- Home
- Articles
- World Records
- Full list of United Kingdom records
- Education and Work Records
- Wales, Barry Railway Company Staff Registers 1888-1896
Records in this collection
- Army Schoolmasters - Punishment Ledgers
- Army Schoolmasters - Punishment Ledgers
- Army Schoolmasters 1847-1876
- Army Schoolmasters 1847-1876
- Army Schoolmasters 1847-1876
- Berkshire, Eton College Register, 1441-1698
- Britain, Business Indexes 1892-1987
- Britain, Business Indexes 1892-1987
- Britain, Children's Employment Commission Part 2, 1842
- Britain, Merchant Seamen, 1835-1857
- Britain, Merchant Seamen, 1918-1941
- Britain, Merchant Seamen, 1918-1941
- Britain, school and university register books 1264-1930
- Britain, Trade Union Membership Registers
- Britain, Trade Union Membership Registers, Browse
- British Empire Awards & Medals 1917-2023
- British India Office Assistant Surgeons
- City of London, Haberdashers, Apprentices and Freemen 1526-1933
- City of London, Ironmongers, Apprentices and Freemen 1511-1923
- City of York apprentices and freemen 1272-1930
- Civil Service Commission appointments, promotions and transfers 1871-1942
- Clergy List 1896
- Dental Surgeons Directory 1925
- Devon, Plymouth & West Devon Apprentices 1570-1910
- East India Company & Civil Service pensions
- Edge Hill University Student Records
- Electrical Engineering Apprentices & Trainees, 1902-1934
- England, Cheshire school records, 1782-1950
- Gloucester Apprentices 1595-1700
- Guernsey, School Records
- Lancashire, Barrow-In-Furness Shipbuilding & Engineering Employees
- Lloyd's Register Of Merchant Ships Index 1843
- London Apprentices from Dorset 1605-1799
- London Apprentices from Somerset 1575-1800
- London, Dulwich College Register 1619-1926
- London, Watermen In Royal Navy, 1803-1809
- London, Watermen, Admiralty Muster Of The Port Of London, 1628
- London, Watermen, Birth Register Of Contracted Men, 1865-1921
- London, Watermen, List Of Free Watermen, 1827
- London, Watermen's Petition For The King Charles I, 1648
- Manchester Apprentices 1700-1849
- Manchester Industrial School Registers1866-1912
- Manchester Police Index 1858-1941
- Match workers strike, Bow 1888
- Merchant Navy Seamen [Merchant Marines]
- National School Admission Registers & Log-Books 1870-1914
- Royal Hibernian Military School admissions 1847-1932
- Royal Hibernian Military School Staff List 1864
- Royal Household Staff 1526-1924
- Royal Military Asylum apprentice ledgers 1803-1840 / Royal Military Asylum (Chelsea) admissions 1803-1901
- Scotland, Edinburgh Apprentices 1583-1800
- Southwark Apprentices
- Surrey, Southwark Congregational Registers
- Surrey, Southwark, Licenses and Trade Registers
- Surrey, Southwark, Newington Apprentice Register 1891
- Sussex, Lancing College Register 1901-1954
- Teachers Registration Council Registers
- Trinity House Calendars, 1787-1854
- Wales, Barry Railway Company Accident Registers 1889-1917
- Wales, Barry Railway Company Staff Registers 1888-1896
- Warwickshire, Coventry Pawnbroker Tickets 1915-1923
- Warwickshire, Coventry, company directories and publications 1908-1966
- White Star Line Officers' books
- Wiltshire Marlborough Apprentice Books 1655-1693
- Wiltshire Police Officers Appointed, 1839-1926
Find your ancestors in Wales, Barry Railway Company Staff Registers 1888-1896
Discover more about these records
The Barry Railway Company emerged in the 1880s as a bold challenge to the dominant Taff Vale Railway, driven largely by Glamorgan colliery owners who were frustrated by delays and congestion at Cardiff’s docks. Their solution was radical: build a brand-new deep-water dock at Barry and a purpose-built railway to feed it. When Barry Dock opened in 1889, it transformed the coal trade almost overnight. With smoother gradients, modern signalling, and infrastructure designed for heavy, fast coal traffic, the Barry line became astonishingly efficient, helping Barry grow into the busiest coal-exporting port in the world by the early twentieth century.
The company quickly developed a reputation for powerful tank locomotives, reliable engineering, and a fiercely proud workforce. Its services included rapid coal trains from the valleys, brisk suburban passenger routes, and a densely used web of sidings and workshops. Behind the scenes were several striking personalities: mining magnate Sir William T. Lewis, whose drive and stubbornness brought the whole enterprise into being; engineer William Szlumper, whose careful design work made the line so resilient; and locomotive superintendent John Auld, whose 0-6-2 tank engines became South Wales icons. The company also became an early employer of women in clerical roles during and after WWI, with figures like Minnie Chapman representing a quiet but significant social shift.