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・ Midland Railway 3835 Class
・ Midland Railway 480 Class
・ Midland Railway 483 Class
・ Midland Railway 700 Class
・ Midland Railway 990 Class
・ Midland Railway Action Group
・ Midland Railway Carriage and Wagon Company
・ Midland Railway Class 2 4-4-0
・ Midland Railway Class 3 4-4-0
・ Midland Railway Clowne Branch
・ Midland Railway Doe Lea Branch Line
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・ Midland railway line
・ Midland railway line, Western Australia
・ Midland Railway of Canada
Midland Railway of Western Australia
・ Midland Railway Paget locomotive
・ Midland Railway Ripley Branch
・ Midland railway station, Perth
・ Midland Railway War Memorial, Derby
・ Midland Railway Workshops
・ Midland Railway – Butterley
・ Midland Reafforesting Association
・ Midland Red
・ Midland Regional Hockey Association
・ Midland Regional Hospital, Mullingar
・ Midland Regional Hospital, Portlaoise
・ Midland Regional Hospital, Tullamore
・ Midland Reporter-Telegram
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Midland Railway of Western Australia : ウィキペディア英語版
Midland Railway of Western Australia

The Midland Railway of Western Australia (MRWA) was a railway company that built and operated the Midland line in Western Australia. It was listed on the London Stock Exchange. Although having its headquarters in London, it had no association with the English Midland Railway.
==History==

In December 1883, John Waddington representing a sydndicate of English capitalists, proposed to Governor Broome to build a line from York via Northam, Newcastle, Bejoording, New Norcia and along the Berkshire Valley to Geraldton under a land grant scheme. A parliamentary select committee recommended the route be altered to branch off from the Eastern Railway at Guildford and run via Chittering, Bindoon, Victoria Plains, Carnamah, Arrino, Upper Irwin and Dongara to Walkaway where it would join the Western Australian Government Railway’s line from Geraldton. The agreement was signed on 27 February 1886, with work commencing a few days later.〔(Midland Railway Company ) Battye Library
Under the land grant scheme, of land was granted for every mile of railway completed, a total of . The consortium was able to select land within of the new railway. Financing problems delayed construction with construction being suspended in June 1887. The Government tried to rescind the contract, but could not as the consortium had until 1890 to complete the first 160 kilometres of the line.〔〔〔(The Midland Railway of Australia ) ''Western Mail'' 3 October 1891〕〔(Royal Commission into the Management, Workings & Control of the Western Australian Government Railways ) Government of Western Australia December 1947 page 8〕
On 21 March 1890, the Midland Railway Company of Western Australia was floated on the London Stock Exchange and Herbert Bond purchased John Waddington's shareholding in the consortium and work recommenced on the 446 kilometre line from both ends.〔
The first section from Midland Junction to Gingin opened on 9 April 1891, followed by Walkaway to Mingenew on 16 August 1991. The rest of the line opened in stages until the two sections met on 1 November 1894.〔〔(The Midland Railway: Its Jubilee Year ) ''The West Australian'' 31 October 1936〕
Between 1905 and 1918, the company actively pursued a scheme of land classification and settlement led by land agent and politician James Gardiner. The first subdivision was auctioned at Moora on 22 June 1906.() By 1911, 16 subdivisions between Midland Junction and Dongara had been classified and auctioned. In 1910, Gardiner instigated and managed the (Ready Made Farms ) Scheme, which provided cleared and fenced farms with houses to prospective settlers.() The townsites of Coorow, Winchester and Carnamah formed the backbone of the scheme. The scheme was advertised widely to British citizens and was moderately successful, with 35 of the 58 farms sold by the end of 1915.()
In 1915, the Western Australian Government Railways opened the parallel, but longer Northern Railway route about 50 kilometres further east via Wongan Hills and Mullewa.
Between 1914 and 1917, business declined rapidly and the company operated at a loss. This was brought on by decreased revenue owing to the construction of the Northern Railway (which captured railway traffic from the Midland Railway), crop losses due to drought, the loss of men from districts owing to World War I, and the imposition of new federal taxes. In 1918, the scheme was wound up.()
In 1922, the MRWA made the first of a number of proposals for the Western Australian Government Railways to purchase it. In December 1962 with much of the track and rolling stock in need of replacement, the company entered negotiations for the WAGR to purchase the business. This was concluded in December 1963, with the sale effective 1 August 1964.〔〔(The Midland Railway Company of Western Australia Limited Acquisition Agreement Act 1963 ) Government of Western Australia〕

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