National Railway Museum

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Image:NRM line up.jpg
Locomotives arranged around the turntable in the Great Hall.

The National Railway Museum (NRM) in York forms part of the British National Museum of Science and Industry.

Overview

The NRM contains a collection of over 100 locomotives and nearly 200 other items of rolling stock, together with many hundreds of thousands of other items of railway historical interest (down to a lock of Robert Stephenson's hair) displayed in three large halls of a former motive power depot next to the East Coast Main Line, near York railway station. The permanent display includes "Palaces on Wheels", a collection of Royal Train coaches from Queen Victoria's early trains to those used by Queen Elizabeth II up to the 1970s.

The NRM was established on its present site in 1975, when it took over the former British Railways Collection located in Clapham, and the York Railway Museum located elsewhere in the city, since when the collection has continued to grow. It is now the largest museum of its type in the world, with 750,000 visitors annually.


Image:NRM Great Hall merge2.jpg
A panorama of locomotives arranged around the turntable in the Great Hall.
Image:Mallard locomotive 625.jpg
Probably the most famous exhibit is the record breaking LNER A4, Mallard.

All items of rolling stock exhibited either ran on the railways of Great Britain or were built there, with the single exception of a Japanese "Series 0" Shinkansen bullet train leading vehicle, which was donated to the NRM by the JR West railway company in 2001 and which now forms part of an award-winning display.

A "roadtrain" runs from the city centre (near York Minster) to the museum on Leeman Road; otherwise it is a 20-minute walk. Admission to the museum is free.

Approximate Location – Lat: 53:57:46N (53.9627) Lon: 1:05:59W (-1.0998).

See also

External links

Preserved Carriage Database

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