For many of the inter-war years the Grouped railways, along with the Metropolitan Railway, issued this booklet of 'facts' about the associated railways through the British Railways Press Bureau based in Westminster, London. The 'Big Four' created by mergers in 1923, the London MIdland & Scottish, the London & North Eastern, the Great Western and the Southern Railways were amongst the country's most strategic of industries, in terms of capital, employee numbers, passenger and freight transport and the Bureau enabled them to exercise some political clout. This was particularly the case by 1930 when, for the first time in a century, their near monopoly on transport was being challenged by the growing motor vehicle lobby.
The booklet therefore gives information about capital, equipment, employment and statistical data on passenger, freight and shipping services along with income, expenditure and costs. The striking cover is by Tom Purvis, an artist associated with the publicity work of the LNER, and the booklet has numerous vignettes that could well be 'stock illustrations". The figures quoted in the booklet cover the year 1929; not good years given the trade depression of the period and indeed, the main line railways would spend many of the coming years attempting to better deal with competition including changes to the legal framework governing the operation of railways around issues such as common carriage.
These pages look at equipment including the total number of locomotives, freight wagons as well as passenger rolling stock statistics; 7,620,000 seats many of which would only see infrequent use such as at holiday times - a fact that the infamous Dr. Beeching took aim at in the 1960s. The track mileages and signalling statistics are also shown, the latter hinting how safety, the utmost requirement of the railway, required very large numbers of trained personnel to man the very many signal boxes. The illustrations show a fine gantry of semaphore signals, at a time when colour light signalling was starting to be used, allied with a comparatively modern miniature lever signal box unlike the majority of traditional lever frame 'boxes.