Race to the North

Main news item in the Glasgow Herald, 23 August 1895. The image shows the top section of the full report.[1]

The Race to the North was the name given by the press to occasions in two summers of the late 19th century when British passenger trains belonging to different companies would literally race each other from London to Edinburgh over the two principal rail trunk routes connecting the English capital city to Scotland – the West Coast Main Line which runs from London Euston via Crewe and Carlisle and the East Coast Main Line route from London King's Cross via York and Newcastle. The "races" were never official and publicly the companies denied that what happened was racing at all. Results were not announced officially and the outcomes have since been hotly debated. In the 20th century there were also occasions of competition for speed on the two routes.

  1. ^ Our Aberdeen Correspondent (23 August 1893). "The Railway Race". Glasgow Herald. Retrieved 1 May 2013. {{cite news}}: |last= has generic name (help)