Introduction
After the Liverpool and Manchester Railway was linked to Birmingham by the Grand Junction Railway, it made sense for the business tycoons of the North West to extend this exhilarating new form of transport to London, and George and Robert Stephenson were given the job.
THE London and Birmingham Railway opened on September 17th, 1838, connecting Euston to Curzon Street via Rugby and Coventry in five and a half hours. At Curzon Street, passengers could change to the Grand Junction Railway for Manchester and Liverpool, whose cotton-merchants and mill-owners had paid for the link to the capital.
The railway’s engineers, George Stephenson and his son Robert, eventually secured Parliamentary approval with generous compensation payments to landowners and some re-routing, but even so, until 1844 trains were not hauled out of the capital by fire-breathing locomotives, but winched out by rope as far as Camden over a mile away, because of fears over smoke and noise on the steep incline.
Construction began on June 1st, 1834. The railway took five and half million pounds and four years to build,* and was not quite complete by Queen Victoria’s coronation on 28th June, 1838, owing to the troublesome Kilsby tunnel near Rugby. A stagecoach bridged the gap for the historic day.
Measuring Worth would suggest that the ‘opportunity cost’ (basically, the hit taken by the economy) of a £5.5m project in 1837 would be roughly £600m today. HS2, a proposed upgrade to the line intended to cut the journey time from 81 minutes to 49, was expected to cost the taxpayer about £30bn in September 2015 (Independent).
Précis
In 1837, wealthy merchants of Liverpool and Manchester who had made their money in textiles engaged the Stephensons to establish a railway connection all the way to London, with a line from Birmingham to the capital. It was completed in 1838, just too late for Victoria’s coronation in June, and opened that September at a cost of over £5.5m. (59 / 60 words)
In 1837, wealthy merchants of Liverpool and Manchester who had made their money in textiles engaged the Stephensons to establish a railway connection all the way to London, with a line from Birmingham to the capital. It was completed in 1838, just too late for Victoria’s coronation in June, and opened that September at a cost of over £5.5m.
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Variations: 1.increase the length of this precis to exactly 65 words. 2.reduce the length of this precis to exactly 55 words. 3.introduce one of the following words into the precis: about, if, may, must, or, otherwise, since, whether.
Word Games
Sevens Based on this passage
Suggest answers to this question. See if you can limit one answer to exactly seven words.
Who were the chief financial backers of the L&BR?
Suggestion
Wealthy businessmen in Northwest England’s textile industry. (7 words)
Variations: 1.expand your answer to exactly fourteen words. 2.expand your answer further, to exactly twenty-one words. 3.include one of the following words in your answer: if, but, despite, because, (al)though, unless.
Jigsaws Based on this passage
Express the ideas below in a single sentence, using different words as much as possible. Do not be satisfied with the first answer you think of; think of several, and choose the best.
Businessmen in the Northwest wanted a railway to London. Their money came from the textile industry. They employed the Stephensons.
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