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What is this mystery railway guide?

Discussion in 'National Railway Museum' started by National Railway Museum, Aug 29, 2012.

  1. National Railway Museum

    National Railway Museum New Member

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    While tackling one of our last remaining ‘black holes’ of library material in the store this week, I came across this rather unusual book: Richardson’s Railway Guide.
    It’s about the size and thickness of early timetables from*George Bradshaw’s famous series*and, like those, contains timetables for every railway in England – which given*the 1841 publishing date means*it’s a rather slim tome. Unlike Bradshaw’s timetables, it also claims to deliver a description of the principal towns “with many*Historical and highly amusing Records” [sic].
    [​IMG]
    Apart from what I take to be a typo – York to Derby is 17 miles apparently – the only thing amusing about it that I can see is a complete absence of anything amusing.
    Maybe the Great British Sense of Humour was a more subtle creature in the mid-19th century, or perhaps you just had to be there.*Perhaps the fares were a joke and the train times ludicrous?
    Anyway, this guide is a bit of a mystery. Nobody I’ve spoken to has heard of it, we don’t have any others in the collection, and only Manchester University and the British Library have a copy – so it’s not a publication that became famous or survived much,*unlike Bradshaw’s.
    Interestingly enough, I’ve just had an enquiry from a visitor to Search Engine who wondered if we had a copy of Topham’s Railway Timetable and Guide in the collection. We don’t – but it leads me to wonder how many more pseudo-Bradshaws are going to come out of the woodwork?
    I’d be interested to hear if you think you’ve got an uncelebrated railway guide languishing in an*attic or similar. However, if you want to look at ours and are curious to discover whether your funny bone will be tickled by its “Humourous Records”, let us know at*search.engine@nrm.org.uk*and we’ll get it out for you.

    Filed under: Library and archive collections Tagged: bradshaw, George Bradshaw, richardson, timetables, topham [​IMG] [​IMG]
     
  2. guard_jamie

    guard_jamie Part of the furniture

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    Regarding it's amusement - or lack of it - consider that language has changed since the 19th century. Amusement then may, indeed I recall that it does, mean something quite different to now. Something more along the lines of thought-provoking, edifying, time-occupying etc.
     

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