About
Part of a joint initiative between the University of Portsmouth, the National Railway Museum (NRM) and the Modern Records Centre at the University of Warwick (MRC). We’re also working with other institutions including The National Archives of the UK and the RMT Union.
The aim is to make it easier to find out about railway worker accidents in Britain and Ireland from the late 1880s to 1939. We’re providing data about who was involved, what they were doing on the railways, what happened to them and why. Although today most people don’t realise it, working on the railways 100 years ago was incredibly dangerous, with hundreds killed and tens of thousands injured each year.
These records are from The National Archives RAIL collection.
The records are those of all private railway companies and private canal companies taken into public ownership by the Transport Act of 1947, together with records which relate to the railway network, and those of associated bodies.
More details on the series can be found here :https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C241
You can find details about the project on the dedicated website https://www.railwayaccidents.port.ac.uk/
Works
RAIL_23_59
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