- Title - Box file relating to the Liverpool & Manchester Railway compiled by C F Dendy Marshall 
- Reference - YA1983.9/2 
- Production date - 1830 - 1930 
Creator
- Bury, Thomas TalbotBiographyBiographyThe architect and engraver Thomas Talbot Bury was born in London in 1809. He studied under Augustus Charles Pugin as an articled apprentice from 1824-1830. In 1830, he established his own studio at 7 Gerrard Street, Soho. From 1845-1849, Bury was in partnership with Charles Lee. Alongside his architectural practice, Bury produced engravings and lithographs of his own and other architects' drawings, notably those of Augustus Welby Pugin and Owen Jones. Bury worked with A W Pugin on designs for the details of the houses of parliament under Sir Charles Barry. Bury became an associate of the Institute of British Architects in 1839, and a fellow in 1843. He became a vice-president in 1876. In 1863, he was made a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries, and was also a member of the council of the Royal Archaeological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, a member of the Cambrian Archaeological Association, and an associate of the Society of Civil Engineers.
The first edition of his Coloured Views of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway was published by Rudolph Ackermann in 1831. Bury’s prints are the finest of the various series of prints published to commemorate the opening of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway, on 15 September 1830. The prints include thirteen hand-coloured aquatint plates engraved by H. Pyall and S. G. Hughes from drawings made by Bury.
Bury died on 23 February 1877 at home at 50 Welbeck Street, Cavendish Square, London, and is buried at Norwood cemetery. 
- Scope and Content - 62 items, including: published version of T T Bury's engravings; illustrations of key figures (Stephenson, Husskison, Braithwaite); illustrations of locations along the railway route; illustrations of locomotives operated along the route.
The items were compiled by C F Dendy Marshall as part of his research for the Centenary History of the Liverpool & Manchester Railway, published in 1930. 
- Extent - 62 items 
- Archival history - Purchased from Christie's, South Kensington, as Lot 79 
- Level of description - FILE 
- Repository name - Science and Industry Museum 
Associated people and organisations
- Liverpool & Manchester Railway CoBiographyBiographyThe Liverpool and Manchester Railway was first proposed by William James and Joseph Sanders in 1821. In 1826 George Stephenson was appointed chief engineer. The company originally intended to use fixed locomotives to pull freight trains between Liverpool and Manchester, but following the Rainhill Trial competition of 6 October 1829, locomotives in the style of Stephenson's Rocket were commissioned. The company opened the line between Liverpool and Manchester on 15 September 1830. The first passengers travelled along the line two days later and goods on 1 December. The Liverpool and Manchester Railway was absorbed into the Grand Junction Railway on 8 August 1845. 
- Dendy Marshall, Chapman FrederickBiographyBiographyChapman Frederick Dendy Marshall was a railway historian known for his studies of the Liverpool & Manchester Railway and the Southern Railway. He was born in Brentford in 1872, educated at Hurstpierpoint and Trinity College, Cambridge. On graduating, he trained as a barrister, but never practised. He died at his home Chinthurst Lodge, Wonersh, in Surrey on 14 June 1945. His collection of railway documents and memorabilia was auctioned at Sotheby's on 13 November that year. 
- Subject 
- Conditions governing access - Open access. 
- Conditions governing Reproduction - Copies may be supplied in accordance with current copyright legislation and Science Museum Group terms and conditions. 
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