Download here: http://gg.gg/vhrt3
Background
PDF Resources As the World’s Greatest Hobby, model railroading can require skills and knowledge across a wide variety of topics. Within the group of products here, you’ll find helpful resources, historical perspective, terminology, and other good-to-know information as you expand your model railroading experience and enhance your own layout. Half my train room is a mix of mostly New England and some Midwestern USA. The other half or so is a Swedish townscape and train land. The room is 23 x 20 feet with a big peninsula in the middle and a shelf type layout around the room. I am running Santa Fe, Pennsy and Milwaukee and the Swedish State Railway (SJ). This Railway Reform Toolkit aims to provide aneasy-to-use resource on the rail industry —what it is and what it does best— and to provide an experience-based set of best practices to aid inthe planning and execution of railway reforms. Introduction To Model Railroading Welcome to the NMRA’s ’Introduction To Model Railroading’ web pages. These web pages have been put together by the NMRA. To introduce people to model railroading. Our goal is to help those who are interested in building a model railroad but who have never done it before or to assist those who may have a simple track plan and now wants to learn.
’Dear Dad: One thing I want this Christmas more than anything is a Lionel Electric Train.… You ought to see the way they run! Like a million dollars. And they whistle too. Real railroad whistle signals by remote control. You can couple and uncouple cars electrically, from a distance, just by touching a button; and reverse the train or speed it up or slow it down. Please get me a Lionel, Dad. We’ll have lots of fun together.’
This letter was featured in a pull-out section of the 1938 Lionel Trains catalog, leaving space for a boy to note which model number train his father should purchase. Lionel electric model trains were all the rage in 1938, had been for many years prior, and continued to be through the 1950s. Though declining in popularity since the 1960s, the trains are still manufactured and sold throughout the world today. Puttinti pattu cheera telugu serial. Many adults now collect old Lionel train models, as evidenced by the number of hobby shops and collectors’ shows dedicated to the product, and the thousands of members of the Train Collectors Association. Lionel is the largest manufacturer of toy trains in the world.
An electric train runs by transferring a positive current from one track rail through to the motor and then returning the current through the negative track rail. The current is then transferred to a transformer or battery, completing the circuit. History
Joshua Lionel Cowen claimed to have embarked upon several other inventions prior to his namesake train, including the flash-light, the dry-cell battery and the motorized fan. Whether these claims were true or not is subject to dispute, but there is no argument that Cowen devised one of the first motorized trains as an ad gimmick for a New York City toy manufacturer in the early 1900s. Cowen’s idea was not entirely unique; a German toy maker had featured a model electric streetcar at the Columbian World’s Fair in Chicago in 1893 and a Cincinnati firm, Carlisle & Finch, came up with a similar invention in 1896. Cowen’s original battery-operated invention was not a toy, however. It served solely to draw attention to the other merchandise in the toy shop window and resembled a box on wheels. The words ’Electric Express’ were embossed on the sides. However, the toy shop customers began requesting the electric car as well as the other merchandise and Cowen began to market his invention.
Cowen soon upgraded his design and began to make a variety of components. In addition to steam locomotives, Pullman sleepers, baggage cars, freight cars and cabooses, he made electric trolleys as well. Trains bearing the logos of various rail lines were available, too, and railroad companies began to submit blueprints of new designs to Lionel in the hopes that he would create a model based on them and give them some free advertising. The transformer was also introduced in the early 1900s.
In 1902, Cowen produced the first of what would become his trademark train catalogs. This 16-page, black-and-white version paled in comparison to the later full-color wish books, but still served as a useful marketing tool. Catalogs and advertising were primary components of the Lionel marketing strategy and for decades the company promoted The steam engine is mode by a process called die-casting, where-by a hot liquid metal is heated and then shot into a highly detailed mold. Plastic cars are mode by a process called injection molding. the sense of importance a boy could feel running his own railroad and the opportunity the product provided for father and son to bond. In 1921, the Lionel Manufacturing Company placed the first-ever advertisement in the color comics section of a news-paper promoting its Lionel Engineers Club for Lionel train owners.
Lionel joined the war effort in 1917, producing compasses, binnacles, and navigating equipment for the U.S. Navy. The company also offered a model war train. By the 1930s, Cowen began to re-think his decision to promote war toys, however. The post-war years were profitable for the Lionel Corporation, as the company was renamed when it was reorganized in 1918. Lionel’s sales in 1920 topped $2 million. The Great Depression took its toll on the company, but the 1934 introduction of a handcar operated by Mickey and Minnie Mouse, endorsed by Cowen’s friend Walt Disney, helped the company bounce back. Lionel introduced streamlined engines that year to reflect the new Burlington Zephyr and Union Pacific City of Port-land in use in the real train world. Lionel introduced remote control operation that year as well. A painstakingly accurate model of the New York Central’s Hudson-type steam engine was released in 1937 in an effort to appeal to the burgeoning market among adult model railroad enthusiasts.
World War II halted the production of Lionel trains for a period as all scrap metal was directed toward the war effort, but Lionel remained secure with $5.5 million in government contracts. In order to sustain its popularity in the interim, the company released a paper model train, dubbed the ’Wartime Freight Train.’ Metal trains were back, though, once the war ended and in 1957 Lionel introduced the ill-received pastel pink and blue model train for girls. Cowen retired in 1958, the company’s first losing year since the Depression. Nine months later he sold the company to his grand-nephew. With the advent of airplanes, racing cars, and tele-vision, model trains dropped in popularity over the next three decades. The company has been purchased several times since Cowen first sold it and is now owned by a group of four investors, one of whom is the rock musician Neil Young, an avid model train collector. Young’s interest in Lionel leadership began when he helped the company design a remote control device that could be operated by persons with handicaps affecting their grip. Young hoped to actively share his hobby with his sons, who have cerebral palsy. Since 1970, Lionel trains have been manufactured in Mt. Clemens, Michigan, a suburb of Detroit. Raw Materials
The primary materials used to manufacture Lionel trains are metals such as steel, aluminum, zinc, and plastic. The Manufacturing
Process
The various components of the Lionel train, such as engines, cabooses, boxcars, and tankers, are designed on a computer. The engine
* 1 The Lionel steam locomotive engine is made by a process called die-casting, whereby a hot liquid metal, such as steel or zinc, is heated to 900° F (482.2° C) degrees and then shot into a highly detailed mold.
* 2 The mold is then placed in a cooling tank where it cools and hardens to form the body of the locomotive.
* 3 The locomotive body is then trimmed, cut and milled (whereby a high-speed cutter cuts off sections only thousandths of an inch thick to create flat surfaces), both by machine and by hand to form the finished locomotive engine.
* 4 The locomotive body is placed on the assembly line for painting and final assembly. The cars
* 5 Plastic components are formed in a process called injection molding, where-by plastic pellets are melted and shot into a mold. The liquid cools and hardens into the shape of the component. Metal components other than the engine are die-cast.
* 6 The components are placed on an assembly line and sent to a drilling station, where a combination of manual and automated processes are used to attach hundreds of tiny accessories, created earlier in a process known as sub-assembly, such as ladders, headlights and handrails.
* 7 Any die cast parts undergo a process called phosphating, where the component is dipped in a phosphate solution to open up pores in the metal and allow for any paint to soak in.
* 8 The metal and plastic components are sent to the painting station where they are sprayed with paint by a machine or painted by hand. Components being painted multiple colors undergo a process called masking, where a mask-like guard is placed over areas that a certain color of paint should not reach.
* 9 At the next station, the components are affixed with lettering and logos through two different processes: hot stamping and pad printing. Hot stamping is used on flat parts and pad printing is used on raised and rounded plastic surfaces and all die-cast surfaces. Hot stamping uses a Mylar-heated rubber dye to emboss print onto the flat surfaces and pad printing uses a dye plate to etch print onto the raised, rounded and die-cast surfaces.
* 10 The engine is affixed to a chassis, which holds the motor, electrical circuitry and wheels. Each car is affixed to a non-motorized chassis that provides support and holds the wheels.
* 11 After successful completion of several quality control tests, the finished model train components are sent to a shipping area where they are packaged and prepared for shipping. The tracks
* 12 Metal sheets are placed into a forming machine, which cuts the metal into miniature rails and ties.
* 13 The rails and ties are joined together in a hydraulic press.
* 14 After quality control inspections, the track segments are sent to a shipping area where they are packaged and prepared for shipping. Comment And Contributefree Model Railway Resources Inc Quality Control
At the end of the assembly line, various functioning components of the train are tested, such as whistles and bells. The engine must be able to run off the line under its own power and climb a 30° incline within 5.5 seconds. Paint colors undergo quality control as well. A color spectrometer is used to ensure that all paint is the precisely right color. The Future
Lionel train components have always reflected the times. Engines have been modeled after real trains in use during various periods in Lionel’s history. The cars often reflect the businesses and interests of the times, from the early milk cars to military components during war times to boxcars bearing the names and logos of major businesses of different periods. It is anticipated that Lionel designs will continue to reflect contemporary society and the real-life rail-roading environment on which the Lionel train is modeled. Vue 6 infinite download.Free Modeling Where to Learn More Books
Hollander, Ron. All Aboard!: The Story of Joshua Lionel Cowen and His Lionel Train Company. New York: Workman Publishing, 1981. Comment And Contributefree Model Railway Resources Ltd
I’m currently reading a book Blood, Iron and Gold by Christian Wolmar about how railways transformed the world.
This interesting extract from the political economist Friedrich List, explains some of the economic benefits of railways:
“Railways would carry wood, turf and coal at less than half the present costs. Bavaria, where flour, meat and other foodstuffs are 50 – 100 per cent cheaper than in Leipzig, could export its surplus to the Erzgebirge, the Elbe and the Hanseatic cities. Cheaper food and fuel would partly enhance the well-being of the working classes, and partly lower money wages, increase population and increase the extent of industry. Cheap building materials and low money wages would encourage building and lower the rents in the new and more distant parts of the city.” …. I do not doubt for one minute that this increase in value in Leipzig alone would in a few years exceed the total capital costs of the new railways.” Leipzig-Dresden railway” [1]
In one paragraph, quite a few interesting areas of economic theory.
*New technology leading to lower average cost for business. The introduction of the railways enabled a substantial reduction in costs of transport, leading to lower prices of goods in shops. The new stream railway technology quite possibly had a bigger impact on business than recent technological innovations, such as micro-computers and the internet.
*Theory of comparative advantage. This extract shows Bavaria has a comparative advantage in foodstuffs (50-100% cheaper) Exporting surplus foodstuffs led to increased economic welfare for both Bavaria (exporters) and the cities (cheaper imports). Presumably, exporting food, would give Bavaria more income to spend on goods and services produced in the cities. This theory of comparative advantage is no use, if there are prohibitive transport costs. The railways enable these potential gains to be materialised.
*Improved living standards. ‘Partly lower money wages’ The author may mean that with lower food prices and lower building costs, real living standards rise. Your wages go further, if the railways make everything cheaper. The author is perhaps suggesting wages can be cut because the price of goods haven fallen.
*Greater choice of goods and services. The railways enable a greater choice of goods. Fish and chips became a popular meal when people could now transport fresh fish in a day. The diet of many people improved after the introduction of the railways because a greater variety of fresh food could be brought in.
*New markets. The railways led to the creation of new industries like tourism. Coastal towns like Blackpool and Scarborough became popular seaside resorts. Thomas Cook’s travel business started from offering special charter trains.
*Economic growth. The consequence of lower prices and lower costs is to encourage investment and spending. Many projects are now profitable that weren’t before. Railways are increasing the productive capacity of the economy, shifting aggregate supply to the right.Other economic consequences of the railways
*Created new journeys. Many felt the railways would take passengers from other forms of transport (like the stagecoach, canal boat and omnibus). But, the railway created a new latent passenger demand. When it was possible to travel from Liverpool to Manchester in a couple of hours (rather than a whole day) Merchants started frequently traveling. People could afford to take a train for a shopping excursion they never would have considered. Railways proved that if you offer new improved transport services you can create demand that wasn’t there before. It is like the modern phenomena of building new roads and finding they soon fill up as journeys increase.
*The railway commuter. Before the railways most people lived within walking distance from their place of work. It meant workers often lived in cramped unsanitary conditions close to industrial centres. The railways enabled people to live further afield and catch the train into work. It was the railway which helped the spread of the ‘commuter belt’. In the 1920s, the Metropolitan railway actively marketed ‘Metro land’ – new houses built near railway lines. People started living further away from their place of work. It was now practical to live in the suburbs and commute into the centre of town / city to work.
*New opportunities for industry. Making raw materials easily available at low cost transformed industry.
*Enhanced the process of globalisation. Trains made it much easier to import goods and raw materials. The easy transfer from coast to inland manufacturing enabled firms to source goods from abroad. It is in the railway age where Britain starts becoming a big importer of food, such as tea from India and beef from Argentina.
*Speeded up communication. Mail delivered by train could arrive in a matter of days rather than weeks. The railways helped develop national networks of mail delivery.
Farming. Before the railways, farmers had to drive their livestock into towns were they would be slaughtered. This was an inefficient process because it would take many days and during the long walk, the animals would lose much of their body weight. The trains enabled cattle to be transported directly into the centre of towns. It was much more profitable for farmers as the cattle would give more meat.
Railways during the First World War
In 1914, trains were perhaps at the height of the dominance of transport. Some scholars have suggested that trains contributed to the defensive nature of the First World War. Railways could easily provide troops, supplies and munitions to positions of defence. However, they lacked the flexibility to help with advancing troops. Trains and railways were useful for supporting strong defensive positions but not attacking troops. Hence one reason for the stalemate of trench warfare. By the time of the second world war, railways had been superseded by motorised transport (tanks) these were much more suitable to advancing (blitzkrieg) forms of war.
Stock markets
The nature of railways was that they required significant capital investment, but companies could not expect profit for several years. To finance the building of railways, companies looked to the stock market to raise finance. In the UK, the building of the railways saw a rapid growth in the number of companies listed on the stock market. More people considered buying shares in railway companies. Railways contributed to the development of banking and stock markets. In the UK, there was a period of railway mania where speculators flocked to buy shares in any railways company. But, some of the schemes were actually unprofitable and people lost parts of their investment.
Government regulation
At the start of the railway age, governments generally followed a laissez faire approach to business. Early railways were privately owned, financed with little or no government regulation. However, the growth of the railways was important for changing governments attitudes. Slowly governments saw the need to regulate aspects of railway safety (after high profile crashes). Railways also lent itself to monopoly power; many of the late Nineteenth Century railway companies were successful in charging high prices and exploiting their monopoly power. Governments started to regulate these monop
https://diarynote-jp.indered.space
Background
PDF Resources As the World’s Greatest Hobby, model railroading can require skills and knowledge across a wide variety of topics. Within the group of products here, you’ll find helpful resources, historical perspective, terminology, and other good-to-know information as you expand your model railroading experience and enhance your own layout. Half my train room is a mix of mostly New England and some Midwestern USA. The other half or so is a Swedish townscape and train land. The room is 23 x 20 feet with a big peninsula in the middle and a shelf type layout around the room. I am running Santa Fe, Pennsy and Milwaukee and the Swedish State Railway (SJ). This Railway Reform Toolkit aims to provide aneasy-to-use resource on the rail industry —what it is and what it does best— and to provide an experience-based set of best practices to aid inthe planning and execution of railway reforms. Introduction To Model Railroading Welcome to the NMRA’s ’Introduction To Model Railroading’ web pages. These web pages have been put together by the NMRA. To introduce people to model railroading. Our goal is to help those who are interested in building a model railroad but who have never done it before or to assist those who may have a simple track plan and now wants to learn.
’Dear Dad: One thing I want this Christmas more than anything is a Lionel Electric Train.… You ought to see the way they run! Like a million dollars. And they whistle too. Real railroad whistle signals by remote control. You can couple and uncouple cars electrically, from a distance, just by touching a button; and reverse the train or speed it up or slow it down. Please get me a Lionel, Dad. We’ll have lots of fun together.’
This letter was featured in a pull-out section of the 1938 Lionel Trains catalog, leaving space for a boy to note which model number train his father should purchase. Lionel electric model trains were all the rage in 1938, had been for many years prior, and continued to be through the 1950s. Though declining in popularity since the 1960s, the trains are still manufactured and sold throughout the world today. Puttinti pattu cheera telugu serial. Many adults now collect old Lionel train models, as evidenced by the number of hobby shops and collectors’ shows dedicated to the product, and the thousands of members of the Train Collectors Association. Lionel is the largest manufacturer of toy trains in the world.
An electric train runs by transferring a positive current from one track rail through to the motor and then returning the current through the negative track rail. The current is then transferred to a transformer or battery, completing the circuit. History
Joshua Lionel Cowen claimed to have embarked upon several other inventions prior to his namesake train, including the flash-light, the dry-cell battery and the motorized fan. Whether these claims were true or not is subject to dispute, but there is no argument that Cowen devised one of the first motorized trains as an ad gimmick for a New York City toy manufacturer in the early 1900s. Cowen’s idea was not entirely unique; a German toy maker had featured a model electric streetcar at the Columbian World’s Fair in Chicago in 1893 and a Cincinnati firm, Carlisle & Finch, came up with a similar invention in 1896. Cowen’s original battery-operated invention was not a toy, however. It served solely to draw attention to the other merchandise in the toy shop window and resembled a box on wheels. The words ’Electric Express’ were embossed on the sides. However, the toy shop customers began requesting the electric car as well as the other merchandise and Cowen began to market his invention.
Cowen soon upgraded his design and began to make a variety of components. In addition to steam locomotives, Pullman sleepers, baggage cars, freight cars and cabooses, he made electric trolleys as well. Trains bearing the logos of various rail lines were available, too, and railroad companies began to submit blueprints of new designs to Lionel in the hopes that he would create a model based on them and give them some free advertising. The transformer was also introduced in the early 1900s.
In 1902, Cowen produced the first of what would become his trademark train catalogs. This 16-page, black-and-white version paled in comparison to the later full-color wish books, but still served as a useful marketing tool. Catalogs and advertising were primary components of the Lionel marketing strategy and for decades the company promoted The steam engine is mode by a process called die-casting, where-by a hot liquid metal is heated and then shot into a highly detailed mold. Plastic cars are mode by a process called injection molding. the sense of importance a boy could feel running his own railroad and the opportunity the product provided for father and son to bond. In 1921, the Lionel Manufacturing Company placed the first-ever advertisement in the color comics section of a news-paper promoting its Lionel Engineers Club for Lionel train owners.
Lionel joined the war effort in 1917, producing compasses, binnacles, and navigating equipment for the U.S. Navy. The company also offered a model war train. By the 1930s, Cowen began to re-think his decision to promote war toys, however. The post-war years were profitable for the Lionel Corporation, as the company was renamed when it was reorganized in 1918. Lionel’s sales in 1920 topped $2 million. The Great Depression took its toll on the company, but the 1934 introduction of a handcar operated by Mickey and Minnie Mouse, endorsed by Cowen’s friend Walt Disney, helped the company bounce back. Lionel introduced streamlined engines that year to reflect the new Burlington Zephyr and Union Pacific City of Port-land in use in the real train world. Lionel introduced remote control operation that year as well. A painstakingly accurate model of the New York Central’s Hudson-type steam engine was released in 1937 in an effort to appeal to the burgeoning market among adult model railroad enthusiasts.
World War II halted the production of Lionel trains for a period as all scrap metal was directed toward the war effort, but Lionel remained secure with $5.5 million in government contracts. In order to sustain its popularity in the interim, the company released a paper model train, dubbed the ’Wartime Freight Train.’ Metal trains were back, though, once the war ended and in 1957 Lionel introduced the ill-received pastel pink and blue model train for girls. Cowen retired in 1958, the company’s first losing year since the Depression. Nine months later he sold the company to his grand-nephew. With the advent of airplanes, racing cars, and tele-vision, model trains dropped in popularity over the next three decades. The company has been purchased several times since Cowen first sold it and is now owned by a group of four investors, one of whom is the rock musician Neil Young, an avid model train collector. Young’s interest in Lionel leadership began when he helped the company design a remote control device that could be operated by persons with handicaps affecting their grip. Young hoped to actively share his hobby with his sons, who have cerebral palsy. Since 1970, Lionel trains have been manufactured in Mt. Clemens, Michigan, a suburb of Detroit. Raw Materials
The primary materials used to manufacture Lionel trains are metals such as steel, aluminum, zinc, and plastic. The Manufacturing
Process
The various components of the Lionel train, such as engines, cabooses, boxcars, and tankers, are designed on a computer. The engine
* 1 The Lionel steam locomotive engine is made by a process called die-casting, whereby a hot liquid metal, such as steel or zinc, is heated to 900° F (482.2° C) degrees and then shot into a highly detailed mold.
* 2 The mold is then placed in a cooling tank where it cools and hardens to form the body of the locomotive.
* 3 The locomotive body is then trimmed, cut and milled (whereby a high-speed cutter cuts off sections only thousandths of an inch thick to create flat surfaces), both by machine and by hand to form the finished locomotive engine.
* 4 The locomotive body is placed on the assembly line for painting and final assembly. The cars
* 5 Plastic components are formed in a process called injection molding, where-by plastic pellets are melted and shot into a mold. The liquid cools and hardens into the shape of the component. Metal components other than the engine are die-cast.
* 6 The components are placed on an assembly line and sent to a drilling station, where a combination of manual and automated processes are used to attach hundreds of tiny accessories, created earlier in a process known as sub-assembly, such as ladders, headlights and handrails.
* 7 Any die cast parts undergo a process called phosphating, where the component is dipped in a phosphate solution to open up pores in the metal and allow for any paint to soak in.
* 8 The metal and plastic components are sent to the painting station where they are sprayed with paint by a machine or painted by hand. Components being painted multiple colors undergo a process called masking, where a mask-like guard is placed over areas that a certain color of paint should not reach.
* 9 At the next station, the components are affixed with lettering and logos through two different processes: hot stamping and pad printing. Hot stamping is used on flat parts and pad printing is used on raised and rounded plastic surfaces and all die-cast surfaces. Hot stamping uses a Mylar-heated rubber dye to emboss print onto the flat surfaces and pad printing uses a dye plate to etch print onto the raised, rounded and die-cast surfaces.
* 10 The engine is affixed to a chassis, which holds the motor, electrical circuitry and wheels. Each car is affixed to a non-motorized chassis that provides support and holds the wheels.
* 11 After successful completion of several quality control tests, the finished model train components are sent to a shipping area where they are packaged and prepared for shipping. The tracks
* 12 Metal sheets are placed into a forming machine, which cuts the metal into miniature rails and ties.
* 13 The rails and ties are joined together in a hydraulic press.
* 14 After quality control inspections, the track segments are sent to a shipping area where they are packaged and prepared for shipping. Comment And Contributefree Model Railway Resources Inc Quality Control
At the end of the assembly line, various functioning components of the train are tested, such as whistles and bells. The engine must be able to run off the line under its own power and climb a 30° incline within 5.5 seconds. Paint colors undergo quality control as well. A color spectrometer is used to ensure that all paint is the precisely right color. The Future
Lionel train components have always reflected the times. Engines have been modeled after real trains in use during various periods in Lionel’s history. The cars often reflect the businesses and interests of the times, from the early milk cars to military components during war times to boxcars bearing the names and logos of major businesses of different periods. It is anticipated that Lionel designs will continue to reflect contemporary society and the real-life rail-roading environment on which the Lionel train is modeled. Vue 6 infinite download.Free Modeling Where to Learn More Books
Hollander, Ron. All Aboard!: The Story of Joshua Lionel Cowen and His Lionel Train Company. New York: Workman Publishing, 1981. Comment And Contributefree Model Railway Resources Ltd
I’m currently reading a book Blood, Iron and Gold by Christian Wolmar about how railways transformed the world.
This interesting extract from the political economist Friedrich List, explains some of the economic benefits of railways:
“Railways would carry wood, turf and coal at less than half the present costs. Bavaria, where flour, meat and other foodstuffs are 50 – 100 per cent cheaper than in Leipzig, could export its surplus to the Erzgebirge, the Elbe and the Hanseatic cities. Cheaper food and fuel would partly enhance the well-being of the working classes, and partly lower money wages, increase population and increase the extent of industry. Cheap building materials and low money wages would encourage building and lower the rents in the new and more distant parts of the city.” …. I do not doubt for one minute that this increase in value in Leipzig alone would in a few years exceed the total capital costs of the new railways.” Leipzig-Dresden railway” [1]
In one paragraph, quite a few interesting areas of economic theory.
*New technology leading to lower average cost for business. The introduction of the railways enabled a substantial reduction in costs of transport, leading to lower prices of goods in shops. The new stream railway technology quite possibly had a bigger impact on business than recent technological innovations, such as micro-computers and the internet.
*Theory of comparative advantage. This extract shows Bavaria has a comparative advantage in foodstuffs (50-100% cheaper) Exporting surplus foodstuffs led to increased economic welfare for both Bavaria (exporters) and the cities (cheaper imports). Presumably, exporting food, would give Bavaria more income to spend on goods and services produced in the cities. This theory of comparative advantage is no use, if there are prohibitive transport costs. The railways enable these potential gains to be materialised.
*Improved living standards. ‘Partly lower money wages’ The author may mean that with lower food prices and lower building costs, real living standards rise. Your wages go further, if the railways make everything cheaper. The author is perhaps suggesting wages can be cut because the price of goods haven fallen.
*Greater choice of goods and services. The railways enable a greater choice of goods. Fish and chips became a popular meal when people could now transport fresh fish in a day. The diet of many people improved after the introduction of the railways because a greater variety of fresh food could be brought in.
*New markets. The railways led to the creation of new industries like tourism. Coastal towns like Blackpool and Scarborough became popular seaside resorts. Thomas Cook’s travel business started from offering special charter trains.
*Economic growth. The consequence of lower prices and lower costs is to encourage investment and spending. Many projects are now profitable that weren’t before. Railways are increasing the productive capacity of the economy, shifting aggregate supply to the right.Other economic consequences of the railways
*Created new journeys. Many felt the railways would take passengers from other forms of transport (like the stagecoach, canal boat and omnibus). But, the railway created a new latent passenger demand. When it was possible to travel from Liverpool to Manchester in a couple of hours (rather than a whole day) Merchants started frequently traveling. People could afford to take a train for a shopping excursion they never would have considered. Railways proved that if you offer new improved transport services you can create demand that wasn’t there before. It is like the modern phenomena of building new roads and finding they soon fill up as journeys increase.
*The railway commuter. Before the railways most people lived within walking distance from their place of work. It meant workers often lived in cramped unsanitary conditions close to industrial centres. The railways enabled people to live further afield and catch the train into work. It was the railway which helped the spread of the ‘commuter belt’. In the 1920s, the Metropolitan railway actively marketed ‘Metro land’ – new houses built near railway lines. People started living further away from their place of work. It was now practical to live in the suburbs and commute into the centre of town / city to work.
*New opportunities for industry. Making raw materials easily available at low cost transformed industry.
*Enhanced the process of globalisation. Trains made it much easier to import goods and raw materials. The easy transfer from coast to inland manufacturing enabled firms to source goods from abroad. It is in the railway age where Britain starts becoming a big importer of food, such as tea from India and beef from Argentina.
*Speeded up communication. Mail delivered by train could arrive in a matter of days rather than weeks. The railways helped develop national networks of mail delivery.
Farming. Before the railways, farmers had to drive their livestock into towns were they would be slaughtered. This was an inefficient process because it would take many days and during the long walk, the animals would lose much of their body weight. The trains enabled cattle to be transported directly into the centre of towns. It was much more profitable for farmers as the cattle would give more meat.
Railways during the First World War
In 1914, trains were perhaps at the height of the dominance of transport. Some scholars have suggested that trains contributed to the defensive nature of the First World War. Railways could easily provide troops, supplies and munitions to positions of defence. However, they lacked the flexibility to help with advancing troops. Trains and railways were useful for supporting strong defensive positions but not attacking troops. Hence one reason for the stalemate of trench warfare. By the time of the second world war, railways had been superseded by motorised transport (tanks) these were much more suitable to advancing (blitzkrieg) forms of war.
Stock markets
The nature of railways was that they required significant capital investment, but companies could not expect profit for several years. To finance the building of railways, companies looked to the stock market to raise finance. In the UK, the building of the railways saw a rapid growth in the number of companies listed on the stock market. More people considered buying shares in railway companies. Railways contributed to the development of banking and stock markets. In the UK, there was a period of railway mania where speculators flocked to buy shares in any railways company. But, some of the schemes were actually unprofitable and people lost parts of their investment.
Government regulation
At the start of the railway age, governments generally followed a laissez faire approach to business. Early railways were privately owned, financed with little or no government regulation. However, the growth of the railways was important for changing governments attitudes. Slowly governments saw the need to regulate aspects of railway safety (after high profile crashes). Railways also lent itself to monopoly power; many of the late Nineteenth Century railway companies were successful in charging high prices and exploiting their monopoly power. Governments started to regulate these monop
https://diarynote-jp.indered.space
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