The Midland Railway (MR) was a railway company in the United Kingdom, which existed from 1844 to 1922.
Eventually the Midland owned a large network of railway lines centred on the East Midlands, and its head office was in Derby. Initially, the MR's main line, now known as the Midland Main Line, connected the East Midlands to London and to Leeds. The company also owned the main lines connecting the East Midlands to Birmingham and Bristol, and another to Manchester. In the end, they were the only railway of the time to own or share lines in England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland.
Alomst immediately, it took over the Leicester and Swannington Railway and the Sheffield and Rotherham Railway in 1845, but it was not until 1870 that a through route via Sheffield to the north was opened, from Chesterfield. It also absorbed the Mansfield and Pinxton Railway in 1847 building a connection of the latter between Chesterfield and Trent Junction at Long Eaton along the Erewash Valley, giving access to the Nottinghamshire coalfields.
Initially the Midland ran into London using the London and North Western line from Rugby to Euston . Although the bill for running the line from Hitchin into Kings Cross, jointly with the Great Northern Railway, was passed in 1847 it was not until 1857 that the Midland could run its own trains into the Capital. By 1867 this was severely congested and the Midland built its own line into St. Pancras.
The Manchester, Buxton, Matlock and Midlands Junction Railway had been built in 1849 between Ambergate Junction and Rowsley a few miles north of Matlock . The Midland extended the line from Rowsley to New Mills South in 1867, joining the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway into Manchester. In 1880 it opened its own line into Manchester Central station.
In the 1870s a dispute with the London and North Western Railway over access rights to the LNWR line to Scotland caused the MR to construct the Settle and Carlisle (S&C) line, the highest main line in England, in order to secure the company's access to Scotland; ironically the dispute with the LNWR was settled before the S&C was built, but Parliament refused to allow the MR to withdraw from the project, which was completed in 1876.
The Midland also acquired a number of other lines, including the Belfast and Northern Counties Railway in 1903 and the London, Tilbury and Southend Railway in 1912. In common with other railways, they shared running rights on some lines, but they also developed lines in partnership with other railways, and were involved in more such 'Joint' lines than any other railway. In partnership with the Great Northern Railway it owned the Midland & Great Northern Joint Railway to provide connections from the Midlands to East Anglia; the M&GN was the UK's biggest joint railway system. The MR also provided motive power for the Somerset & Dorset Joint Railway.
The company was grouped into the London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS) on January 1, 1923 and was the most influential of the pre-grouping companies that formed the LMS.
See also locomotives of the Midland Railway.
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