On Saturday the project was represented at a really interesting workshop in Leeds, exploring the connections and collaborative potential between family historians and academic historians…
Today’s post is a little different to usual – though hopefully still relevant and interesting to our readers. Typically we’ve taken a case or two…
We’ve blogged about the dangers of the permanent way before now, including one post about a particularly bad day in 1911. Sadly we have to…
We’re delighted to be able to say that we’re extending the project! We’ve blogged in the past about the impact of accidents and trying to…
In railway terms, Waterloo generally brings one thing to mind: the London mainline station, in our period the terminal point of the London & South…
In a previous post, we focused on labourer Joseph Brown of the Great Eastern Railway, one of a select few – 15 – who feature…
Yesterday our project Twitter feed (@RWLDproject) tweeted a case in which a worker attempted to apply a vacuum brake with a coupling pole. This caused…
The accidents and reports from which our database draws reveal much about all sorts of aspects of British and Irish society around the time of…
How far could workers control their own fates? In the 19th century and well into the 20th it was believed by many – certainly the…
28 April is Workers’ Memorial Day – an important occasion for us to stop and think about all those who have died, been injured or…