Paperback. Zustand: Good. It's a preowned item in good condition and includes all the pages. It may have some general signs of wear and tear, such as markings, highlighting, slight damage to the cover, minimal wear to the binding, etc., but they will not affect the overall reading experience.
Verlag: [Newcastle]; Engelmann, Graf, Coindet & Co, 1828., 1828
Anbieter: Keel Row Books. ABA/ ILAB / PBFA., Whitley Bay, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 4.137,57
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbLarge, rolled lithographic plan printed in sections on paper which form a cohesive, single plan approximately 5,045 x 552mm in length. The map covers the course of the railway from Newcastle to Carlisle, marking district boundaries, land plots and principal buildings. Original hand-colouring showing sections of the railway, with elevation graphed below plan. Title cartouche to centre. Light soiling and spots of ink to plan, nicks and minor tears to edges, two intersecting tape repairs approximately 200mm to verso of one section only. A well-preserved copy of a rare and impressive plan. Benjamin Thompson's survey plan of the first railway to cross Britain, and the third to be built after the Stockton-Darlington (1825) and Liverpool-Manchester (1830). At the time of the opening of England's first public steam-powered railway from Stockton to Darlington there began the plan for a project of national significance: the connection of England's seas by rail. This great project, completed in tandem by the Leeds-Hull and Newcastle-Carlisle railways, had 'historical significance which [Stockton-Darlington] could scarcely claim' (Tomlinson 191). Originally planned as a horse-drawn wagon way, the line was first proposed in 1825, with two rival plans by George Stephenson and mining engineer and pit owner Benjamin Thompson. It was Thompson's plan, which was a quarter of a mile longer than Stephenson's, that would ultimately be approved by parliament in the session of April 1828. In the following months, Thomas Oswald Blackett and John Studholme surveyed the Newcastle and Carlisle ends of the finalised plan respectively. This hand-coloured lithographic map records the plan as it appeared in this later form. The scheme was not without its problems, issues with the levels and the obstruction of the project by certain landowners meant construction did not begin until March 1830. A superb piece of early railwayana. Tomlinson, 'The North Eastern Railway', 191-195.