Fifty Years of Railway Life in England, Scotland and Ireland

audiobook

Fifty Years of Railway Life in England, Scotland and Ireland

by Joseph Tatlow

EN·~8 hours·36 chapters

Chapters

36 total
1

FIFTY YEARS OF RAILWAY LIFE IN ENGLAND, SCOTLAND AND IRELAND

0:22
2

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.

0:15
3

CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTORY

4:18
4

CHAPTER II. BOYHOOD

14:28
5

CHAPTER III. THE MIDLAND RAILWAY AND “KING HUDSON”

11:44
6

CHAPTER IV. FASHIONS AND MANNERS, VICTORIAN DAYS

8:39
7

CHAPTER V. EARLY OFFICE LIFE

15:51
8

CHAPTER VI. FRIENDSHIP

11:53
9

CHAPTER VII. RAILWAY PROGRESS

13:37
10

CHAPTER VIII. SCOTLAND, GLASGOW LIFE, AND THE CALEDONIAN LINE.

17:01

Description

A seasoned railway veteran recounts his half‑century of life on the tracks of England, Scotland and Ireland, beginning with a tranquil autumn evening in Donegal. He paints vivid pictures of mist‑kissed mountains, heather‑filled valleys and the gentle rhythm of a mixed‑train journey that lets the landscape unfold at a leisurely pace. As the memoir opens, his conversation with a younger colleague sparks the decision to set his memories down, offering a window into a bygone era of rail travel.

The narrative blends personal recollection with thoughtful commentary on the industry’s evolution, from the humble role of a clerk to the responsibilities of a director. Readers are invited to share his reflections on the people, places and challenges that shaped the railway network, all conveyed with modest humor and a keen eye for detail. It’s a heartfelt portrait of a profession that once stitched together the countryside, told by someone who lived every mile.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~8 hours (468K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2005-12-13

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Joseph Tatlow

Joseph Tatlow

1851–1929

A veteran railway manager turned memoirist, he wrote with the detail of an insider and the calm confidence of someone who had spent decades helping run major rail systems in Britain and Ireland. His best-known book offers a firsthand look at how the railway world grew and changed across the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

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