
Old
Swindon-built locomotive destined for restoration |
Wiltshire
County Council and Swindon Borough Council, who run the Wiltshire
and Swindon Record Office, have just taken delivery of the final
collection of records from the celebrated railway, created by engineer
Isambard Kingdom Brunel.
Brunel
made second place in the BBC's poll to find the public's choice
for the Greatest Briton of all time.

Great
Briton: Isambard Kingdom Brunel |
The
archive, which contains thousands of documents, includes staff and
pension records, as well as engineering papers and plans of buildings
and tracks.
The
final set of records has arrived in Wiltshire from the British Rail
Records Centre at Paddington in London.
The
Great Western Railway was the only British railway to survive intact
from its opening in 1841 right up until the nationalisation of the
rail network after the Second World War.

Steve
Hobbs, archivist |
Some
of the records held at the Wiltshire and Swindon Record Office date
back to the mid-19th century.
Wiltshire
County Council archivist, Steve Hobbs, said: "We are thrilled to
be able to complete our archive of the Great Western Railway, which
is still revered by railway enthusiasts.
"Swindon
was at the heart of the railway industry in the West for nearly
150 years and the company was very important economically to Wiltshire."

The
Great Western Railway logo |
He
added: "We are working to make the whole collection available to
the public. Only a small part of the archive is currently listed
and it will take several years to catalogue all the material.
"However,
when the process is completed, the archive will prove very useful
to anyone with an interest in the history of the Great Western Railway."
A catalogue of some of the records is already available on the Internet
at www.a2a.pro.gov.uk
|