a railway in 1605

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Kestrel
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a railway in 1605

Post by Kestrel »

Were there railways in 1605? They seem to think so here.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/ ... s-ago.html
giner
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Re: a railway in 1605

Post by giner »

Nobody employs proofreaders in 2014, methinks.
earlswood nob
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Re: a railway in 1605

Post by earlswood nob »

Good morning all

There was a wagon way built at Jackfield in 1605 by James Clifford, from his coal mines to the river.

It was one of the earliest in the world.

Earlswood nob
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Re: a railway in 1605

Post by Bryan »

German mining operations in the middle ages is known to have used waggonways.
JASd17
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Re: a railway in 1605

Post by JASd17 »

There was a 'waggonway' built at Wollaton near Nottingham between 1603-4. It was not a railway perhaps, but certainly a precursor. Built to transport coal, of course.

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Re: a railway in 1605

Post by 2392 »

According to the "Guinness book of rail facts & feats". The principle of a railway date back to babylonian times about 2245BC. The oldest known illustration of anything like a railway dating to 1350+/- in the Minster of Freiburg-im-Breisgau Germany. The earliest record of a railway in the accepted sense is another illustration dated 1550 of a narrow gauge mine railway in Alsace. So collectively well before Messrs Stephenson and Co arrvied on the scene.
Last edited by 2392 on Sun Apr 05, 2015 2:32 am, edited 2 times in total.
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richard
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Re: a railway in 1605

Post by richard »

I don't know the Babylonian reference, but the Greek system across the Corinth Isthmus is often quoted as one of the first "railways". It had 'cars' that carried boats from one side to the other. > 2000 yrs ago.

Considering the problems the Daily Mail have with current events, I'm surprised anyone looks at them for historical 'facts'...
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Re: a railway in 1605

Post by 2392 »

The Guinness book also mentions the Greeks too. At about the time you mention Richard.
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