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  1. See where you can go on our trains by taking a look at the Great Northern route map. Download the map. You can catch our trains for travel between London and the East of England, including Cambridge, Peterborough and King’s Lynn. Download Thameslink route map (pdf) Popular places to visit. Our trains can take you places.

  2. Service updates. Take a look at some of the amazing destinations on the LNER rail network. See route information, find cheap tickets, and get inspired.

  3. View and download maps of the National Rail network in Great Britain, including London and South East maps, regional maps for England, Scotland and Wales, accessibility maps and more.

  4. gner.co.uk. Great North Eastern Railway, [1] often referred to as GNER, was a train operating company in the United Kingdom, owned by Sea Containers, that operated the InterCity East Coast franchise on the East Coast Main Line between London, Yorkshire, North East England and Scotland from April 1996 until December 2007.

  5. Track length. 4,990 miles 44 chains (8,031.5 km) (1919) [1] The North Eastern Railway ( NER) was an English railway company. It was incorporated in 1854 by the combination of several existing railway companies. Later, it was amalgamated with other railways to form the London and North Eastern Railway at the Grouping in 1923.

  6. Plan your journey with our map. Our rail network is based in East Anglia and we run trains to London, Cambridgeshire, Essex, Norfolk, Suffolk & Hertfordshire. Use our live map to see: Where our trains run in the UK. Where we're experiencing delays and alternate routes to get around them.

  7. The Great Eastern Railway. The formal opening of the Eastern Counties Railway on June 18th 1839, from a temporary terminus at Mile End to Romford, heralded the beginning of the development of the railway system in East Anglia. Originally the ECR had obtained Parliamentary approval to raise the capital to build a railway from London to Norwich ...

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