• The Coniston Railway was a railway in Cumbria, England, linking Coniston and Broughton-in-Furness, which ran for over 100 years between the middle of the...
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  • Coniston railway station may refer to: Coniston railway station (England) Coniston railway station, New South Wales This disambiguation page lists articles...
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  • South Wales Coniston railway station, New South Wales Coniston, Tasmania, a town in the Derwent Valley Coniston, East Riding of Yorkshire Coniston Cold, North...
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  • Thumbnail for Coniston, Cumbria
    construction of a branch of the Furness Railway, which opened to passenger traffic in 1859 and terminated at Coniston railway station. The poet and social critic...
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  • Thumbnail for Coniston railway station (England)
    Coniston railway station was the northern terminus of the Coniston branch line in the village of Coniston, Lancashire, England (now in Cumbria). Authorised...
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  • Thumbnail for Coniston railway station, New South Wales
    Coniston railway station is a heritage-listed railway station located in Coniston, New South Wales, Australia, on the South Coast railway line. The station...
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  • Thumbnail for Coniston copper mines
    54°22′39″N 3°05′43″W / 54.377551°N 3.095199°W / 54.377551; -3.095199 The Coniston copper mines were a copper mining operation in Lancashire, England. It...
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  • Thumbnail for Furness Railway
    Copper mining interests at Coniston promoted the Coniston Railway, running from the Furness Railway at Broughton to Coniston and on to the copper mines...
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  • Thumbnail for Torver railway station
    Authorised by Parliament in August 1857 the line to Coniston was opened by the Coniston Railway less than two years later on 18 June 1859. The station...
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  • Thumbnail for Nickel Centre
    oats.: 45  The Canadian Northern Railway (a predecessor of the Canadian National Railway) arrived in 1905, with Coniston lying along its transcontinental...
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  • Thumbnail for Coniston, New South Wales
    Coniston (/kɒnɪstən/ CON-ist-ən), is a suburb of Wollongong in New South Wales, Australia. At the 2021 census, it had a population of 2,267. Coniston...
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  • Thumbnail for Foxfield railway station
    The line from Broughton was extended further northwards to Coniston by the Coniston Railway Company on 18 June 1859, although it was not long before the...
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  • Thumbnail for Woodland railway station
    Woodland railway station served the hamlet of Woodland, in Lancashire, England (now in Cumbria). It was on the branch line to Coniston. Authorised by...
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  • List of rail accidents in Canada (category Railway accidents and incidents in Canada)
    Winchester subdivision". crcml.org. "69 years ago: Remembering the deadly Coniston bus crash". Sudbury.com. 9 February 2020. "1952, August 4 - five people...
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  • Thumbnail for Cumbrian Coast line
    formerly a standard gauge line from Ravenglass to Murthwaite for freight. Coniston Branch, near Foxfield Sandscale branch, at Barrow in Furness apparently...
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  • Thumbnail for Broughton-in-Furness railway station
    Broughton-in-Furness railway station served the market town of Broughton-in-Furness, in Lancashire, England (now in Cumbria). It was on the branch line to Coniston. In...
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  • Thumbnail for Furness Railway M1 Class
    engines were built for the summer season traffic on the Furness's Lakeside, Coniston and Kendal branches. "Furness 4-4-2 Locomotives in Great_Britain (steamlocomotive)"...
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  • Thumbnail for Broughton-in-Furness
    with the Furness Railway in 1862 - extended the line through Broughton to Coniston. Nearly 100 years after the opening of the Coniston line, in 1958, the...
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  • Thumbnail for SY Gondola
    SY Gondola (category Coniston, Cumbria)
    vessel on Coniston Water, England. Originally launched in 1859, she was built for the steamer service carrying passengers from the Furness Railway and from...
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  • This list is for railway lines across Great Britain and Northern Ireland, which are now abandoned, closed, dismantled or disused. Within the United Kingdom...
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  • North Western Railway Act 1857 20 & 21 Vict. c. cviii 27 July 1857   North Level Act 1857 20 & 21 Vict. c. cix 10 August 1857   Coniston Railway Act 1857 (repealed)...
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  • Thumbnail for Cumwhinton railway station
    Cumwhinton railway station was a railway station serving the village of Cumwhinton in Cumbria, England. The station was located on the Settle and Carlisle...
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  • Thumbnail for Greenodd
    of the Lake District national park, it is where the River Crake (fed by Coniston Water) flows into the River Leven (fed by Windermere), beginning the Leven...
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  • Thumbnail for Lake District
    railway line, the Windermere Branch Line, penetrates from Kendal to Windermere via Staveley. Railways once served Broughton-in-Furness and Coniston (closed...
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  • Shap railway station served the village of Shap, Westmorland (now in Cumbria), England for over 120 years. The station was situated on the West Coast...
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  • xcii) Norwich Corporation Markets Act 1860 (23 & 24 Vict. c. xxxiv) London Railway Depôt and Storehouses Act 1860 (23 & 24 Vict. c. cxcvii) Road from New...
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  • Unanderra and Coniston Junction were used when the Ilawarra line was electrified to Dapto in January 1993. Sandy Hollow - Gulgong railway line - railway project...
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  • Thumbnail for Furness
    Coniston Water. Between them is flat country and Esthwaite Water. West of Coniston Water is the highest range, the Coniston Fells, with the Coniston Old...
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  • were two Scotby railway stations situated in the village of Scotby, two miles outside of Carlisle, England. Both have closed. This railway station (54°53′21″N...
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  • Thumbnail for London, Midland and Scottish Railway
    steamers and piers from the Furness Railway on Windermere and Coniston Water. Ships inherited from the Midland Railway. The LMS also inherited docks at Goole...
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