Isambard Kingdom Brunel, then aged 27, was appointed engineer on 7 March 1833. The company was founded at a meeting in Bristol on 21 January 1833. 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 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 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. ![]() History Formation The interior of Brunel's train-shed at Temple Meads, the first Bristol terminus of the GWR, from an engraving by J. C. Bourne. It ran ferry services to Ireland and the Channel Islands, operated a network of road motor (bus) routes, was a part of the Railway Air Services, and owned ships, canals, docks and hotels. The company pioneered the use of larger, more economic goods wagons than were usual in Britain. It also operated many suburban and rural services, some operated by steam rail motors or autotrains. Great Western trains included long-distance express services such as the Flying Dutchman, the Cornish Riviera Express and the Cheltenham Spa Express. Goods wagons were painted red but this was later changed to mid-grey. The company's locomotives, many of which were built in the company's workshops at Swindon, were painted a Brunswick green colour while, for most of its existence, it used a two-tone "chocolate and cream" livery for its passenger coaches. ![]() The GWR was called by some "God's Wonderful Railway" and by others the "Great Way Round" but it was famed as the "Holiday Line", taking many people to English and Bristol Channel resorts in the West Country as well as the far southwest of England such as Torquay in Devon, Minehead in Somerset, and Newquay and St Ives in Cornwall. ![]() The GWR was the only company to keep its identity through the Railways Act 1921, which amalgamated it with the remaining independent railways within its territory, and it was finally merged at the end of 1947 when it was nationalised and became the Western Region of British Railways. It was engineered by Isambard Kingdom Brunel, who chose a broad gauge of 7 ft ( 2,134 mm)-later slightly widened to 7 ft 1⁄ 4 in ( 2,140 mm)-but, from 1854, a series of amalgamations saw it also operate 4 ft 8 + 1⁄ 2 in ( 1,435 mm) standard-gauge trains the last broad-gauge services were operated in 1892. It was founded in 1833, received its enabling Act of Parliament on 31 August 1835 and ran its first trains in 1838 with the initial route completed between London and Bristol in 1841. The Great Western Railway ( GWR) was a British railway company that linked London with the southwest, west and West Midlands of England and most of Wales. Logo of the Great Western Railway, incorporating the shields, crests and mottoes of the cities of London (left) and Bristol (right)Ĥ ft 8 + 1⁄ 2 in ( 1,435 mm) standard gauge
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