Formation The Great Western Railway originated from the desire of
Bristol merchants to maintain their city as the second port of the country and the chief one for American trade. The increase in the size of ships and the gradual silting of the
River Avon had made
Liverpool an increasingly attractive port, and with a Liverpool to London rail line under construction in the 1830s Bristol's status was threatened. The answer for Bristol was, with the co-operation of London interests, to build a line of their own; a railway built to unprecedented standards of excellence to out-perform the lines being constructed to the
North West of England. The company was founded at a meeting in Bristol on 21 January 1833.
Isambard Kingdom Brunel, then aged 27, was appointed engineer on 7 March 1833. The name Great Western Railway was adopted on 19 August 1833, and the company was incorporated by the '''''' (
5 & 6 Will. 4. c. cvii) on 31 August 1835.
Route of the line This was by far Brunel's largest contract to date. From the outset he wanted a line that offered the highest possible speeds, and to this end made two controversial decisions. Firstly, he chose to use a
broad gauge of to allow for the possibility of large wheels outside the bodies of the rolling stock, which could give smoother running. Secondly, he selected a route north of the
Marlborough Downs, which allowed for gentler gradients and therefore higher speeds. From London, the route would run west as far as
Reading, then make a sweeping deviation to the north before returning to the east–west alignment at
Bath. Although this route had no significant towns it offered potential connections to
Oxford and
Gloucester. Brunel reasoned the higher speeds and limited stops would achieve shorter journey times overall. Brunel surveyed the entire length of the route between London and Bristol himself, with the help of many, including his solicitor, Jeremiah Osborne of the Bristol law firm
Osborne Clarke, who on one occasion rowed Brunel down the
River Avon to survey the bank of the river for the route.
Construction of the line George Thomas Clark played an important role as an engineer on the project, reputedly taking the management of two divisions of the route including bridges over the
River Thames at
Lower Basildon and
Moulsford and of
Paddington Station. Involvement in major earth-moving works seems to have fed Clark's interest in geology and
archaeology and he, anonymously, authored two guidebooks on the railway: one illustrated with
lithographs by
John Cooke Bourne; in 1846 The first of line, from Paddington station in London to
Maidenhead Bridge station, opened on 4 June 1838. When
Maidenhead Railway Bridge was ready the line was extended to on 1 July 1839 and then through the deep
Sonning Cutting to on 30 March 1840. The cutting was the scene of
a significant accident two years later when a goods train ran into a
landslip; ten passengers who were travelling in open trucks were killed. This prompted
Parliament to pass the
Railway Regulation Act 1844, requiring railway companies to provide better carriages for passengers. , 1850. The sweep to the north from Reading is clearly seen. The next section, from Reading to crossed the Thames twice and opened for traffic on 1 June 1840. A extension took the line to
Faringdon Road on 20 July 1840. Meanwhile, work had started at the Bristol end of the line, where the section to
Bath opened on 31 August 1840. On 17 December 1840, the line from London reached a temporary terminus at west of Swindon and from Paddington. The section from Wootton Bassett Road to was opened on 31 May 1841, as was
Swindon Junction station where the
Cheltenham and Great Western Union Railway (C&GWUR) to
Cirencester connected. That was an independent line worked by the GWR, as was the
Bristol and Exeter Railway (B&ER), the first section of which from Bristol to was opened on 14 June 1841. The GWR main line remained incomplete during the construction of the
Box Tunnel, which was ready for trains on 30 June 1841, after which trains ran the from Paddington through to Bridgwater. In 1851, the GWR purchased the
Kennet and Avon Canal, which was a competing carrier between London, Reading, Bath and Bristol. The GWR was closely involved with the C&GWUR and the B&ER and with several other broad-gauge railways. The
South Devon Railway was completed in 1849, extending the broad gauge to
Plymouth, whence the
Cornwall Railway took it over the
Royal Albert Bridge and into
Cornwall in 1859 and, in 1867, it reached over the
West Cornwall Railway which originally had been laid in 1852 with the
standard gauge or "narrow gauge" as it was known at the time. The
South Wales Railway had opened between and in 1850 and became connected to the GWR by Brunel's
Chepstow Bridge in 1852. It was completed to in 1856, where a transatlantic port was established. There was initially no direct line from London to Wales as the tidal
River Severn was too wide to cross. Trains instead had to follow a lengthy route via Gloucester, where the river was narrow enough to be crossed by a bridge. Work on the
Severn Tunnel had begun in 1873, but unexpected underwater springs delayed the work and prevented its opening until 1886.
Brunel's 7-foot gauge and the "gauge war" train on
mixed-gauge track Brunel had devised a track gauge for his railways in 1835. He later added , probably to reduce friction of the wheel sets in curves. This became the broad gauge. Either gauge may be referred to as
Brunel gauge. In 1844, the broad-gauge
Bristol and Gloucester Railway had opened, but Gloucester was already served by the lines of the
Birmingham and Gloucester Railway. This resulted in a
break of gauge that forced all passengers and goods to change trains if travelling between the south-west and the North. This was the beginning of the "gauge war" and led to the appointment by
Parliament of a
Gauge Commission, which reported in 1846 in favour of standard gauge so the 7-foot gauge was proscribed by law (
Railway Regulation (Gauge) Act 1846) except for the southwest of England and Wales where connected to the GWR network. Other railways in Britain were to use standard gauge. In 1846, the Bristol and Gloucester was bought by the
Midland Railway and it was
converted to standard gauge in 1854, which brought
mixed-gauge track to Temple Meads station – this had three rails to allow trains to run on either broad or standard gauge. The GWR extended into the
West Midlands in competition with the Midland and the
London and North Western Railway.
Birmingham was reached through in 1852 and
Wolverhampton in 1854. This was the furthest north that the broad gauge reached. In the same year the
Shrewsbury and Birmingham Railway and the
Shrewsbury and Chester Railway both
amalgamated with the GWR, but these lines were standard gauge, and the GWR's own line north of Oxford had been built with mixed gauge. This mixed gauge was extended southwards from Oxford to at the end of 1856 and so allowed through goods traffic from the north of England to the south coast (via the
London and South Western Railway – LSWR) without
transshipment. . It was several years before these remote lines were connected with the parent LSWR system and any through traffic to them was handled by the GWR and its associated companies. By now the gauge war was lost and mixed gauge was brought to
Paddington in 1861, allowing through passenger trains from London to Chester. The broad-gauge South Wales Railway amalgamated with the GWR in 1862, as did the
West Midland Railway, which brought with it the
Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway, a line that had been conceived as another broad-gauge route to the Midlands but which had been built as standard gauge after several battles, both political and physical. On 1 April 1869, the broad gauge was taken out of use between Oxford and Wolverhampton and from Reading to Basingstoke. In August, the line from to was converted from broad to standard and the whole of the line from Swindon through Gloucester to South Wales was similarly treated in May 1872. In 1874, the mixed gauge was extended along the main line to Chippenham and the line from there to Weymouth was narrowed. The following year saw mixed gauge laid through the Box Tunnel, with the broad gauge now retained only for through services beyond Bristol and on a few branch lines. The
Bristol and Exeter Railway amalgamated with the GWR on 1 January 1876. It had already made a start on mixing the gauge on its line, a task completed through to
Exeter on 1 March 1876 by the GWR. The station here had been shared with the LSWR since 1862. This rival company had continued to push westwards over its Exeter and Crediton line and arrived in Plymouth later in 1876, which spurred the
South Devon Railway to also amalgamate with the Great Western. The
Cornwall Railway remained a nominally independent line until 1889, although the GWR held a large number of shares in the company. One final new broad-gauge route was opened on 1 June 1877, the
St Ives branch in west
Cornwall, although there was also a small extension at
Sutton Harbour in Plymouth in 1879. Part of a mixed gauge point remains at Sutton Harbour, one of the few examples of broad gauge trackwork remaining in situ anywhere. Once the GWR was in control of the whole line from London to Penzance, it set about converting the remaining broad-gauge tracks. The last broad-gauge service left Paddington station on Friday, 20 May 1892; the following Monday, trains from Penzance were operated by standard-gauge locomotives.
Into the 20th century After 1892, with the burden of operating trains on two gauges removed, the company turned its attention to constructing new lines and upgrading old ones to shorten the company's previously circuitous routes. The principal new lines opened were: • 1900:
Stert and Westbury linking the Berks and Hants line with to create a shorter route to for the
Channel Islands traffic. • 1903: the
South Wales and Bristol Direct Railway from
Wootton Bassett Junction to link up with the Severn Tunnel. • 1904: a diversion of the
Cornish Main Line between and , eliminating the last
wooden viaducts on the main line. • 1906: the
Langport and Castle Cary Railway to shorten the journey from London to between and . • 1908: the
Birmingham and North Warwickshire which, combined with the Cheltenham and Honeybourne of 1906, offered a new route from Birmingham via to south Wales. • 1910: the Birmingham Direct Line built jointly with the
Great Central Railway to give a shorter route from London to and the North. • 1913: the Swansea District Lines which allowed trains to to avoid . Fishguard had been opened in an attempt to attract transatlantic liner traffic and provided a better facility for the Anglo-Irish ferries than that at Neyland. The generally conservative GWR made other improvements in the years before
World War I such as restaurant cars, better conditions for third class passengers, steam heating of trains, and faster express services. These were largely at the initiative of T. I. Allen, the Superintendent of the Line and one of a group of talented senior managers who led the railway into the
Edwardian era: Viscount Emlyn (
Earl Cawdor, Chairman from 1895 to 1905); Sir Joseph Wilkinson (general manager from 1896 to 1903), his successor, the former chief engineer Sir James Inglis; and
George Jackson Churchward (the
Chief Mechanical Engineer). It was during this period that the GWR introduced
road motor services as an alternative to building new lines in rural areas, and started using
steam rail motors to bring cheaper operation to existing branch lines.
One of the "Big Four" locomotives At the outbreak of World War I in 1914, the GWR was taken into government control, as were most major railways in Britain. Many of its staff joined the armed forces and it was more difficult to build and maintain equipment than in peacetime. After the war, the government considered permanent
nationalisation but decided instead on a compulsory
amalgamation of the railways into four large groups. The GWR alone preserved its name through the "
grouping", under which smaller companies were amalgamated into four main companies in 1922 and 1923. The GWR built
a war memorial at Paddington station, unveiled in 1922, in memory of its employees who were killed in the war. The new Great Western Railway had more routes in Wales, including of former
Cambrian Railways lines and from the
Taff Vale Railway. A few independent lines in its English area of operations were also added, notably the
Midland and South Western Junction Railway, a line previously working closely with the
Midland Railway but which now gave the GWR a second station at Swindon, along with a line that carried through-traffic from the North via
Cheltenham and to
Southampton. The 1930s brought hard times but the company remained in fair financial health despite the
Depression. The
Development (Loans, Guarantees and Grants) Act 1929 allowed the GWR to obtain money in return for stimulating employment and this was used to improve stations including
London Paddington, and
Cardiff General; to improve facilities at
depots and to lay additional tracks to reduce congestion. The road motor services were transferred to local bus companies in which the GWR took a share but instead, it participated in
air services. When the company celebrated its centenary during 1935, new "Centenary" carriages were built for the Cornish Riviera Express, which again made full use of the wider
loading gauge on that route.
World War II and after With the outbreak of
World War II in 1939, the GWR returned to direct government control, and by the end of the war a Labour government was in power and again planning to nationalise the railways. After a couple of years trying to recover from the ravages of war, the GWR became the
Western Region of British Railways on 1 January 1948. The Great Western Railway Company continued to exist as a legal entity for nearly two more years, being formally
wound up on 23 December 1949. GWR designs of locomotives and rolling stock continued to be built for a while and the region maintained its own distinctive character, even painting for a while its stations and express trains in a form of chocolate and cream. About 40 years after nationalisation
British Rail was
privatised and the old name was revived by
Great Western Trains, the
train operating company providing passenger services on the old GWR routes to South Wales and the South West. This subsequently became First Great Western, as part of the
FirstGroup, but in September 2015 changed its name to
Great Western Railway in order to 'reinstate the ideals of our founder'. The operating infrastructure, however, was transferred to
Railtrack and has since passed to
Network Rail. These companies have continued to preserve appropriate parts of its stations and bridges so historic GWR structures can still be recognised around the network. ==Geography==