Backtrack  |  December 2015
December 2015
25 Years of the Windsor Link - Alan Taylor reviews a successful railway network development in the Manchester and Salford area.
Wiltshire's Railways - a historical survey by Stephen Roberts.
Golf and the Railways: The Links - Beverley Cole concludes her look at the connections between the two.
Visiting Willesden Shed - four pages of colour by Geoff Rixon.
Return to the Waverley Route - archive photos marking the partial revival of the Borders Line.
R. Herbert Lapage - Darryl Grant introduces a forgotten engineer and his locomotives.
A Cleaner at Hadleigh - A. J. Ludlam tells of the early career of a Suffolk engineman.
Eastern Blue - three pages of historic colour showing LNER Pacifics in company and early British Railways blue livery.
The Somerset & Dorset's Exmouth-Cleethorpes Holiday Train - Jonathan Edwards looks at one of the S&D's timetable oddities.
Passing Bredbury Junction - two of Alan Tyson's colour shots at a busy Cheshire location.
Greasy John and the Great Tay Whale - A. F. Nisbet tells the story of a Dundee showman, his prize exhibit and its railway travels.
The Formative Years of the Lancaster & Carlisle Railway: Part Two - the concluding part of Jeffrey Wells's look back at the building and opening of this important part of the West Coast Main Line.
Napsbury - Peter Butler notes a lost station on the Midland Main Line in Hertfordshire.
It seemed like a Good Idea at the time: Part Three - Miles Macnair describes some 19th/early 20th century Compressed Air Locomotives.
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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
Receberá 12 edições durante um ano Backtrack assinatura da revista.
Nota: As edições digitais não incluem os artigos de capa ou os suplementos que se encontram nos exemplares impressos.
Artigos desta edição
Segue-se uma seleção de artigos em Backtrack December 2015.