Earliest railways The
Swansea & Mumbles Railway, the world's first passenger railway service operated in the same manner as
turnpike roads. When it opened in 1807, anyone with a suitable
horse-drawn waggon could use the line in exchange for paying a toll. The railway operated in this manner until passenger services ceased in 1826 or 1827 because of the construction of a turnpike road parallel to the railway. The
Stockton & Darlington Railway of 1825 opened with mostly horse-drawn trains, with all able to operate their own trains on a turnpike basis. The
Liverpool & Manchester Railway of 1830 opened with purely-steam locomotive haulage, and the need for greater co-ordination meant that the railway had to operate the trains. Private wagons hauled by company trains were tolerated. That set the pattern for the next century or more.
Canals Canals have been operated like turnpikes if the canal company was prohibited for anti-monopoly reasons from operating boats on the canal.
British Rail After 1948, most of the United Kingdom railway network was nationalized as
British Rail for both political and practical reasons. Internal industrial operations and some minor lines were excluded from the process. Where industrial lines met the railway network proper, trains would be transferred from the industrial operator to British Rail control, with non-British Rail locomotives and engineers never being permitted onto the British Rail network. Arrangements existed whereby non-British Rail operators could own rolling stock. This changed in 1986, when in a very different political climate,
Foster Yeoman obtained the right to run its own trains onto the British Rail network if British Rail locomotive engineers were used. In 1997, the British Railways network was privatised as a single company
Railtrack, which later became the non-profit company
Network Rail. Multiple companies hold rights to operate trains on the national network either as for-profit operators or government aided passenger franchises. A formal safety process exists for gaining access, along with driver and equipment requirements and a pricing scheme. Any organisation meeting all of the requirements can become a railway operator and access the national network. As well as holding access rights to the national network and, in some cases, internationally via the
Channel Tunnel, many of the freight operators have agreements that permit them to access private networks operated by industries and ports and, in some cases, also onto heritage railways, several of which now also carry small amounts of commercial freight traffic. Passenger operators also have agreements with some of the heritage railways to allow them to run special trains to connect with heritage railway events. Similarly, heritage railway operators and railtour operators have reached arrangements to access the national network and run heritage trains, often steam powered, to and from the national rail network. As of 2007, that has extended to regular summer timetabled services on both the
North Warwickshire Line to
Stratford-upon-Avon and from
Grosmont, on the
North Yorkshire Moors Railway to
Whitby on the national rail network. ==References==