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railway |
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railway![]() Bullet trains at Tokyo station, Japan. The Shinkansen railway network had to build wide-gauge tracks to carry the bullet trains; the standard width being unsuited to their design. The first wide-gauge segment was built between Tokyo and Osaka. ![]() The Renaissance-style front of Grand Central Station in New York which was opened in 1913. The station concourse is one of the largest rooms in the world. Statues of Mercury, Athena, and Hercules surround the station clock. ![]() The first transcontinental railway in the USA was completed on 10 May 1869, when the Union Pacific line from Omaha, Nebraska, joined up with the Central Pacific line from Sacramento, California. Workers from each company surrounded the two proprietors (Harriman and Huntington) as they solemnly shook hands for the camera. ![]() English engineer George Stephenson built the Rocket in 1829. It was one of the factors behind the sudden increase in railway construction that helped the spread of the industrial revolution in Britain. ![]() The great peaks of the Canadian Rockies, which rise along Alberta's southwestern boundary, are cut by the Canadian Pacific Railway. Completed in 1885, it is one of the most impressive engineering feats in the world. Method of transport in which trains convey passengers and goods along a twin rail track. Following the work of British steam pioneers such as the Scottish engineer James Watt, English engineers, such as George Stephenson, developed the steam locomotive and built the first railways; Stephenson built the first public steam railway, from Stockton to Darlington, England, in 1825. This heralded extensive railway building in Britain, continental Europe, and North America, providing a fast and economical means of transport and communication. After World War II, steam engines were replaced by electric and diesel engines. At the same time, the growth of road building, air services, and car ownership brought an end to the supremacy of the railways.
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Since then I have seen many horses much alarmed and restive at the sight or sound of a steam engine; but thanks to my good master's care, I am as fearless at railway stations as in my own stable. Even the bustle and confusion at the railway terminus, so wearisome and bewildering at other times, roused me and did me good. WHILE a Division Superintendent of a railway was attending closely to his business of placing obstructions on the track and tampering with the switches he received word that the President of the road was about to discharge him for incompetency. |
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