A Touch of Class
Documentary series about Britain's railways. This edition charts how, in the 1800s, the trains gradually acted as a great catalyst in mixing the classes.
Trains reflected class divisions with separate carriages for first, second and third class passengers. Yet, seen at the time, they were also bringing people physically closer together. In the early 1800s, Britain was clearly divided between upper, middle and working classes. On the railways they shared the same stations and arrived at the destination at the same time!
The trains gradually acted as a great catalyst, mixing the country up as people were travelling to regions and places for the first time. Locations, accents, culture and fashions were all new. The nation's relationship with royalty also changed. Queen Victoria was now able to venture far and wide across her kingdom and visit more of her subjects. Over time, we developed a stronger sense of shared identity and culture.
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Clips
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What was 3rd class rail travel like?
Duration: 02:12
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How railways helped celebrate Queen Victoria's Jubilee
Duration: 01:33
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The 'Necropolis train'
Duration: 00:31
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Preview: How railways broke down the class divide
Duration: 01:38
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Liz McIvor |
Producer | Ed Barlow |
Series Producer | Andy Richards |
Broadcasts
- Wed 28 Sep 2016 19:30Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ One West Midlands
- Thu 3 Nov 2016 20:00
- Thu 27 Jul 2017 22:30
- Sat 15 Dec 2018 13:00
- Thu 25 May 2023 19:00
- Fri 26 May 2023 01:55