Nottingham to Mansfield
By Vic Mitchell and Keith Smith ALTHOUGH its front cover confusingly refers to ‘The Midland & Great
Northern Railway’, this book describes two rival routes in Nottinghamshire built separately by the MR and GNR.
The opening page contains a tribute to co-author and Middleton Press founder Vic
Mitchell, who died this year during the final stages of the book’s production.
He and Keith
Smith have collaborated on more than 300
Middleton titles over 42 years and in the process have built up what is described as ‘the ultimate railway encyclopedia’.
This latest addition to the series follows the traditional pattern of maps, track plans, photos and captions, all in black and white, and covers one of the most fascinating and complicated stretches of railway in the whole of Britain. For the GN and Midland fought not only with each other through the narrow Leen valley but with the Great Central too. This led to situations in which three main lines ran literally alongside each other in some locations, and although the GC routes are not covered in this volume, they inevitably appear on the maps.
So intertwined were the lines that the Midland and GN routes are wisely treated as separate chapters.
The Leen valley lies in the heart of Nottinghamshire’s once-vibrant mining district (the main reason for such intense railway rivalry) and numerous collieries were served, including Cinderhill, Bestwood, Hucknall, Linby, Newstead, Annesley and Kirkby. The last two locations are well known in railway circles too, both having possessed major motive power depots.
Rather unusually, the book contains three pictures pre-dating the photographic era. Hand-drawn, they depict Nottingham station as it was when new in the 1830s and 40s. Coming up to date, there are several photos of trams on the Nottingham Express Transit system, which today runs alongside parts of the Network Rail route as far as Hucknall. NP. Middleton Press, www.middletonpress. co.uk, 96 pages, hardback. £18.95