Backtrack  |  March 2017
Backtrack- March 2017
Changing at York - Tom Heavyside's three pages of colour shots of the York scene in the late 1970s and early 80s.
What about the Workers? - Archive photos of a variety of railwaymen at work in a range of activities.
The Closure of the Midland & Great Northern Joint Line: Part One - One of the major railway closures of the pre-Beeching era examined by Edward Gibbins.
The Brimscombe Bankers - Mike Fenton looks at the working of a steeply-graded GWR main line in the Cotswolds.
Getting a Quart out of a Pint Pot: Part One: Boosters and Steam Tenders - Miles Macnair looks at various ideas to obtain extra performance from locomotives.
Representing the Eastern Counties - four colour pages of Great Eastern Railway locomotives.
Ripon - A City no longer with a Railway: Part Two - James Rogers concludes his history of the city's station.
A Lancashire Alliance 1863-1870 - Jeffrey Wells tells how the Lancashire Union Railway came into being.
Morfa Mawddach in limbo - Max Birchenough's colour photos of a once significant Cambrian Coast junction station in 1968.
The Great Silence and the railways, 1919 - Jeffrey Wells notes how the first anniversary of the First World War armistice was marked.
Beyond Clapham Junction - Michael H.C. Baker reflects on railway travels in south London suburbia.
Carruthers (and others) - the story of a staff fraud perpetrated on the Liverpool Overhead Railway in 1902 told by John C. Hughes.
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The specialist magazine was first published in 1986 for the purpose of ‘recording the history of Britain’s railway’ - the magazine’s strapline - and it is now published by Pendragon Publishing. Dropping every month, Backtrack magazine is your monthly dose of railway nostalgia and historical insight.
35 years later and Backtrack has firmly established itself as the authority on topics such as the history of Britain and Ireland’s train stations, railway bridges, signalling, biographies, train services and staff recollections - all of which regularly appear in the magazine. Backtrack's contributors include many of today's leading railway history writers and the magazine has a reputation for being of the highest quality.
With a multitude of unmissable monthly features, every issue aims to chronicle and record part of the history of Britain’s railway system. Every issue contains a dozen or so large articles that focus on a particular line or area in British railway history.
Whether you’re into early railway history from the 'pre-Stephenson' era, steam, diesel or electric locomotive you’ll find every era covered in minute detail - from railway company history, railway carriages and wagons, railway stations, railway ships, hotels and road vehicles, railway economic and social history and railway publicity and advertising.
A Backtrack digital magazine subscription is your go-to for railway history:
- Britain's leading historical railway magazine
- Delving into the era of horse-drawn tramroads up to locomotives and rolling stock
- History of lines, the social, political, financial, engineering and labour aspects of the railway
- Archive black and white quality images and historical colour coverage of the railway scene
- The history of train stations, railway bridges, signalling, biographies and train services
- Contributors include many of today's leading railway history writers
- Delivered directly to your device every week
Sie erhalten 12 Ausgaben während eines 1-Jahres Backtrack Zeitschriftenabonnement.
Hinweis: Die digitalen Ausgaben enthalten nicht die in den gedruckten Exemplaren enthaltenen Umschlagseiten oder Beilagen.
Artikel in dieser Ausgabe
Im Folgenden finden Sie eine Auswahl von Artikeln aus Backtrack March 2017.