Place    From 1844  To 1847

Croydon atmospheric railway

Categories: Transport

An experiment by the London and Croydon Railway. Pumping stations were built which created a vacuum in a pipe laid between the rails. Each carriage had a piston that entered a slot in the tube, sealed by a leather seal. As air was sucked from the tube the carriages were drawn along the track.

As part of the construction works, the world's first railway viaduct was built, carrying the railway over the conventional steam line below. After the experiment was abandoned, the stationary engine-house at Forest Hill railway station was largely demolished and an electricity sub-station built on the site. This image shows the viaduct above the conventional steam railway.

Wikipedia for further reading.

Credit for this entry to: Alan Patient of www.plaquesoflondon.co.uk

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Croydon atmospheric railway

Commemorated ati

Croydon atmospheric railway

1845 - 1847, one of only four such railways in the world. The London to Croyd...

Read More

Forest Hill mural

{Panel 1:} A Brief Local History In medieval times this area was known as The...

Read More

Other Subjects

Croydon Road Recreation Ground

Croydon Road Recreation Ground

The land was purchased by the Beckenham Local Board to provide a public open space which had been lacking since the loss of the Fair Field for housing in the 1870s. The site was part of open farmla...

Place, Gardens / Agriculture, Transport

1 memorial
Great Eastern Railway

Great Eastern Railway

Formed from an amalgamation of the ECR, EAR, NMR, NR and EUR.  Ceased to exist when it become a part of the LNER.  Primarily linked London Liverpool Street to Norwich but also served much of East A...

Group, Transport

3 memorials
Great Eastern Street

Great Eastern Street

Constructed 1872-6 by The Metropolitan Board of Works. Opened in 1876. Improved in 1880-2.

Place, Engineering, Transport

1 memorial
Finchley Toll Gate

Finchley Toll Gate

Our picture is taken from an old map showing London toll gates (black circles), but strangely, nothing appears in Finchley.

Place, Transport

1 memorial
Peter Frank Stott

Peter Frank Stott

Civil engineer. Eight years working in Australia. Director of Highways and Transportation at the GLC 1964-67. President of the Institute of Civil Engineers in 1990. Died Devon.

Person, Engineering, Politics & Administration, Transport, Australia

2 memorials