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  2. InterCity Sleeper (British Rail) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/InterCity_Sleeper_(British...

    InterCity Sleeper was the collective name for overnight sleeper train services run by British Rail between London and Scotland, Cornwall, Wales, and Northern England in Great Britain. Services were not provided in Northern Ireland .

  3. Night Riviera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Night_Riviera

    On 22 December 1945 at 00:45, the sleeper service from Paddington collided with the back of the 23.00 train from Paddington near Sonning. The engine of the sleeper service was derailed and it and four parcel vans on the rear of the 23.00 service were badly damaged. [5] Taunton sleeping car fire – on 5 July 1978, the up train left Penzance at ...

  4. London-Cornwall sleeper trains disrupted for eight weeks - AOL

    www.aol.com/london-cornwall-sleeper-trains...

    Great Western Railway’s Night Riviera will be cancelled between Mondays and Thursdays due to a complication with engineering work. London-Cornwall sleeper trains disrupted for eight weeks Skip ...

  5. Cornish Riviera Express - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cornish_Riviera_Express

    The Cornish Riviera Express is a British express passenger train that has run between London Paddington and Penzance in Cornwall since 1904. Introduced by the Great Western Railway, the name Cornish Riviera Express has been applied to the late morning express train from London to Penzance continuously through nationalisation under British Rail and privatisation under First Great Western, only ...

  6. Hayle Railway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hayle_Railway

    Hayle Railway System in 1837. The Hayle Railway was an early railway in West Cornwall, constructed to convey copper and tin ore from the Redruth and Camborne areas to sea ports at Hayle and Portreath. It was opened in 1837, and carried passengers on its main line from 1843.

  7. St Austell railway station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Austell_railway_station

    St Austell opened with the Cornwall Railway on 4 May 1859. [4] A report when the station opened stated that the departure station is an ornamental wooden structure, having projecting verandahs at each side, waiting room, ticket office, &c., similar to the corresponding building at Lostwithiel.

  8. Wadebridge railway station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wadebridge_railway_station

    Wadebridge railway station (Cornish: Ponswad) was a railway station that served the town of Wadebridge in Cornwall, England. It was on the Bodmin and Wadebridge Railway . It opened in 1834 to transport goods between Wadebridge , the limit of navigation on the River Camel , and inland farming and mining areas.

  9. Liskeard and Caradon Railway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liskeard_and_Caradon_Railway

    The Liskeard and Caradon Railway (Cornish: Hyns-horn Lyskerrys ha Karn) was a mineral railway in Cornwall, in the United Kingdom, which opened in 1844. It was built to carry the ores of copper and tin, and also granite, from their sources on Caradon Hill down to Moorswater for onward transport to market by way of Looe Harbour and coastal shipping.