Cambridge Station (Hardback)
Its Development and Operation as a Rail Centre
Imprint: Pen & Sword Transport
Pages: 188
Illustrations: 200
ISBN: 9781473869042
Published: 1st November 2017
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Why build a Railway to Cambridge? This is the first substantive illustrated book about Cambridge Station which explores the opening of the station in 1845; the four principal railway companies which all worked to and from the station in a ‘tangle of mutual inconvenience;’ the extensive goods traffic which was handled in the several goods yard around the station; and the way the Station operated from early beginnings, to what Abellio East Anglia and Network Rail offer today. Cambridge Station is renowned for having one of the longest single platforms in the UK, served by Up and Down trains. Ingenious trackwork and extensive signalling could satisfy passengers who were told at the central booking hall entrance: 'Turn left for Kings Lynn or right for London.' The book contains several pictures never before published, showing how the Eastern Counties and then the Great Eastern Railway Companies contrived Cambridge Station and the Engine Sheds, Goods Yards, Signal Boxes and extensive sidings to serve East Anglia. And it tells people stories too, because the author worked on the station in the 1950s and 1960s and knows Cambridge and East Anglia well. He is a geographer and writes with knowledge, wisdom and humour.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
BackTrack, September 2018
This is an important addition to the literature and (as we are in Cambridge) it is graded 'alpha plus'.
A well written book, spiced by the author's often humorous recollections of his working as a goods porter in vacations 1958-65, and especially notable for the many maps and plans which clarify the text.
Railway & Canal Historical Society
As one who has travelled to and from Cambridge by train many times since 1950, the reviewer found the book a delight and an enlightenment and has no hesitation in recommending it.
This is a useful work both for students of railway history or the Cambridge area in particular.
RailExpress, May 2018
As featured in
Friends of the National Railway Museum
The importance of the Station of Cambridge deserved a work of these characteristics.
José Manuél Rico Cortés (Mister JM) - Miniaturas JM
Read the complete Spanish review here.
About Rob Shorland-Ball
Rob Shorland-Ball is a former teacher, deputy head of the National Railway Museum, railways and industrial heritage consultant. In this book he explores a cross-country railway patchwork from the Midlands to Lowestoft, and Norfolk seaside resorts en route. Rob’s books always explore connections – knitting a railway patchwork together and how it worked. And people stories too. M&GNJR was much loved and is recalled today by a preserved station at Whitwell & Reepham and the North Norfolk Railway at Sheringham.