Title
Diary of Thomas Oliver Baker
Reference
BAKE/1
Production date
1893 - 1893
Creator
- Baker, Thomas OliverBiographyBiography
Thomas Oliver Baker, born in 1873 worked at Station Masters Office, Midland Railway. Baker's decendents suggest that prior to this he was a Lost Luggage Clerk at Long Eaton. Whilst working in Derby he lodged at Mrs Ransome's lodgings in Derby, his family home was in Stretton-under-Foss, Warwickshire. His father was a Gas Manager and his mother worked as a Trimming Maker. Baker was later transferred to Kettering, Northamptonshire, where he worked as a Ticket Collector. He married in 1897 and had two sons and a daughter. After working at Derby he went on to work as a Station Master at Henlow, Bedfordshire, he then moved to Yate in Gloucestershire where he also worked as a Station Master. He died in 1953.
Scope and Content
The diary is a Charles Letts "Popular Shilling Diary". The entries are a mix of personal and work, covering his duties, how busy he was, the weather, classes he was taking, activities such as reading, chapel attendance, cash, colleagues and violin etc. He often mentions 'Edie', Edith Marie Smith who he married in 1897. The diary is written when Thomas was 20 years old.
Extent
1 item
Level of description
ITEM
Repository name
National Railway Museum, York
Associated people and organisations
- Midland Railway CoBiographyBiography
The Midland Railway was formed in 1844 from the merger of the Midland Counties Railway, the North Midland Railway and Birmingham and Derby Junction Railway wit its headquarters in Derby. It expanded its operational territory by acquisition (e.g. railways in the Erewash valley, to Sheffield, serving the Leicestershire coalfields and the route from Birmingham to Bristol), and by construction of new railways and extensions to existing lines, including lines to Peterborough and Lincoln, towards Manchester and, most notably the Settle to Carlisle route. It expanded into the South Wales coalfields, and acquired railways not connected to its main routes: the London, Tilbury and Southend Railway and, in Ireland, the Belfast and Northern Counties Railways. Much of this activity was driven by competition with its geographical rivals, the London and North Western Railway to the west and the Great Northern Railway to the east.
Where its interests were better served by co-operation, it tried to reach agreements with those same companies to share routes and traffic receipts. The most famous of these is the Euston Square Confederation, an agreement between the Midland Railway, the London and North Western Railway and the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway. Other such arrangements were the Cheshire Lines Committee and the right to run over the Great Northern Railway into King’s Cross station.
The arrangements for through running and sharing of London termini with its competitors proved unsatisfactory. As a consequence the Midland Railway eventually built its own connection to London. The line ran from Bedford on the Midland’s existing Leicester to Hitchin line, to a terminus at St Pancras. It was opened in 1868. The Midland Railway was a partner in several joint railways e.g. the Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway (with the London and South Western Railway), and the Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway (the Great Northern Railway).
The Midland Railway came under the control of the Railway Executive during the First World War and ended its independent existence in 1923 under Grouping when it was merged with, amongst other railway companies, its great rival the London and North Western Railway to form the London, Midland and Scottish Railway Company.
Subject
External document