User:Robevans123/sandbox/GWR People
Named railway lines (network rail website)
[edit]As found at "Named railway lines". National Rail Enquiries. Association of Train Operating Companies (ATOC). Archived from the original on 4 July 2014. Retrieved 4 March 2015. - beware - this page seems to run a script using Adobe Flash Player and can grind your browser...
See also List of railway lines in Great Britain in Wikipedia
Measurements
[edit]Context | Notes | Implied accuracy | Range (in feet) | Range (in metres) | Suitable conversion |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
The room was about 5 ft wide and 10 ft long | Possibly given to the nearest foot (a rough "ball park" figure) | ±0.5 feet | 4.5 - 5.5 | 1.37 - 1.68 | 1.4 - 1.7 m or ≈1.5 m or approx. 1.5 m |
Buna air strip is 5 ft above sea level (as mentioned above) | Given to the nearest foot? Or possibly 1/2 foot? | ±0.25 feet | 4.75 - 5.25 | 1.45 - 1.60 | 1.5 m |
Freda Bloggs was 5 ft tall | Height usually given to the nearest 1/2 inch | ±0.25 inch | 4.980 - 5.021 | 1.518 - 1.530 | 1.52 m |
The rail gauge was 5 ft | Usually given to nearest 1/4 inch | ±0.125 inch | 4.99 - 5.01 | 1.521 - 1.527 | 1.524 m |
All this has reminded me of the old joke about precision used on building sites where bricklayers work to the nearest half brick, plasterers work to the nearest 1/2 inch, carpenters work to the nearest 1/8 inch, Electricians work to the nearest 1/16 inch, and labourers work to the nearest pub.
Various roles
[edit]Chairmen
[edit]Frederick Campbell 1895-1905
Alfred Baldwin
Viscount Churchill 1908-1934
Viscount Horne 1937
See also List of Chairmen
General Managers
[edit]James Grierson
Henry Lambert 1887-1896 (Lt-col of Army reserve)
Joseph Wilkinson (My Draft) 1896-1903 (Lt-col of Army reserve)
James Charles Inglis 1903-1911
Frank Potter 1912-1919
Charles Aldington 1919-1921 CBE 1918 (as superintendent of line)
Felix Pole 1921-1929
James Milne 1929-1947
Sources include Wragg, David (2009). A Historical Dictionary of Railways in the British Isles (1 ed.). Barnsley, South Yorkshire: Wharncliffe Books. ISBN 978-1-844680-47-4. OCLC 477110821. Milne 187-188, Pole 216, Inglis 129,