Revealed: The myths surrounding the Stockton and Darlington railway (2024)

The Stockton and Darlington line in the North East of England is hailed as 'the first public railway in the world' - a line that kickstarted the global railway revolution.

However, it turns out that the idea of the line as a 'revolution' was actually created for cash in 1875 by a local newspaper journalist on a tight book deadline working to a biased brief from a railway company.

Thanks to subsequent newspaper coverage of a costly jubilee event, the myth created by this book stuck.

To help unravel the myth, let's make a stop at the 20-year-old Locomotion rail museum in Shildon, which lies a few miles north of Darlington.

It has just opened a new £8m hall, called simply 'New Hall', that expands what was already a gargantuan display of historic rail vehicles into the largest and most awe-inspiring such collections in Europe, with over 100 vehicles now on display.

The Stockton and Darlington line in the North East of England is hailed as 'the first public railway in the world' - a line that kickstarted the global railway revolution.However, it turns out that the idea of the line as a 'revolution' was actually created for cash in 1875 by a local newspaper journalist on a tight book deadline working to a biased brief from a railway company. Pictured - costumed men and women in 1925 commemorating the 100th anniversary of the line

One of these is steam engine Locomotion, famous for its pivotal role in the birth of the nearby Stockton and Darlington line.

Locomotion – known for 170 years or so as Locomotion No.1 - pulled 27 wagons along the line on its opening day on September 27, 1825.

This linear event was said to have been witnessed by 40,000 or so spectators entertained by a band in the final wagon 'playing cheering and appropriate airs'.

The early locomotive - a travelling steam engine rather than one fixed to the ground - puffed through the Stockton and Darlington Railway's Georgian landscape.

The 26-mile line was mainly used to transport coal to market, but it also carried fare-paying folk and was an important stepping stone in the development of passenger railways, pre-dating the better-known Liverpool to Manchester railway of 1830, which is world famous for the Rocket locomotive and was designed from the get-go to be a city-to-city line.

George Stephenson was involved with both railways, and his Newcastle locomotive factory also supplied the first steam engines that worked them.

New Hall has opened in plenty of time for next year's bicentenary of the opening of the Stockton and Darlington Railway.

Locomotion on display at the Locomotion museum. The steam engine pulled 27 wagons along the Stockton and Darlington Railway on its opening day on September 27, 1825. It's not the 1820s vintage or even from the 1830s - it's an amalgam of parts

The huge new £8million hall at the 20-year-old Locomotion rail museum (above) in Shildon, a few miles north of Darlington

The anniversary will be marked by a year-long celebration billed as Railway 200, which will attract hundreds of thousands of visitors to the North East.

The Locomotion museum - a partnership between the Science Museum Group and Durham County Council - will be an essential stop on the bicentenary circuit and will host several of the events.

Yet it's a safe bet that few to none of the birthday bashes will celebrate the forgotten Victorian figure James Stephen Jeans.

Yet if it wasn't for Jeans, there might not be a birthday to celebrate.

Jeans wasn't a rail financier, a locomotive engineer, or a wayleave-granting landowner. He was a jobbing journalist.

It was 29-year-old Jeans, an eager young wordsmith for hire, who was most responsible for shaping the story of the opening of the Stockton and Darlington Railway as the 'greatest idea of modern times'.

Above,Locomotion's post-1825 brass nameplate. The steam engine was originally called 'Active'

LEFT: J.S. Jean's 1875 book about the Stockton & Darlington Railway's jubilee. The book created several of the myths attached to the 1825 opening of what was originally a coal line with passenger coaches mostly pulled by horses, not steam locomotives. RIGHT: An illustration of Locomotion from J.S. Jean's 1875 book

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In April 1875, he was commissioned by the directors of the North Eastern Railway, owners of the Stockton and Darlington Railway, to write a book celebrating the line's jubilee in September of the same year.

His swiftly-written 315-page history of the first 50 years of the railway - a giveaway book created for cash and based on a biased brief from a company with an aggrandising agenda - propagated several myths about the Stockton and Darlington Railway.

Myths that are still current.

Historic England claims the Stockton and Darlington line was the 'birthplace of the modern railway system', used 'innovative technology to carry both passengers and freight' and 'began the railway age which was to change the world'.

However, new archival research by an eminent North East historian reveals a far more complex picture, showcasing that railways have a far longer history than most people realise.

Les Turnbull, a former university lecturer, has written that, contrary to common claims, the Stockton and Darlington Railway didn't introduce any ground-breaking technologies - malleable iron rails, cuttings, embankments, large railway bridges, signals, and locomotives existed long before 1825 - nor was it the first public railway, and the line wasn't even the first railway to take paying passengers.

Locomotion houses over 100 vehicles. Above - schoolchildren explore New Hall on its opening day

The Locomotion museum is a partnership between the Science Museum Group and Durham County Council

LEFT: At Locomotion, visitors can see a replica of Stephenson's Rocket being put through its paces. RIGHT: Visitors on the opening day of New Hall

The Surrey Iron Railway of 1801, the Swansea and Mumbles line of 1804, and the Kilmarnock and Troon line of 1812 pre-dated the Stockton and Darlington line as public railways, with the last two lines carrying passengers as well as freight.

The Middleton Railway to Leeds was established in 1758 and, in 1812, was the first to use locomotives.

Yet railways are even older than this.

Rutways have existed since antiquity, and in 1604, colliery owners built Nottingham's Wollaton Wagonway in Nottingham.

In the 1720s, the horse-powered Tanfield Wagonway on Tyneside was constructed with deep cuttings, huge embankments and the world's first large masonry railway bridge, the Causey Arch.

The Cape 2 Cairo restaurant in Shildon is the former Mason's Arms, a pub where tickets for the early Stockton and Darlington Railway were sold. The pub was where, in 1825, locomotives were hitched to wagons following the work of the Brusselton Incline's stationary engines

While the Stockton and Darlington's inaugural journey in 1825 featured an experimental passenger coach - named, appropriately enough, Experiment - and 26 other coal wagons, many with passengers sitting on top, the everyday line was worked for several years not by locomotives but by horses.

In truth, says Turnbull, the Stockton and Darlington Railway was an obscure coal line for most of its early history.

Eight years after opening, only one per cent of the company's revenue was generated from passenger traffic.

There are many other myths surrounding the Stockton and Darlington Railway.

A locomotive called Locomotion No. 1 didn't puff along the line on the opening day - that was a later name for the engine.

The locomotive was originally called 'Active'.

Raised trackbed on the historical Brusselton Incline on the route of the Stockton & Darlington railway. The original sleeper stones were laid between 1822 and the line's opening in 1825. Around 64,000 were in use on the line, but they were found to be too weak - and in 1831-32, the whole line was relaid

The old engine room, workers' cottages and steam locomotive reservoir at top of Brusselton Incline

The Skerne railway bridge, built by George Stephenson for the 1825 opening of the Stockton and Darlington Railway, is billed as the world's oldest railway bridge still in use for its original purpose

The Locomotion No. 1 on display in the Locomotion museum is not 1820s vintage or even from the 1830s - it's an amalgam of parts, with the long-working engine frozen in the configuration it had in about 1857 after several key parts had been replaced, Trigger's Broom style.

Nor is it the Stockton to Darlington Railway as is sometimes written.

The mineral line started not in Darlington but at the Witton Park Colliery, close to St. Helen Auckland, a southern satellite of Bishop Auckland.

Five miles of this part of the line quickly fell out of use and are today part of a walking route devised by the Friends of the Stockton and Darlington Railway.

Peter Robinson, a volunteer at Locomotion. Peter worked at the Shildon railway workings from the 1950s through to its closure in 1984. Robinson's father and grandfather also worked in Shildon

The human-sized wooden velocipedes that maintenance workers once pedalled along rail tracks. Above, aBata velocipede 'rail bike' in Locomotion's New Hall

Visitors can follow the line's route and climb to the top of the Brusselton Incline, where a stationary steam engine once pulled carriages along the line.

The engine is long gone, but the buildings remain, and they are now converted into houses.

Later stone sleepers left in situ in several sections give a good approximation of what the original route might have looked like in this still rural landscape.

In Darlington, meanwhile, the Skerne railway bridge, built by George Stephenson for the opening of the Stockton and Darlington Railway, is billed as the world's oldest railway bridge still in use for its original purpose.

Whatever the reality was for the line, it was historically significant – and deserves a few party poppers next year. But along with a certain James Stephen Jeans.

Revealed: The myths surrounding the Stockton and Darlington railway (2024)

FAQs

What was special about the Stockton and Darlington Railway? ›

The Stockton and Darlington Railway (S&DR) was the first passenger railway to use steam trains to transport passengers. The company operated across north east England from 1825 to 1863. The S&DR's first line connected coal mines at Shildon in County Durham to Darlington.

When was the opening of the Stockton and Darlington Railway in 1825 the world's first public railway? ›

The opening of the Stockton & Darlington Railway on 27 September 1825 was a great occasion. Not only was it the first public passenger railway in the world, but it was pulled by one of the first steam locomotives. Most people had never seen anything like it before and 40,000 people turned out to witness it.

How long was the Stockton to Darlington railway? ›

The Stockton & Darlington Railway was 26 miles (42km) long. Today, Britain's rail network runs on 9,790 miles (15,760 kilometres) of track. The Stockton & Darlington Railway carried as many as 40,000 passengers between July 1826 and June 1827. Today, 1.65 billion train journeys are made in Britain every year.

In what year did the Stockton and Darlington railroad in England become the first railroad to haul general traffic? ›

The world's first public railway to use steam locomotives, its first line connected collieries near Shildon with Darlington and Stockton in County Durham, and was officially opened on 27 September 1825.

What was the significance of the railway? ›

The building of railways and locomotives provided a significant stimulus to the coal-mining, iron-production, engineering, and construction industries. The railways also helped to reduce transaction costs, which in turn lowered the costs of goods, bringing positive changes to people's diet.

What is the fastest train in the world? ›

Under commercial traffic and practical conditions where trains carry passengers across from one station to another, the world records for top operating speeds of maglev and single phase trains are held respectively by China's Shanghai Maglev Train that has a top speed of 431 km/h (268 mph) and CR400 f*cking Hao with 350 ...

What is the longest railroad ever? ›

The Trans-Siberian Railway, historically known as the Great Siberian Route and often shortened to Transsib, is a large railway system connecting European Russia with the Russian Far East. Spanning over 9,289 kilometers (5,772 mi) in length, it is the world's longest railway.

How long was the death railway? ›

The 415-kilometre railway ran from Thanbyuzayat in Burma (now Myanmar) to Non Pladuk in Thailand. It was constructed by units working along its entire length rather than just from each end.

What was the world's first railway? ›

On September 27, 1825, Locomotion No. 1 became the world's first steam locomotive to carry passengers on a public line, the Stockton and Darlington Railway, in North East England. Locomotion No. 1 was built by George Stephenson at his son Robert's company, the Robert Stephenson and Company.

Where is the oldest railroad? ›

The Middleton Railway in Leeds, which was built in 1758, later became the world's oldest operational railway (other than funiculars), albeit now in an upgraded form. In 1764, the first railway in America was built in Lewiston, New York.

Who is the father of the railroad? ›

George Stephenson (9 June 1781 – 12 August 1848) was an English civil engineer and mechanical engineer during the Industrial Revolution. Renowned as the "Father of Railways", Stephenson was considered by the Victorians as a great example of diligent application and thirst for improvement.

What type of engine did the first train use? ›

In 1802, Richard Trevithick patented a "high pressure engine" and created the first steam-powered locomotive engine on rails. Trevithick wrote on February 21, 1804, after the trial of his High Pressure Tram-Engine, that he "carry'd ten tons of Iron, five wagons, and 70 Men...

Why was the railway important to Confederation? ›

In exchange for joining the Canadian Confederation, provinces were promised a railway link. Construction of the railway would provide work for hundreds of thousands people, in addition to establishing Canada's reputation abroad and encouraging colonization.

What is the most famous railway throughout history? ›

Orient Express is without the doubt one of the most famous trains of all time. The real reason for its popularity lies in its level of service and the popular stories that were centered around it (most famously by a detective novel “Murder on the Orient Express” written by Agatha Christie).

What were the facts about the railway revolution? ›

The engineer and inventor, George Stephenson , known as the 'father of railways', had worked building steam locomotives for coal mines. In 1825, he opened the first locomotive route from Stockton to Darlington. This led to 'railway mania' throughout the 1830s and 1840s and the rapid growth of the railways.

What was the most important railroad in Kentucky during the 19th century? ›

The Louisville and Nashville Railroad, chartered in 1850, was Kentucky's first interstate standard carrier railroad and completed its mainline to Nashville in 1859. Its construction marked the largest internal improvement project in the state. Louisville provides much of the needed funding.

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