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Narrator
it is the 15th of September, 1830, on a gray, rainy day at Crown Street Station, Liverpool. High above the railway cutting, hundreds of spectators crowd the tops of the stone walls and the great arch that spans the track. Colorful flags hang from the masonry, and from every vantage point, people lean forward to watch the strange procession beginning below. Among the crowd down on the platform is a wealthy Liverpool cotton broker who has been fortunate enough to secure a coveted ticket on this, the inaugural journey of the brand new Liverpool to Manchester railway. He's traveled between the two cities by road, often spending long hours rattling across rutted turnpikes behind tired horses. But that all changes today. Four years in the making, with engineers carving through mountains and shoring up vast bogs to lay their tracks, the rail line is about to host its first passenger journey. Looking along the platform, the merchant sees the small engine, a locomotive, sitting patiently on the lines, breathing steam into the morning air. It's one of eight such engines that will form part of this opening ceremony, far smaller than the industrial steam engines
Historian/Narrator
he's seen in the mills.
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It's little more than a squat boiler balanced above tall wheels, its narrow chimney pointing to the sky. It doesn't look powerful enough to haul nearly 100 people all the way to Manchester, but the promise is that it will not only make the journey, but will do it at an unimaginable 30 miles per hour. Coupled to the engine are several repurposed stagecoach bodies and open wagons, the kind that usually carry travelers and goods between towns by horse. Now they have been fitted with benches and mounted on iron wheels instead, to form a train of passenger carriages. As coal smoke drifts along the platform, the merchant weaves through the raucous crowd, smiling at a group of children balanced on crates to get a better view. Officials in tall hats move along the line, directing passengers to their places. The merchant climbs the small iron step into one of the open wagons and settles onto the wooden bench. Around him, other passengers sit stiffly, coats buttoned, hats firmly pressed onto their heads. No one quite knows what to expect. Suddenly, the engine shrieks as steam escapes from a valve. Several passengers startle, a few laugh nervously. The band swells again, and cheers ripple across the platform as clouds of white erupt from beneath the boiler. The locomotive gives another piercing whistle that slices through the morning air, and the wheels begin to turn against the iron rails. With a hard, metallic cry, they are off. The procession moves slowly at first, picking up speed as the engine gathers momentum. As the platform slides away, the wind rises against the merchant's face. Soon the fields are flickering by, faster than any horse could carry him. He finds he's grinning like an excited
Historian/Narrator
child, and as he looks to his
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neighbors in the carriage, he discovers he's not the only one. With the machine continuing to gather speed, it becomes clear to those aboard that everything they ever knew about transport has just changed.
Historian/Narrator
For most of human history, the speed of travel barely shifted. People moved at the pace of muscle, wind, and water. Journeys between cities took days, news traveled slowly, and distance was a stubborn and tedious barrier. But in the early 19th century, something remarkable happened. Engineers discovered that steam power and iron rails could be combined to move people and goods faster than any horse or ox could carry them.
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Within a few decades, railways spread across every continent.
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Cities were reorganized around stations, clocks were
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synchronized, leisure and luxury were redefined, and
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entire economies began to run according to railway timetables. This was the golden age of the railways, a period when steam and steel transformed landscapes and fundamentally altered the way the world worked. But how did a strange experimental machine become the backbone of modern life? How did railways reshape everything from holidays
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to warfare to time itself?
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And why, long after the Steam Age
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ended, does so much of modern life
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still run on railway logic?
Narrator
John I'm John Hopkins from the Noiza Podcast Network. This is a short history of the golden age of railways.
Historian/Narrator
From our earliest migrations, travel has been an essential aspect of human life. People and goods move on foot or by horse, ox, river barge, coastal ship, or caravan along roads that turn to mud in the rain and dust, in the heat, or are blocked for months
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at a time by ice and snow. Mountains, deserts, and oceans act as hard
Historian/Narrator
limits to progress and must either be conquered or Circumnavigated at great length. Cost and effort for most families and individuals, Even by the late 18th century, the place they call home remains practically inescapable. Birth, work, marriage and death all unfold within a short radius, with opportunities to find employment or even a spouse limited to one's immediate surroundings.
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Long distance travel remains expensive, dangerous, and incredibly rare.
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And even the shortest distances are uncomfortable undertakings. Christian Wolmar is a writer and broadcaster specializing in transport and author of several books on the history of the railways.
Christian Wolmar
Why the railways are so revolutionary and so game changing is precisely because before the railways, people didn't get around very much. Look. It took a stagecoach three or four days to get between London and New York. The roads were lousy. Nobody had traveled faster than you could gallop on a horse.
Historian/Narrator
While ancient trade networks already link distant parts of the world, they are painfully slow. Messages take weeks to cross a country and months to cross an ocean. By the time news arrives, it's no longer. New empires exist, but they stretch awkwardly, and governing the more distant outreaches requires patience and resilience. Across Europe, Asia, Africa and the Americas, economies continue to grow within these confines. But they start to feel the strain as populations rise and industry demands more efficient movement of goods. One early step towards solving this problem appears in the mining districts of Germany in the 16th century, and is later adopted and adapted in Britain's coal fields around Newcastle.
Christian Wolmar
Before what we know as railways, there were wagonways. There was actually quite a network in the northeast and in several other places. These were basically wagons on rails, which were either pulled by horses or mules, or pushed by human beings and moved minerals around.
Historian/Narrator
By running the wheels along fixed rails, a horse can hold far more weight, far more easily than it could on a road. As a result, mines are able to expand their output as the industrial revolution gathers pace and demand for coal soars. Industry depends more on these wagon ways. But the system has limits. The wagons still rely on horses or human strength to move them along the track. So transit remains slow. As engineers and industrialists look for a solution, they realize they have many of the moving parts already.
Christian Wolmar
The railways had many fathers, as it were, and they were pretty much all men in that. There were all sorts of inventions that came together to result in what we know as a railway. So you needed tracks, you needed places to put tracks, so you needed to create reasonably flat roads, spaces, and you put the tracks onto the road. But then you also needed the technology of steam engines and, and that was developed over the space of the 18th century by various people, of which the most famous was James Watt. But all sorts of other people contributed to that.
Historian/Narrator
The problem, though, is that the steam engines driving mills and factories through the Industrial Revolution, are huge contraptions bolted to the ground, the very opposite of mobile. By the late 18th century, engineers understand the usefulness of rails and wagons and the power of steam engines. But still no one thinks to join them all together. The breakthrough comes in the early years of the 19th century, when Cornish engineer Richard Trevithick experiments with a new kind of steam engine. Unlike the vast low pressure machines developed by James Watt, Trevithick's design uses high pressure steam, allowing the engine to be far smaller and far more powerful for its size. In 1804, he demonstrates a remarkable new steam engine mounted on wheels, capable of hauling wagons along iron rails on a short industrial line in South Wales. Trevithick's locomotive pulls a train of loaded wagons at around five miles an hour.
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Granted, it's barely faster than a brisk
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horse, and the early machines are unreliable, heavy and expensive to run. But even so, Trevithick has proven that steam could do away with the need for horses altogether. Gradually, other engineers turned their attention to the same possibility. Among them is a colliery worker from the north of England named George Stephenson. With little formal education, but years of practical experience maintaining pumping engines in coal mines, Stephenson becomes convinced that steam locomotives could transform the wagon ways of Britain's coal fields.
Christian Wolmar
30, 40 years between the first kind of steam engine whizzing round a small track, which was devised by Trevithick in the early 19th century, you get the idea of a train and a railway which combines all these inventions.
Historian/Narrator
Stephenson's chance to prove the idea comes in 1825, with the opening of the Stockton and Darlington Railway in northeast England. Designed to carry coal from inland collieries to the River Tees, it becomes the first public railway to use steam locomotives to haul wagons along iron rails. On its opening day, Stephenson himself drives Locomotion Number one, an engine of his own design to pull a long train of coal wagons and workers carriages. But even now, it's far from obvious that locomotives are the future. Many engineers believe the trains should instead be pulled along by powerful stationary engines, hauling wagons up and down the line using cables. Others suggest a kind of locomotive powered by a horse on a treadmill instead of steam. To settle the question, a public competition is organised in October 1829 on the newly built Liverpool and Manchester Railway. The contest becomes known as the Rainhill Trials. Five engines are entered and thousands of spectators gathered to Watch them try to tackle a mile long stretch of track near the village of Rainhill. George Stephenson's son Robert, who grew up around his father's engines and experiments, enters an engine of his own design, which he calls Stephenson's Rocket. One by one, his rivals fall short, either breaking down, overheating or failing to complete the short course. Rocket alone runs the required distance at speed, day after day. In doing so, it wins the competition's 500 pound prize. And more importantly, it settles the debate, proving that a steam locomotive can haul trains quickly, reliably and repeatedly. Soon the system expands beyond freight trains begin carrying passengers too, along George Stephenson's groundbreaking new railway between Liverpool and Manchester.
Christian Wolmar
It wasn't until all these inventions were put together and that the technology was found to work properly that you then get what I think is a great opening of the railways, which is 1830, the Liverpool and Manchester railway would be, which is really the breakthrough of this technology. There were precursors to that, notably the Stockton and Darlington Railway in 1825, but that was more like the last of the Wagonways rather than the first modern railway, which was definitely the Liverpool and Manchester, which was double tracked and steam hauled all the way through. So that was the breakthrough point.
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though the technology has proved itself, engineers still have a long way to go to make it safe and reliable.
Christian Wolmar
There was all sorts of technologies that needed to be honed out. Probably most difficult was creating the power out of steam, burning coal to create steam which then powered pistons and and then another problem was getting the weight down. So the static steam engines that had existed to pump out water in mines as being one major thing they did were huge. Great Big things. And then you had to build the track.
Historian/Narrator
Gradually, engineers solve those problems, refining the engines, strengthening the track, and learning how to build railways through landscapes in the straightest possible lines. And once the hurdles are overcome, the technology spreads quickly across the Atlantic. Early American railroads begin linking ports to inland markets. And on the European continent, Belgium and Prussia adopt railways as tools of national development. Almost from the outset, everywhere, it seems, wants in on the action. By the 1840s, enthusiasm for railways has become a fever. In Britain, Europe, North America and beyond. Proposed lines multiply at astonishing speed. Newspapers trumpet a coming age of motion, while politicians lobby fiercely for tracks to pass through their towns, already imagining the prosperity they might bring. And for an emerging middle class with newfound capital to invest, the railways are an attractive prospect.
Christian Wolmar
There was at the time quite a lot of capital which arose from the fact that slavery had been abolished. And a lot of the aristocrats who owned slaves were paid compensation, and again, so they had some money to invest in the railways. There was also a burgeoning middle class were beginning to get savings and money that they wanted to invest in something profitable. Their rate of return looked very attractive in some of these railways.
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Even though many of the proposed routes exist only as ink on maps. The railway boom quickly becomes a speculative frenzy, with investors clamoring to get in on the action. In 1846 alone, the British Parliament approves railway schemes worth £132 million, a staggering sum at the time. Within a decade from the opening of the Liverpool and Manchester railway, more than a thousand miles of track have already been laid.
Christian Wolmar
So that created a real rush to invest in lines, which was the railway mania, Some of which was successful and resulted in lines, some of which the investors were fleeced and they never got their money back.
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And still engineers and visionaries push the idea further. Among them is the brilliant and ambitious British engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel, whose Great Western Railway is soon slicing across the countryside on a massive scale. Carried over valleys on vast viaducts and driven through hills in mile long tunnels. Within a few years, it has revolutionized travel along the hundred mile stretch between London and Bristol. Yet this transformation also provokes unease. Early rail travel is loud, violent and unpredictable. Though accidents aren't frequent, boilers can explode and carriages sometimes derail. Speeds once thought impossible provoke genuine anxiety too, as doctors warn that rapid motion might damage the human body or unsettle the mind. When accidents do happen, newspapers report them in lurid detail, stoking the public's fears and shadowing the system's success. With the same Uneasy question, should human beings really be moving this fast? But accidents are also often learned from driving changes that make travel safer. And railway mania gathers pace. And the fever isn't confined to Britain. The opening of the Liverpool to Manchester railway prompts other countries to jump on board.
Christian Wolmar
By 1840s, there was maybe eight or 10 countries with railways. By the 1850s, that had probably doubled again. And really, every country with a good economy had begun to start building railways. The point is that it was such a game changer, such an obvious asset to a country, that of course, there were some downsides. People sometimes objected to the dirt, the noise they incurs on the countryside and so on. But those downsides were very small compared to the upside. Quicker travel for people, quicker transfer of freight, a huge boost for technology. So the railways themselves were an important catalyst for the development of technology and so on. It was really quite an unstoppable force.
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Countryside is reshaped everywhere with networks of lines, bridges and tunnels driven through hills and mountains by hand, and high explosives. Vast workforces endure dangerous conditions to lay tracks that promise speed and fortune. The initial momentum, however, doesn't last forever. Some companies thrive, but others collapse under debt, corruption, or pure fantasy. Fortunes are made and lost almost overnight. But when the financial bubble bursts, the rails remain, binding towns and cities together. The landscape has been remade with a new backbone of steel. By the middle of the 19th century, the railway is already becoming part of the fabric of everyday life. At this point, railways are widespread enough to force significant and fundamental changes to old norms, even the concept of time itself. To run safely and efficiently, trains need precise schedules. And precise schedules require something the world has never truly had before shared time. For centuries, each town has kept its own local hour, set by the position of the sun. Noon arrives slightly earlier in the east, slightly later in the west. In the slow moving world of the horse and cart, this difference hardly matters. But once trains begin running between cities, the system quickly breaks down, because somewhere
Christian Wolmar
like Exeter in the west, the sun would rise 15 or 20 minutes later than in London. And therefore, when you got to Exeter by train, you'd find you have to put your watch back by 15 or 20 minutes, because that's what the local church clock said. And that was obviously really inconvenient for railways, because what do you put in the timetable? Whose time are you using? And very quickly, it was realized that you needed standardized time, which had never been done before.
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So railway companies begin imposing a single time across their network. Stations synchronize their clocks, with many even introducing a second Minute hand to differentiate between local time and and railway time.
Christian Wolmar
As time was standardised in London, Greenwich Mean Time became naught, and that was established around the world.
Historian/Narrator
From the 1850s. The Royal Observatory at Greenwich sends daily telegraph signals across the railway network, allowing station clocks around the country to be synchronized to the same minute. The change quickly catches on. Cities reset their clocks to match the station clocks, with businesses, schools, factories and governments all adapting elsewhere, however, an even more radical approach is required.
Christian Wolmar
In America, they standardized the time into four different time zones. But they did that again because of the railways and because the inconvenience of not being able to work out precisely what time the railways are operating.
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For many in the United States, that change arrives dramatically. On 18 November 1883, railroads across the country reset their clocks to the new system of four time zones. In some towns, the clocks jump forward. In others, it moves back. In some places, midday is struck twice and the day becomes immortalized as the day of two noons. Once the changes have been implemented, though, for the first time in history, millions of strangers are bound to the same invisible schedule. And with journeys now planned to the minute, the movement of people really begins to change. Railways also reshape cities as hotels, offices, warehouses and entertainment venues spring up around the stations they serve. Entire suburbs grow along commuter lines, separating home from work. On a mass scale, urban life reorganizes itself around arrival and departure, with proximity to the platform becoming a new measure of opportunity.
Christian Wolmar
It worked for everybody. You'd go up to the local market town more easily, bring your agricultural produce. If you were a farmer, it worked for mail order goods, so you could order things from department stores in London and they would get sent to you by train. And it made it easier for people to travel. The big example of that was the Great Exhibition in the early 1850s, where special trains were organized from all around Britain to bring literally thousands of people into London to see these wonders of the modern world. And that would not have been possible without the railways. You wouldn't have got that number of people in there.
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Across the world, the same story unfolds. From Europe to the United States to Japan. Railways open access to distant landscapes, linking growing cities with with coastal resorts and national parks. For the first time in history, travel stops being the preserve of elites and becomes something for ordinary working people, too.
Christian Wolmar
So holidays were really enabled by the railways, both because they could travel to the seaside, in particular in huge, lengthy chartered trains, which had 15, 20 carriages hauled with two or three locomotives to take people off, but also because of industrialization and the demands it put on people, they began to require holidays, and they were given a week off. The factory would close, and everybody would go off to the seaside by rail.
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With their places of employment closed, thousands of workers and their families board excursion trains bound for seaside resorts like Blackpool or Brighton. Entrepreneurs like Thomas Cook begin organizing group tours with fixed itineraries, turning a holiday into something that can be sold as a package and launching a new industry. And that industry reshapes everyday culture in Britain in unexpected ways.
Christian Wolmar
They actually even enable the spread of fish and chips, because originally, fresh fish would only have been available in seaside towns, because you couldn't take fresh fish inland very fast. When the railways arrive, you can take fresh fish into lots of towns, so fish and chip shops can open up. And people got the taste for the fish and chips by going to the seaside towns and seeing fresh fish and chips. Isn't that wonderful? We'd love to have that in our town.
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Even sport gets the railway treatment, with teams now traveling quickly between towns, allowing regular fixtures. Over time, these journeys help create leagues, competitions, and eventually the possibility of professional athletes. But there are also downsides to all this freedom of movement. Trains are usually crowded, noisy, and socially unsettling. First, second, and third class carriages reinforce social divisions, even as they force strangers to travel together in confined spaces. And while women have traveled unaccompanied before on stagecoaches and in private carriages, railway travel is different. Women are no longer moving within small, supervised groups, but through a massive system of strangers. In an attempt to avert any moral panic, railway companies introduce ladies compartments, while etiquette guides set out rules of behavior regulating anything from conduct to dress to luggage. At the same time, women begin working on the railways themselves as clerks, telegraph operators, cleaners and service staff, occupying new roles within the machinery of modern life. The railway doesn't erase gender boundaries or social norms, but it does stretch their definitions. And as people move more easily across their countries, a stronger sense of national connection emerges.
Christian Wolmar
The railways were very important in really establishing the idea of nationhood, let alone empire. So countries such as Germany and Italy were linked within each other by railways. And really, the nations were created by the fact that now people could travel all the way around the country without any difficulties, where they could not do that before.
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But while citizens might enjoy a greater sense of national identity, their governments start recognizing the potential for moving troops, administrators, and supplies across vast distances with unprecedented speed. In a world of expanding empires, regions that once felt remote are suddenly drawn tightly into the orbit of central authority.
Christian Wolmar
When Britain was building up its empire in Africa in the last quarter of the 19th century, there was very much the idea that if we want to hold onto this particular territory, we need to build a railway. And so wherever they went, they essentially tried, sometimes not entirely successfully, because it's not easy territory to build railways to hold onto the parts of Africa they wanted to have control. So railways and imperialism go hand in hand.
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Rather than connecting communities, these railways facilitate the extraction of vast wealth. Tracks run from mines and plantations to straight to coastal ports, Carrying raw materials out to the wider imperial economy. In southern Africa, the British imperialist and mining magnate Cecil Rhodes dreams of a railway running the entire length of the continent from Cape town to Cairo, Binding Britain's African territories together. But this venture comes at a profound human cost.
Christian Wolmar
Some of the railways that Cecil Rhodes built in Africa Were at the expense of vast numbers of people who died of disease or accidents. True. Also in India. True. The worst railway in the world for that was probably the Panama railway, which was built by largely American interests in order to create a quicker route from one side of America to the other without having to go down to the cape. So there was little concern for the lives that were lost in this rush to build railways
Historian/Narrator
across empires. Railways are built by vast labor forces working in dangerous conditions In India, Africa, and southeast Asia. Tens of thousands die from accidents, disease, and exhaustion, but their lives are treated as expendable in the pursuit of modernity and fortune. Elsewhere, governments launch railway projects on an almost unimaginable scale. In Russia, the trans Siberian railway, begun in 1891, attempts the staggeringly ambitious task of building a single railway stretching almost 9,300 km from Moscow to the Pacific. After the heir to the Russian throne, the future tsar Nicholas ii, Ceremonially dumps the first wheelbarrow of earth at Vladivostok, the engineers and workers are left to face some of the most challenging feats of engineering in railway history.
Christian Wolmar
So good, so good, so good.
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Narrator
It is the winter of 1903, on the southern shore of Lake Baikal, Siberia. A laborer originally from Georgia steps out from a canvas worker's tent and into the icy Siberian wind, the cold sitting deep in his bones. He stamps his boots against the frozen ground and flexes his hands inside stiff wool gloves, trying to bring feeling back to his fingers. The air is bitter, every breath turning to white vapor in front of his face. He stands on a narrow ledge cut into the mountainside below him. To the right, Lake Baikal stretches out
Historian/Narrator
into the a pale morning, a vast
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sheet of ice fading into the gray horizon. On his left, a sheer cliff face rises from the water's edge.
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There is no natural path here.
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The ledge he stands on has been
Historian/Narrator
hacked from the rock, and to push
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the railway forward, they must carve it wider before forging ahead, blasting their way along the lake's edge. Setting to work, he grips his heavy hammer and waits for his partner to
Historian/Narrator
heat their steel rod or drill in the fire.
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When it's glowing, his colleague brings it up to the rock face, and the Georgian brings his hammer, clattering against the rod's head. The steel bites into the rock face by fractions, boring a hole into which charges of dynamite can be laid. Each strike sends a shot shudder through his arms. The foreman said the charge needs to be deep or the blast won't break the ice hardened stone around him. The entire mountainside is alive with the same rhythm. Everywhere.
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For miles along this track bed, there
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are men drilling or hauling sledges of timber and iron along carved ledges, while others clear rubble from yesterday's blasts. For years now, the the railway has been advancing across Siberia. Thousands of kilometers of track have been laid through forests, over rivers and empty plains, but here the land refuses to yield easily. At last the drill sinks deep enough. The Georgian pulls it free, steam rising from the metal where it touches the frozen air. The foreman comes over and from a canvas bag he removes some sticks of dynamite and pushes them carefully into the rock.
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The fuse follows.
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The men move quickly now, boots crunching along the frozen ground as they retreat, huddling in the safety of the cutting. The Georgian glances once more at the cliff face. The stubborn wall of stone has halted the railway for months. We'll be glad to see it. For a moment the mountainside falls quiet as only the wind moves over the
Historian/Narrator
ice Then the blast splits the morning open.
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The ground jolts beneath his feet, and
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a thunderous crack rolls across the frozen
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lake as rock shatters outwards from the cliff. Chunks of stone tumble down the slope, bouncing across the ice below. Debris and snow billow through the air. When it clears, the worker looks at the result. Where the cliff had stood unbroken only moments earlier, a jagged new gap has opened in the rock. Another few meters of Siberia have given way.
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One day, trains will run here above
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the waters of Baikal, carrying passengers and freight across an empire that stretches from Europe Europe to the Pacific. But today, as the dust settles, the relentless work must begin again.
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The Trans Siberian Railway, when finally completed
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in 1916, becomes an imperial artery. As well as allowing the movement of
Historian/Narrator
troops and goods, it will bind distant territories to the Russian state and project its power across an entire continent. Around the world, the same logic takes hold.
Narrator
By the dawn of the 20th century,
Historian/Narrator
the railway is undoubtedly one of the defining technologies of the modern world. Now, having galvanized industrial progress, defined national identity and consolidated empires, it is time for another change in gear.
Christian Wolmar
Once the railway companies no longer have to invest in building new lines, which happens really towards the end of the 19th century, early 20th century, they can then focus on trying to make the railways more comfortable, smoothing out curves in the track, providing better facilities for passengers, building grander stations, and so on. So it's a gradual process of improvement which probably reaches its height both in Europe and America, between the wars.
Historian/Narrator
By now, rail travel for the elite
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classes has become theater.
Historian/Narrator
Express trains, with their carriages of polished wood and brass, promise style as much as speed. Sleeping cars turn night journeys into private havens of comfort and discretion. While dining cars serve exquisite multi course meals on moving tables dressed in crisp white linen, uniformed staff choreograph the whole luxury travel experience. As for those who can afford it, the railway becomes the place to be seen.
Christian Wolmar
There were wonderful trains that operated at the time, and there's great posters about the travel itself and the offer of food on board. And on some trains you had secretaries who were available to type up letters for business people. And some trains even had DJs on them, and they played music throughout the train.
Historian/Narrator
Nothing embodies this better than the Orient Express, a grand hotel on rails which links Europe's capitals in a journey of just a few days. Meanwhile, in the United States, Pullman cars
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offer similar elegance on journeys that cross
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thousands of miles of American landscape. At the same time, railway companies compete not only on luxury, but on speed. Famous expresses, like Britain's Flying Scotsman France's Nord Express and America's 20th Century Limited promise passengers the once impossible opportunity to cross entire countries in a single day. But this glamour and pace is carefully curated and exclusive and certainly not accessible to everyone.
Christian Wolmar
There were a lot of very nice trains at the time, but the basic service for a lot of people hadn't really changed much since the middle of the 19th century, where you get kind of smoky stations, you get a couple of carriages hauled by a tank engine rather slowly between towns and villages, you get a pretty kind of desultory service being offered by the railways.
Historian/Narrator
Even so, the image of rail travel has changed dramatically. But the same railways that carry diplomats and champagne across Europe are also capable of carrying something far more deadly. Railways have been shaping warfare for decades. Before the First World War, as early as the 1860s, during the American Civil War, trains were already proving decisive in moving troops, supplying armies, and determining where battles would be fought.
Christian Wolmar
The American Civil War was really the first railway war because most of the battles took place around junctions or places that were easily accessible by rail. Both sides used the railways very extensively, and the north happened to be better at that than the secessionists. And that was one of the reasons why they won, because they had better railways and made better use of them.
Historian/Narrator
In the decades that follow, railways become an essential part of military planning. In conflicts like the Franco Prussian War and the Boer Wars. In South Africa, they are used to assemble armies, move equipment, and keep supply lines open across vast distances. When the First World war begins in 1914, Europe faces a conflict that will require millions of soldiers, along with artillery, horses, food and ammunition, to be moved across entire countries in a matter of days. And the only way to do it is by train.
Narrator
It is August 1914, at a railway junction in western Germany. A German army officer stands on the platform, watch in hand, scanning the line through drifting steam. The station is already full. Soldiers crowd the platform in tight ranks, rifles slung over their shoulders, kit bags at their feet. Down the track, a long line of carriages waits, their dark windows clouded with condensation. Another whistle cuts through the noise. The officer checks his watch, pleased to see they're right on time. The incoming train slows and pulls alongside the platform, metal wheels squealing against the track. Before it is fully stopped, doors are thrown open. Some soldiers disembark, stiff from the journey and blinking into the light, while others remain in the carriages to be moved on. On the platform, fresh units are already being directed forward to take their places on the train. The officer turns, measuring the flow of men, the loading of wagons and checking the space on the line. This train has three minutes at this platform. No more. Behind him, the telegraph chatters again. A clerk hurries forward and presses a message into his hand, telling him that another convoy is running ahead of schedule. But in an operation this tightly planned, early is no better than late. It throws everything else out of sequence. The officer folds the paper, already calling out to the soldiers, boarding to get a move on. Men scramble for the carriages as their officers shout roll calls over the noise. Crates of ammunition are hauled up into under open wagons. Further down the line, a horse rears at the ramp, its hooves striking wood as handlers struggle to force it into the stable carriage. Steam thickens the air, hot and damp against the railway officer's face. He checks his watch again. One minute until departure. Everything is going according to the meticulously
Historian/Narrator
precise Schlieffen plan, the great timetable of troop movement prepared for years in advance, where every second has been calculated and every train assigned its place. Without the railways and officers like him
Narrator
on the platform coordinating everything, it simply wouldn't work.
Historian/Narrator
Watch in hand, he counts down the
Narrator
seconds, then raises his arm a little further up the platform. Ahead of the engine, a signal clatters into an upward position and the driver releases the brake.
Historian/Narrator
The train lurches forward, slowly at first
Narrator
and gathering speed as it pulls away from the platform, the last stragglers still
Historian/Narrator
wedging themselves inside and slamming the doors shut.
Narrator
But the officer doesn't linger to watch them leave. Already another whistle sounds in the distance,
Historian/Narrator
signaling the next regiment.
Narrator
All along the line, the same pattern
Historian/Narrator
is repeating as hundreds of thousands of
Narrator
German soldiers are moved as part of
Historian/Narrator
a single coordinated machine.
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Narrator
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Christian Wolmar
Am I here?
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Historian/Narrator
So what's next? I feel liberated.
Christian Wolmar
We're gonna take this city back over
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Historian/Narrator
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Christian Wolmar
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Christian Wolmar
I can work with that.
Historian/Narrator
This should be tons of fun.
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Historian/Narrator
only on Disney plus, in just two weeks, thanks to the Schlieffen plan, German railways mobilize nearly 2 million troops towards the western frontier. And it's not unique to Germany. Across Europe, mobilization plans hinge on precise schedules, with delayed trains capable of derailing entire campaigns. Which means stations, bridges, marshaling yards, and even moving trains become prime targets. Tracks are sabotaged under cover of darkness. Armored trains patrol contested lines, while civilians flee along the same routes that carry soldiers towards the front. Across Europe, Asia and beyond, railways are destroyed and rebuilt again and again. By war's end, the illusion of the railway as a neutral engine of progress is gone. It has helped shape the scale and outcome of modern conflict. Even after the devastation of war, city life across the world moves to the rhythm of rail timetables. Morning trains carry workers in from expanding suburbs, and vast stations dominate the urban landscape. Like new cathedrals. For millions of people, the railway dictates where they live, how they work, and when they move. This is the golden age in its purest form, but it is not experienced equally.
Christian Wolmar
My interworld period was commuting, and commuting was largely on kind of rather slow suburban trains that people were packed into like sardines. It wasn't a great experience.
Historian/Narrator
For most passengers, the railway is a practical necessity, crowded but essential, allowing people to live beyond the city and commute in for work. But even now, the system is evolving.
Christian Wolmar
There was a big debate in the interwar period where some rail industry figures really wanted to stick with steam, and they try and improve steam. You have at the same time in Germany, kind of fast diesel trains being developed, and in America you have these amazing streamliner diesel expresses, which are seen as the future. Whereas more forward looking people begin to realize that diesels, and of course the best form of traction, electricity, begin to dominate.
Historian/Narrator
But although the railways continue to adapt, they face a more fundamental challenge as new rivals appear. Cars promise personal freedom and the chance to travel without timetables or shared space. Buses reach places, rails never will. Aircraft offer the radical idea of speed unbounded by geography. As flexible road transport and long distance aviation emerge, investment shifts away from train travel. For the railway companies, after decades of investment, the idea that trains could be sidelined is almost unfathomable. And yet, slowly but surely, that's what is happening. By the mid 20th century, the future seems no longer guaranteed to run on rails. The golden age of the railway ends, but its imprint is everywhere.
Narrator
Cities are still organized around stations, and
Historian/Narrator
commuting patterns follow routes laid down generations ago. Even when we're not on the train, we move through a world shaped by its legacy. And today that legacy is expanding once more.
Christian Wolmar
Their survival and the fact they're thriving in the 21st century thanks to the huge advantage that commuter railways, high speed railways, heavy freight railways, and sometimes even local railways have over other means of transport and the fact that they've won through. So it's obviously a developing story and who knows where the railways will be in 50 years time. But I suspect that they won't be very different from now. They will be faster, they will be probably more efficient, but I suspect they will be the mainstay of many countries transport systems.
Historian/Narrator
Modern high speed rail may look new, but it builds on the 19th century ideas of fixed routes, shared schedules, and the movement of large numbers of people with precision and speed.
Christian Wolmar
China's built 30,000 miles of high speed line in a space of less than 20 years. Japan runs 270 trains a day between Tokyo and Osaka, each with about 800 people. In the United States, the metro systems are popping up in all sorts of places you wouldn't imagine. It's ubiquitous.
Historian/Narrator
Railways redefined movement and everything that comes with it for everyone. Even now, when we fly above the tracks or drive alongside them, we live in a world first organized by iron rails and steam, a world still quietly running on railway time.
Christian Wolmar
If you could bring Stevenson back from the dead, I think even he would be surprised at how well his invention has done. I think he might have thought he'll take a few people between Liverpool and Manchester and there might be trains a bit around. But I don't think that he could have envisaged that he started off a worldwide revolution.
Historian/Narrator
Next time on Short History of We'll bring you a short history of Charlemagne.
Charlemagne Historian
For us today, it becomes incredibly important because he seems like the first, especially to 19th and early 20th century scholars, kind of the founder of Europe in a real way. Charlemagne created this empire and then it was lost in the subsequent generations. And then it led to all this dissension of the European religious wars of the early modern period, the world wars of something like that. If we had only kept on to that unity, we would have had peace, we would have had modernity in an early period as well.
Narrator
That's next time.
Historian/Narrator
You can listen to the next two episodes of Short History of Right now without waiting and without adverts by subscribing to noizr plus just hit the link in the episode description or head to www.noiser.comsubscriptions to unlock more episodes today.
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Host: Noiser / John Hopkins
Guest Historian: Christian Wolmar
Date: May 24, 2026
This episode journeys through the transformative era known as the "Golden Age of Railways." It charts the remarkable ascent of rails and steam from early 19th-century experiments to the global networks that forever altered economies, societies, and the very concept of time. Insightful commentary from transport historian Christian Wolmar and immersive storytelling vividly captures both the marvel and the upheaval brought by the railway revolution.
Dramatic Opening—Inaugural Liverpool to Manchester Railway (00:56–04:51)
Why Railways Were Revolutionary (07:30–08:08)
Early Trackways and Steam (08:55–10:31)
The Breakthrough Locomotives—Stephenson’s Rocket (11:34–14:35)
Railway Mania & Investment (16:50–19:08)
Speed, Anxiety, and Progress (19:08–20:31)
Standardizing Time (21:22–24:33)
Urban & Social Change (24:33–26:44)
Birth of Mass Tourism & Culture (26:44–28:09)
Sports, Gender, and Social Mixing (28:09–29:36)
Nation-Building (29:36–30:06)
Imperialism and Exploitation (30:06–33:07)
Epic Engineering—Trans-Siberian Railway (34:03–38:07)
Luxury & Innovation (38:37–41:15)
Unequal Experience (40:49–41:15)
Railways of War (41:15–46:07)
Postwar Shift and Competition (48:35–49:32)
Rails in a Changing World (50:23–52:15)
Unbroken Legacy (51:19–52:15)
Final Reflection (52:15)
“Everything they ever knew about transport has just changed.”
(Narrator, 04:49)
— Captures the radical shift delivered by the debut of passenger rail.
“The railways had many fathers, as it were... all sorts of inventions that came together.”
(Christian Wolmar, 09:51)
— Emphasizes the collaborative, cumulative nature of railway technology.
"Railways even enabled the spread of fish and chips..."
(Christian Wolmar, 27:43)
— A delightful illustration of the unexpected ripple effects of rails.
“The railways were very important in really establishing the idea of nationhood.”
(Christian Wolmar, 29:36)
— Highlights rail’s role in forging modern national identities.
“The American Civil War was really the first railway war...”
(Christian Wolmar, 41:44)
— Shows how rails shaped not just peace, but conflict too.
“If you could bring Stephenson back from the dead, I think even he would be surprised at how well his invention has done.”
(Christian Wolmar, 52:15)
— A poignant summation of the enduring, world-changing legacy of railways.
| Timestamp | Topic | |-----------|-------| | 00:56-04:51 | Vivid recreation of Liverpool–Manchester’s inaugural rail journey | | 07:43 | Why railways were revolutionary (Wolmar) | | 09:51 | Technology precedents: wagonways and steam (Wolmar) | | 14:35 | Liverpool–Manchester as definitive breakthrough (Wolmar) | | 18:54 | Railway mania—investment boom and risks (Wolmar) | | 24:19 | Time zones and railway time (Wolmar) | | 25:40 | Everyday impact: commerce, mail order, exhibitions (Wolmar) | | 27:43 | Fish and chips culture (Wolmar) | | 29:36 | Railways and nationhood (Wolmar) | | 31:35 | Imperial railways’ human cost (Wolmar) | | 39:42 | Luxury trains and innovations (Wolmar) | | 41:44 | Railways in war—a strategic weapon (Wolmar) | | 50:41 | Enduring relevance and modern high-speed rail (Wolmar) | | 52:15 | Final summation and legacy (Wolmar) |
This episode masterfully tracks the development and impact of railways from their origins to their evolution in the modern world. Through crisp narration and expert commentary, it reveals how rails shaped economies, cultures, cities, time, and even the structure of nations—ultimately leaving tracks that, quite literally, have set the course for the modern age.