The Leeds and Hull Railroad Company had been formed in 1824 to build a railway from Leeds to the port of Hull, but had failed to raise the necessary funds. The
Leeds and Selby Railway (L&SR) was formed in 1829 to build a railway as far as Selby, where goods could be conveyed onwards on barges on the Ouse and Humber to Hull. The line was to be less than with a maximum gradient of 1 in 135 so that horses or locomotives could be used, and the necessary permission was gained on 29 May 1830. A service started in September 1834 from a station in Leeds at Marsh Lane, just to the west of a tunnel through Richmond Hill, and Hull could be reached in about hours. The
Hull and Selby Railway (H&SR) received permission in June 1836 to complete the line to Hull, and the line, which crossed the Ouse at Selby with a
bascule bridge, opened on 1 July 1840. On 27 July 1840, a curve opened connecting the North Midland Railway at Methley Junction and allowing the direct access to Leeds, in competition with the . From 9 November Hudson leased the line for £17,000 per year; from then all traffic between Leeds and Selby was diverted via Methley and over the North Midland Railway to its Wellington station. However, the management of the Hull and Selby Railway refused any offers from Hudson to lease or operate over their line and in 1844 formed an alliance with the
Manchester and Leeds Railway, which was planning a route to Selby. Amalgamation was proposed early in 1845, but at two meetings shareholders overruled the directors, accepting instead a lease from Hudson at 10% of the original capital, with an option to purchase, and the H&SR became part of the from 1 July 1845. A railway to the port of
Whitby was proposed in 1826, George Stephenson recommended a route to
Pickering in 1832 and the
Whitby and Pickering Railway Act 1833 (
3 & 4 Will. 4. c. xxxv) received royal assent on 6 May 1833, which both permitted and prohibited steam locomotives. The
River Esk was diverted a mile from Whitby but a number of bridges were needed, including a five span timber bridge at
Ruswarp. A tunnel was dug at
Grosmont and at Beck Hole a
inclined plane was built at a gradient of 1 in 15. The line, worked by horses, opened to Grosmont on 8 June 1835 and to Pickering on 26 May 1836. At
Beck Hole carriages were worked up or down the incline individually; each summer the landlord of a nearby inn erected a tent so as to supply refreshments to waiting passengers. The journey from Pickering to Whitby took an average hours. The received permission in the '''''' (
7 & 8 Vict. c. lxi) to build
a line from York to Scarborough with a branch from to Pickering and to take over the
Whitby and Pickering Railway. The line and branch were built in less than a year and opened on 7 July 1845. Following celebrations on the opening day, the railway offered free travel for the first five days. The line to Whitby was doubled, timber bridges replaced with ones built from iron and the tunnel at Grosmont rebuilt, although the incline at Beck Hole was not replaced until 1864. The first train hauled by a steam locomotive ran on 4 June 1847. The received permission in the '
(8 & 9 Vict. c. lxxxiv) for a line to Harrogate and it opened to on 10 August 1847. After completing the long Prospect Hill tunnel and long Crimple Viaduct, on 20 July 1848 services started to the centrally sited Brunswick station. The Leeds and Thirsk Railway (later the Leeds Northern Railway) passed under the viaduct and opened its station at in September that year. The Leeds and Thirsk Railway was able to offer a shorter journey to Leeds after it had opened to Leeds in July 1849, although the station at Brunswick was more convenient. Both the and Hull and Selby Railway had permission for a line to , the in the (8 & 9 Vict. c. lviii) for a branch from Seamer, on the York to Scarborough Line; and the Hull and Selby Railway, a branch from Hull. The line was built and opened on 6 October 1846 as the Hull and Scarborough branch. The ' (
9 & 10 Vict. c. lxvi), giving approval for two lines to
Market Weighton was granted to the York and North Midland Railway on 18 June 1846. A double line York to Beverley Line was opened to Market Weighton on 4 October 1847, and a single line from Selby to Market Weighton opened on 1 August 1848. == George Hudson departs ==