"The Railway of the Dead – The train line built solely to transport London's corpses" explores one of the strangest solutions to an urban crisis. In the mid-19th century, London was overflowing with the dead. Graveyards were so full that bodies were surfacing in the streets, causing cholera outbreaks. The solution was the London Necropolis Railway, established in 1854.
Historian Arthur Cross details the dedicated train station at Waterloo that carried coffins and mourners 23 miles away to Brookwood Cemetery, the largest in the world. The book highlights the obsession with class: even the dead were separated into First, Second, and Third Class carriages, ensuring that a wealthy corpse would never ride next to a poor one.
"The Railway of the Dead" is a macabre yet fascinating look at Victorian logistics. It tells the story of the "death train" that ran daily for almost a century until it was bombed in WWII, serving as a moving memento mori for a metropolis that had run out of room.