This section is empty. You can help by
adding to it. (February 2023)
Canada
Under the provisions of the Dominion Lands Act of 1872, the railway companies had the power to survey new townsites along their rail lines, throughout
Western Canada. Virtually every community in Western Canada that was created after 1870 (the majority) was directly created by the rail companies. One company, the
Grand Trunk Pacific, actually began naming the new towns along its main line in
alphabetical order from east to west, demonstrating the arbitrary nature of their planning powers.[7]
Czech Republic
Česká Třebová - This town in Eastern Bohemia has been an important settlement for more than seven centuries but since 1849 it became a large railway hub where main lines connecting
Bohemia and
Moravia meet. The largest rail yard in that country is located there as well as maintenance and scrap works.
České Velenice - The settlement was developed around an engine depot and railway works located on halfway between
Vienna and
Prague. Originally a suburb of Austrian town of
Gmünd, the railway junction with its hinterland was attached to newly created
Czechoslovakia after
World War I and became a town of its own.
Kralupy nad Vltavou - Since Middle Ages Kralupy was a tiny insignificant village on the
Vltava River. Since the 1850s it became an important railway junction and centre of petrochemical industry.
Japanese National Railways (JNR) had chosen 12 major railway towns officially.[9] The list below shows the official railway towns, but there are many other towns where town officials and residents think of their town as a railway town.
Iwamizawa, Hokkaidō - Iwamizawa engine depot and center of coal transport in Hokkaido.
There are different kinds of railway towns in Spain:[10]
Railway towns: new creation settlements which have community services (medical service, school, church...)
Railway villages: new creation settlements which have no community services.
Railway neighborhoods: settlements which appeared near a formerly town.
Some of them can be partial, non-entire. It means that railway activity was not the only one; it coexisted with other economic activities such as mining industry, cargo trade or customs activity.
This section is empty. You can help by
adding to it. (February 2023)
Canada
Under the provisions of the Dominion Lands Act of 1872, the railway companies had the power to survey new townsites along their rail lines, throughout
Western Canada. Virtually every community in Western Canada that was created after 1870 (the majority) was directly created by the rail companies. One company, the
Grand Trunk Pacific, actually began naming the new towns along its main line in
alphabetical order from east to west, demonstrating the arbitrary nature of their planning powers.[7]
Czech Republic
Česká Třebová - This town in Eastern Bohemia has been an important settlement for more than seven centuries but since 1849 it became a large railway hub where main lines connecting
Bohemia and
Moravia meet. The largest rail yard in that country is located there as well as maintenance and scrap works.
České Velenice - The settlement was developed around an engine depot and railway works located on halfway between
Vienna and
Prague. Originally a suburb of Austrian town of
Gmünd, the railway junction with its hinterland was attached to newly created
Czechoslovakia after
World War I and became a town of its own.
Kralupy nad Vltavou - Since Middle Ages Kralupy was a tiny insignificant village on the
Vltava River. Since the 1850s it became an important railway junction and centre of petrochemical industry.
Japanese National Railways (JNR) had chosen 12 major railway towns officially.[9] The list below shows the official railway towns, but there are many other towns where town officials and residents think of their town as a railway town.
Iwamizawa, Hokkaidō - Iwamizawa engine depot and center of coal transport in Hokkaido.
There are different kinds of railway towns in Spain:[10]
Railway towns: new creation settlements which have community services (medical service, school, church...)
Railway villages: new creation settlements which have no community services.
Railway neighborhoods: settlements which appeared near a formerly town.
Some of them can be partial, non-entire. It means that railway activity was not the only one; it coexisted with other economic activities such as mining industry, cargo trade or customs activity.