Great Western Railway Telegraphic Codes
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Great Western Railway telegraphic codes were a commercial telegraph code used to shorten the
telegraphic Telegraphy is the long-distance transmission of messages where the sender uses symbolic codes, known to the recipient, rather than a physical exchange of an object bearing the message. Thus flag semaphore is a method of telegraphy, whereas p ...
messages sent between the stations and offices of the railway. The codes listed below are taken from the 1939 edition of the ''Telegraph Message Code'' bookGreat Western Railway (1939) ''Telegraph Message Code'' unless stated otherwise.


History

The
Great Western Railway The Great Western Railway (GWR) was a British railway company that linked London with the southwest, west and West Midlands of England and most of Wales. It was founded in 1833, received its enabling Act of Parliament on 31 August 1835 and ran ...
(GWR) pioneered telegraph communication over the from
Paddington Paddington is an area within the City of Westminster, in Central London. First a medieval parish then a metropolitan borough, it was integrated with Westminster and Greater London in 1965. Three important landmarks of the district are Paddi ...
to on 9 April 1839 using the
Cooke and Wheatstone telegraph The Cooke and Wheatstone telegraph was an early electrical telegraph system dating from the 1830s invented by English inventor William Fothergill Cooke and English scientist Charles Wheatstone. It was a form of needle telegraph, and the first te ...
equipment. Although this early system fell into disuse after a few years, from 1850 a new contract with the
Electric Telegraph Company The Electric Telegraph Company (ETC) was a British telegraph company founded in 1846 by William Fothergill Cooke and John Ricardo. It was the world's first public telegraph company. The equipment used was the Cooke and Wheatstone telegraph, ...
saw double-needle telegraphs working at most stations on the line; these were replaced by single-needle machines from 1860. Although used primarily as a safety device to regulate the passage of trains, it was also used to pass messages between the staff. In order to do this quickly and accurately, a number of code words were used to replace complicated or regularly used phrases. The codes were changed from time to time to reflect current needs. By 1922 most railways in the country had agreed on standard code words, although the GWR had an extended list of codes that could only be used within its own network. In 1943 all railways were brought into a single system of codes and the GWR special codes were discontinued.


Wagons

Note: many of these codes could have an extra letter to identify variations, such as Mink A (a ventilated van), or Mink G (a ordinary van). Most of these codes were painted onto the wagons for easy identification. * Aero – airscrew wagon (from 1941) * Ale – cattle wagon converted for beer barrels (from 1940) * Asmo – covered motor car truck * Beaver – flat truck * Beetle – prize cattle wagon. * Bloater – large fish van * Bocar – covered truck for car bodies * Cone – gunpowder van *
Conflat Conflat is a United Kingdom railway term for a short wheelbase flat wagon container wagon. British Railways used several standard types of wagon. The Conflat A, which could carry one type 'B', or two type 'A', containers, was the most common ...
– flat wagon for containers * Coral – glass wagon * Cordon – gas reservoir truck * Covcar – covered carriage truck * Crocodile – well trolley * Damo – covered motor car truck * Fruit – fruit van * Gadfly – aeroplane truck * Gane – engineers rail truck * Grano – covered grain hopper * Hydra – passenger rated well truck * Loriot – machine truck * Macaw – timber truck * Mayfly – transformer truck *Mex – ordinary cattle wagon * Mica – meat van * Mink – covered goods van * Milta – milk tank * Mite – twin timber trucks * Mogo – covered motor car wagon * Morel – propeller truck * Open – open wagon * Parto – covered van with movable partitions * Pollen – girder or boiler truck * Rectank – trolley for machinery. * Roder – flat truck for road vehicles (to 1935) * Rotruck – road-rail truck for milk tanks * Serpent – carriage truck * Tadpole – open fish wagon * Tevan – converted Mica for special traffic * Toad – goods
brake van Brake van and guard's van are terms used mainly in the UK, Ireland, Australia and India for a railway vehicle equipped with a hand brake which can be applied by the guard. The equivalent North American term is caboose, but a British brake van ...
, which became the standard designs nickname * Totem – armour plate and girder wagon * Tourn – eight-wheeled open (to 1934)


Carriages

Note: many of these codes could have an extra letter to identify variations, such as Scorpion C (a carriage truck), or Scorpion D (a carriage truck). * Beetle – special cattle truck * Bloater – covered fish truck * Catox – cattle box * Chafer – invalid carriage * Chintz – family carriage * Chub – third saloon * Cricket – composite carriage * Emmett – brake third carriage * First – first class carriage * Gnat – slip coach * Goliath – bogie open scenery truck * Hydra – well truck for road vehicles * Melon – brake third carriage * Mex – cattle wagon * Monster – scenery truck * Paco – horse box * Python – covered carriage truck * Scorpion – carriage truck * Siphon – milk van * Snake – passenger brake van * Termite – third class carriage


Road motor vehicles and trailers

* Brockhouse – 15 ton Brockhouse trailer * Dido – four-wheeled trailer * Dixton – 10 ton cartage motor vehicle * Dyak – two-wheeled trailer * Forton – 4 or 5 ton cartage motor vehicle * Jason – tipping trailer * Lydus – pipe trailer * Mentor – six-wheeled trailer * Nico – cattle trailer * Numa – container trailer * Sixate – 6 or 8 ton cartage motor vehicle * Toner – 1 or 1½ ton cartage motor vehicle * Tooton – 2 ton cartage motor vehicle * Vibo – timber trailer


Standard phrases

The 1939 ''Telegraph Message Code'' book contains in excess of 900 code words (around half of which were standard codes also used by other railways) yet very few were the familiar codes seen painted on the side of goods wagons. By using these codes long and complex sentences could be sent using just a few words. Some examples of the codes representing phrases include: * Adex – Advertised day excursion. * Boyne – There is no water at the following station. Instruct drivers. * Chicory – Cannot trace delivery. Wire full description, marks, and contents, and say who complains. * Cynic – Can only offer ordinary service. Wire what decided. * Earwig – Following urgently wanted. * Lough – Shunting horse ill. Send relief. * Osage – Send men here for undermentioned engine to leave at ... * Palm – Report fully by next train with reference to delay. * Smoke – Owing to fog in London Division restriction train service to operate in accordance with current fog-working notice. * Stork – We have no trace of your invoice; send copy next train. * Zola – Can you send engine and men to undermentioned station? If so, state time leaving.


See also

*
Australian railway telegraphic codes Australian railway telegraphic codes were devised to reduce the size of telegraphic messages, though some survived into the telephone era. They were used in telegrams between various parts of the railway system, such as offices, stations, locomot ...
* Commercial code *
Great Western Railway wagons The fleet of Great Western Railway wagons was both large and varied as it carried the wide variety of goods traffic on the Great Western Railway (GWR) in the United Kingdom. This was the railway company that operated for the longest period of t ...


References

{{reflist Telegraphic codes Telegraphy