Title
Letter from Charles Dickens regarding the accident on Great Western Railway
Reference
DIC
Production date
05-02-1870 - 05-02-1870
Creator
- Dickens, Charles John HuffamBiographyBiography
Charles Dickens, journalist and author, was born on 7 February 1812 at 13 Mile End Terrace, Portsea, Portsmouth. He was the second child and eldest son of John Dickens, an assistant clerk in the naval pay offices, and his wife Elizabeth (née Barrow).
Dickens’ early childhood was spent in Kent, firstly at Sheerness and then at Chatham. In 1822 the family moved to Camden, where John Dicken’s poor financial circumstances led to him being committed to the Marshelsea debtors’ prison. He was sent to work in a factory, Warren's Blacking Warehouse, where he earned six shillings a week pasting labels on to jars of shoe polish.
In 1825, following his father’s release from prison, Charles Dickens was enrolled at Wellington House Classical and Commercial Academy on Hampstead Road. From May 1827 to November 1828 he worked as a solicitor’s clerk, after which he became a journalist. His first literary work was published in the Monthly Magazine in December 1833. In 1836 he found fame with the publication of The Pickwick Papers, and subsequently became one of the most famous and popular literary figures of the Victorian age. His works included more than a dozen major novels, many short stories, several plays, several non-fiction books, and individual essays and articles.
Dickens married Catherine Hogarth (1816-1879) on 2 April 1846. They separated in 1858.
On 9 June 1865 Dickens was involved in the Staplehurst rail crash. He was returning from Paris when the train he was travelling in was de-railed by engineering works. Ten people were killed. Dickens was severely affected by this traumatic event and afterwards became nervous of rail travel. Despite this, he continued to use the railway to fulfil engagements on his popular reading tours.
Dickens died on 9 June 1870 (the anniversary of the Staplehurst accident) at his home, Gad’s Hill Place, Heigham, Kent, and was buried at Westminster Abbey on 14 June 1870.
Scope and Content
Autograph letter and envelope from Charles Dickens to James Charles Kingett, Superintendent of the Great Western Railway Up Parcels Department at the Paddington station, dated on Saturday 5th February 1870:
'Sir, In reply to your letter I beg to say that I have no doubt my Christmas fare was destroyed by an unavoidable accident, and that I bore the loss with unbroken good humour towards the Great Western Railway Company. Faithfully Yours, Charles Dickens'
Paper's letterhead refers to Dicken's country home: Gad's Hill Place, Higham by Rochester, Kent. Dickens signed the letter with his customary flourish, and the envelope bears his stamp with letters C. D.
The letter is a reply to Mr Kingett's previous letter regarding a destroyed Christmas parcel. In the Christmas week of 1869, a horsebox laden with parcels from the Hereford district caught fire between Gloucester and Reading. The parcels were destroyed and the owners compensated. Mr Kingett wrote to the senders, one of whom was Charles Dickens, explaining the circumstances and apologising.
The parcel contained a turkey sent by George Dolby, the manager of Dickens’ reading tours. Letter was kept by Mr Kingett and it was later published in the Great Western Railway Magazine in 1908.
Extent
1 document
Physical description
Fair condition, slight fading. Letter and envelope mounted on cardboard.
Language
English
Archival history
Letter was written by Charles Dickens and sent to J.C. Kingett at GWR Paddington Station parcel office in 1870. The letter came to the NRM from the Museum of British Transport, Clapham and according to its ledger originated from the British Rail West Offices at Paddington Station.
Level of description
TOP
Repository name
National Railway Museum, York
Associated people and organisations
- Great Western Railway CoBiographyBiography
The Great Western Railway, also known as the GWR, was founded by Royal Assent on 31 August 1835. The idea of a railway from Bristol to London had first been mooted in 1824, and finally in 1833 a committee of four prominent Bristol businessmen, namely George Jones, John Harford, Thomas Richard Guppy and William Tothill, had joined together and provided impetus and capital for the project. It took two years to survey the line and push the necessary legislation through Parliament. The first train ran from Bristol to Bath on 31 August 1940, full services started in 1841 and in 1842 Swindon Locomotive Works started operation. The London terminus of the GWR was at Paddington station.
At its inception, the GWR had a board of 24 directors which was divided into two committees based in London and Bristol. The first chairman, who sat on the London committee, was Benjamin Shaw and the first deputy chairman was Robert Bright, a member of the Bristol committee. Sir Daniel Gooch was the first Locomotive Superintendent, a post that came later to be known as the Chief Mechanical Engineer. The GWR did not have the post of General Manager until 1863, when Charles Grierson was appointed. The first Secretary was Charles Saunders. Charles Russell became chairman in 1839. The GWR’s first Engineer (a post that would later be called the Chief Civil Engineer) was the renowned Isambard Kingdom Brunel, and he held the post from March 1835 to September 1859. The GWR was overseen by a Board of Directors.
At the turn of the century there were three departments under the General Manager. These were the General Department, New Works and Government Enquiries and Staff and Expenses. On the operational side of the GWR, the various different departments such as the Locomotive, Carriage and Superintendent, the Superintendent of the Line, the Goods Department and the Traffic Manager all used a similar administrative structure. These departments were headed by one manager and beneath this post responsibility was distributed into divisions based on geographical areas, which varied by department. The docks which were owned by the GWR were administrated separately from the railways under the control of the Chief Docks Manager. There were also facilitative administrative departments, as well as Hotels and Catering, Surveyor, Estate Agent, Stores departments and a Road Motor Engineer’s Department which operated the GWR’s road haulage service.
Brunel insisted on using a broad gauge track, which caused problems both in the civil engineering projects to build the railway and also during operation. A Gauge Commission had been appointed in 1846 and brought about the Gauge Act of 16 August 1846 which noted the systemic advantages of narrow gauge but did not compel the GWR to convert the full length of their track. From 1846 a standard gauge third rail was added to board gauge lines. From around 1868, led by then Chairman Sir Daniel Gooch, the GWR began to convert the entire system to standard gauge, and this was completed on 23 May 1892.
The main line of the Great Western Railway ran over the 118¼ miles between Bristol Temple Meads and Paddington station in London. The construction of the main line required several major engineering works. The chief among these was the two-mile long Box Tunnel between Bath and Chippenham. This challenging engineering work took around five years to complete, opening on 30 June 1841. Brunel also constructed viaducts and bridges, including the Maidenhead Bridge, opened on 1 July 1839 and the Royal Albert Bridge at Saltash which linked Devon and Cornwall across the River Tamar and which opened on 11 April 1859.
The GWR had a road haulage operation, which connected with its rail freight services. The GWR also owned and operated a number of docks and harbours, and after the Grouping in 1923 the GWR became the world’s largest dock-owning company. It wholly owned 16 docks, including Plymouth, Swansea and Cardiff, and jointly owned five other docks. The South Wales ports mainly handled minerals and food, whilst passenger ships used Plymouth and Fishguard. The GWR’s docks and harbours allowed goods and passengers to transfer between rail and sea with ease. The GWR also owned its own hotels, which numbered eight by 1923. The showpiece hotel was the Great Western Royal Hotel which was connected to Paddington station.
The Railways Act 1921 came into effect on 1 January 1923 and the multitude of smaller railway companies were consolidated in the Big Four. The GWR absorbed seven larger constituent companies as well as 26 smaller railways covering most of Wales, the Welsh Marches, Somerset, South Devon and Cornwall. It was third largest Big Four railway, with around 3,800 miles of track.
The Great Western Railway, along with all the other Big Four railway companies was nationalised and taken over by the Railway Executive, part of the British Transport Commission from 1 January 1948. The Western Region of British Railways took over responsibilty for GWR's sphere of operations.
- Kingett, James CharlesBiographyBiography
James Charles Kingett was the Superintendent of the Parcels Department at Great Western Railway's Paddington station. Kingett was born in November 1842. He joined the GWR at Paddington in 1862. He worked in a variety of roles, spending several years at Southampton, Reading and Smithfield before being put in charge of the London Goods District in 1902. He retired in 1908 and died from heart failure in 1916.
Subject
Railways
Accidents (railways)
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