The Skyline Limited


Book Description

This is the dramatic story of the Kaslo & Slocan Railway-the Great Northern's narrow gauge-in the rugged Slocan Mountains of BC's West Kootenay district during the 1890s and early 1900s. Here too is the superbly illustrated account of the beautiful sternwheelers that connected the K&S with other Great Northern branch lines. The Skyline Limited is a fascinating chapter in the stories of the Great Northern and the Canadian Pacific.




American Narrow Gauge Railroads


Book Description

This is a comprehensive, illustrated account of the growth and decline of American narrow gauge railroading. It documents a long-gone era, bringing to life ancient steam locomotives, railroads and rolling stock that have mostly disappeared without trace. The basic facts and information on the subject are heavily illustrated with photographs, drawings and maps, presented in an encyclopedia format.







Narrow Gauge Railways


Book Description

Narrow gauge railways, so well suited to difficult, mountainous terrain, were built in many of the UK's most scenic locations. Their genesis was in mines and quarries where they replaced manor horse-pulled wagons, but their adaptability meant that by the 1860s they were also carrying passengers, in some cases over quite considerable distances. Today a good proportion of all the important lines survive in the service of tourists, whose appreciation of the landscape, and the railways themselves, keep these relics of industrial Britain alive in all their variety. Peter Johnson has been researching and writing about narrow gauge lines for many years, and this is the perfect introduction to a rich and appealing corner of British railway history.




Gauge Evidence


Book Description




Narrow Gauge in the Rockies


Book Description

Take a nostalgic 100 year Journey through the Rocky Mountains aboard the narrow gauge railways that snaked through them.







The Broad and the Narrow Gauge


Book Description

This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1846 edition. Excerpt: ... sinking, moreover, bearing a greater proportion to the 4 feet 8 inches than to 7 feet, will cause a far greater and more dangerous oscillation. We find it afterwards, on the head of accommodation, admitted that "Until lately the broad gauge carriages were altogether more commodious than those of the narrow gauge, but recently carriages have been introduced on several of the narrow gauge lines nearly as lofty as those on the broad gauge, and equally commodious." If this be accurate, it seems difficult to avoid the conclusion that the superior comfort of the broad gauge carriages has been so highly appreciated that it has been thoughtworth while to imitate it, even at a certain increase of risk. As to the comparative comfort, even now, every one must judge for himself. We have known fanatics who professed to prefer the inside of a coach to a railway carriage; and we can therefore believe in the existence of sectarians with minds inadequate to the broad, and with characteristic predilections for the narrow: still, we have never met with any one who had travelled by both, who did not prefer the luxuriousness and roominess of the Great Western to any other; and it is worth observing that in America, where a gauge of about 5 feet is in use, the superior commodiousness of the broad gauge is acknowledged, at the obvious sacrifice of safety, by building the carriages so as to overlay the wheels to a considerable extent. In England we are less careless of life; but the easy roominess of the Great Western carriages is, it would seem, sufficient to tempt us into some degree of rashness. The broad gauge however is, at any rate, "safer at high velocities" Now as to the unimportance of safety at high speeds, --an unimportance appreciated by the...