It was to the south-west of Leeds that one of the key lines in the development of Britain’s railway network — the Middleton Railway — established the principle of seeking parliamentary sanction for the construction of a new form of transport. Five decades later in the early nineteenth century it was again the Middleton Railway that was at the forefront of the use of steam — rather than animal — power to move coal from colliery to market.
From the early 1830s through until the early years of the twentieth century the local railway network continued to expand; indeed, if it had not been for the outbreak of the First World War in 1914 the area would have played host to one of the last first-generation main lines to be constructed with the Midland Railway planning — and partially constructing — a new main line north from Royston. In the event the line was never completed, consigning Bradford to be served by no more than glorified branch lines.
Providing a largely illustrated account to the history of the railway development of the area, the book includes a fascinating selection of illustrations that focus on the evolution of the network in the almost eighty years since the end of the Second World War.