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  2. Edmondson railway ticket - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmondson_railway_ticket

    The Edmondson railway ticket was a system for recording the payment of railway fares and accounting for the revenue raised, introduced in the 1840s. [1] It is named after its inventor, Thomas Edmondson , a trained cabinet maker , who became a station master on the Newcastle and Carlisle Railway in England.

  3. High-speed rail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-speed_rail

    High-speed rail (HSR) is a type of rail transport network utilising trains that run significantly faster than those of traditional rail, using an integrated system of specialised rolling stock and dedicated tracks. While there is no single definition or standard that applies worldwide, lines built to handle speeds of at least 250 km/h (155 mph ...

  4. Ticketing and Reservation System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ticketing_and_Reservation...

    Most ticket printers are designed for blue tickets equipped with a magnetic stripe (although the magnetic stripe was formerly used across the national high-speed railway network in automatic faregates, it is now only used on the Jinshan Railway in Shanghai), while some are designed for pink paper-only tickets, with the latter type becoming ...

  5. While several small scale improvements to rail lines were financed by federal money, more ambitious plans in Florida, Ohio and other states failed when newly elected Republican governors stopped existing high-speed rail plans and returned federal funding. [citation needed] In 2015 construction began on the California High-Speed Rail line.

  6. High-speed rail in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-speed_rail_in_the...

    Authorities in the United States maintain various definitions of high-speed rail. The United States Department of Transportation, an entity in the executive branch, defines it as rail service with top speeds ranging from 110 to 150 miles per hour (180 to 240 km/h) or higher, [10] while the United States Code, which is the official codification of Federal statutes, defines it as rail service ...

  7. Automated fare collection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automated_fare_collection

    Compass fare gates that are used at train stations across the Metro Vancouver Regional District. Canada's first public transit agency, the Toronto Street Railway Co., started in 1861 with a horse-drawn streetcar service but it was not until 1912 that the City of Toronto began deliberations on fare collection. [2]

  8. APTIS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/APTIS

    It was widely known as the All-Purpose Ticket-Issuing System, a description which was used during the development of the prototype devices. [1] [2] It led to the introduction, on the national railway, of a new standardised machine-printable ticket, the APTIS ticket, which replaced the Edmondson railway ticket first introduced in the 1840s.

  9. Timeline of railway history - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_railway_history

    1987 – World speed record for a diesel locomotive set by British Rail's High Speed Train (HST), which reached a speed of 238 km/h (148 mph). 1989 – Cairo Underground Metro Line 1 is the first line of underground in Africa and Middle East Line length 44 kilometres (27 mi) with 34 stations Daily ridership 1 million passenger Operating speed ...