from the Nottinghamshire coalfield to London.

[edit] Canals

The LMS owned many canals, including the Montgomeryshire Canal, Ellesmere Canal and Chester Canal.

Many of its canals were later abandoned by Act of Parliament, instigated by LMS. Those that were not abandoned passed to the control of the British Transport Commission, at nationalisation; and ownership subsequently transferred to the British Waterways Board.

[edit] Shipping

Further information: Caledonian MacBrayne

[edit] Hotels

Midland Hotel (Morecambe) British Transport Hotels

[edit] Road haulage

[edit] Air services

[edit] Technology

Suburban_electrification_of_the_London,_Midland_and_Scottish_Railway LMS Scientific Research Laboratory

[edit] Traction and Rolling Stock

(locomotives, rolling stock, multiple units, liveries, works and depots)

[edit] Locomotives

LMS locomotive numbering and classification

[edit] Rolling stock

[edit] Multiple units

[edit] Freight wagons

  • Wagons of the London, Midland and Scottish Railway

[edit] Liveries

[edit] Construction and maintainance

To add information on Crewe, Wolverton, Horwich, St Rollox, Derby, Bromsgrove, Stoke

[edit] Preservation

[edit] Public Relations

(advertising campaigns, public perception, branding etc)

[edit] Branding

[edit] Advertising

[edit] Public perception

[edit] Popular Culture

Night Mail

[edit] Notable Employees

(general managers, chief engineers, but also for example drivers awarded for bravery in WWII etc)

[edit] Presidents

[edit] Chief Mechanical Engineers


[edit] Other notable employees

William Kelly Wallace

[edit] Gallery

(variety of images from across timeline and representing each of the sections listed above)


[edit] References

  • Gammell, C.J., (1980), LMS Branch Lines, 1945 - 1965, Oxford Publishing Company, ISBN 0-86093-062-9
  • Hendry, R.P. and Hendry, R.P., (1982), An Historical Survey of selected LMS Stations, Layouts and Illustrations, Volume 1, Oxford Publishing Company, ISBN 0-86093-168-4
  • Nock, O.S., (1982), A History of the LMS. Vol. 1: The First Years, 1923-1930, George Allen & Unwin, ISBN 0-04-385087-1
  • Nock, O.S., (1982), A History of the LMS. Vol. 2: The Record Breaking 'Thirties, 1931-1939, George Allen & Unwin, ISBN 0-04-385093-6
  • Welbourn, N., (1994), Lost Lines: LMR, Ian Allan, ISBN 0-7110-2277-1
  • Whitehouse, P. and Thomas, D.St J., (1995), LMS 150: the London, Midland & Scottish Railway: a century and a half of progress, Greenwich Editions, ISBN 0-86288-071-8 [Recommended for general overview]

[edit] Further Reading

[edit] External Links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:

[edit] Footnote

  1. ^ It has been argued that the initials LMSR should be used to be consistent with LNER, GWR and SR. However the London, Midland and Scottish Railway's corporate image used LMS, and this is what is generally used in historical circles. The LMS occasionally also used the initials LM&SR. For consistency, Wikipedia uses the initials LMS.


The "Big Four" pre-nationalisation British railway companies
v  d  e

Great Western London Midland & Scottish London & North Eastern Southern

GWR constituents: Great Western RailwayCambrian RailwaysTaff Vale Railway
Barry RailwayRhymney Railway(Full list)
LNER constituents: Great CentralGreat EasternGreat NorthernGreat North of Scotland
Hull & BarnsleyNorth BritishNorth Eastern(Full list)
LMS constituents: CaledonianFurnessGlasgow & South WesternHighland
Lancashire & YorkshireLondon and North WesternMidlandNorth Staffordshire(Full list)
SR constituents: London and South Western RailwayLondon, Brighton and South Coast Railway
South Eastern RailwayLondon, Chatham and Dover Railway(Full list)

See also: History of rail transport in Great Britain 1923 - 1947List of companies involved in the grouping


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