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  2. Highland Main Line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highland_Main_Line

    Route Maximum Speed Builder/ built In service on the line Leased from Other notes mph km/h 43: Diesel locomotive: ScotRail: Glasgow/Edinburgh to Inverness: 125 200 BREL Crewe Works 1975–1982 2018– Angel Trains: Operates under the brand Inter7City. Fleet consists of 9 four-coach and 17 five-coach trains. 1 four coach train damaged in the ...

  3. Inverness and Aviemore Direct Railway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverness_and_Aviemore...

    The Inverness to Perth line in 1898 showing the Carr Bridge deviation. Interests in Inverness had long wanted a railway connection to Central Scotland and the south. The Inverness and Aberdeen Junction Railway provided a route to Keith where the Great North of Scotland Railway connected to Aberdeen. This route became available in 1858.

  4. Far North Line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Far_North_Line

    A train calling at Invergordon station Tain station is the terminus for some Far North Line services. Kinbrace station is a request stop. All passenger trains are operated by ScotRail using Class 158 "Express Sprinter" diesel multiple units. The exact stopping pattern varies between each station, as not all trains run the full length of the Far ...

  5. Kyle of Lochalsh line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyle_of_Lochalsh_line

    The route begins at Dingwall station [A] – a junction station with the Far North Line, which runs (mostly) along the Moray Firth and links Inverness with Wick and Thurso. [3] Almost immediately north of Dingwall, the two lines diverge at Dingwall Junction [ B ] and the line to Kyle of Lochalsh takes a sharp left turn to head west.

  6. Caledonian Sleeper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caledonian_Sleeper

    Sleeping car services were operated on both the west and east coast routes to multiple destinations for over a century, even under the nationalised railway operator British Rail. During 1976, services from King's Cross ran to Edinburgh and Aberdeen, and from Euston to Glasgow Central, Perth, Inverness, Stranraer Harbour, and Fort William.

  7. Highland Railway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highland_Railway

    The first proposals for rail links to Inverness were made in 1845. These were the Great North of Scotland Railway (GNoSR) between Inverness and Aberdeen and so link up with the railways to the south; the Perth & Inverness Railway, proposing a direct route over the Grampian Mountains to Perth; and the Aberdeen, Banff & Elgin Railway, with a route that followed the coast to better serve the ...