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342:, South Korea used to use the Edmondson tickets for certain types of trains until the introduction of computer in ticket issuing. In some local lines and lower-grade trains, Edmondson format was used even after the computerisation for a while before magnetic stripped card-shape tickets became in use. The ticket was usually hand-punched by employees at the boarding gate, which now replaced by
175:. Vertical-format Edmondsons were validated in NCR21 cash registers, which is the machine printed date/fare/machine number on the ticket front. Some NCR24 machines were later bought from Dutch Railways for use on the Southern and these were distinguishable from NCR21 because the machine data, in a slightly different format, appeared upside down on tickets.
321:, for its own use and for nostalgic trips on ČD and a number of museum railways. JHMD has one of two extant Goebl printing machines from 1895 in the world, together with four newer machines. In the eighties, at ten of the biggest railway stations in Czechoslovakia special mechanical printing machines were used, which printed tickets in Edmondson's format.
230:
Typically, half-fare single tickets (e.g., for children, dogs, and bicycles) would be created by cutting the ticket in half vertically; half-fare return tickets by having a diagonal cut across the ticket, having the value of half the adult fare. The remaining part was placed in a groove in the lid of
140:
The tickets in each series were individually numbered. When a ticket was issued, it was date-stamped by a custom-made machine. The tickets to different destinations and of different types were stored in a lockable cupboard where the lowest remaining number of each issue was visible. Different colours
74:
A faster means of issuing pre-printed tickets was needed. There was also a need to provide accountability by serial-numbering each ticket to prevent unscrupulous clerks from pocketing the fares, who now had to reconcile the takings against the serial numbers of the unsold tickets at the end of each
259:
The
Edmondson system was widely used in European countries such as Austria, Belgium, the Netherlands, Czechoslovakia, Romania, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy (until mid 1995), the Soviet Union, Norway, Poland, and Switzerland, and outside Europe, for example in Australia and Argentina. The use of
166:
Vertical-format
Edmondson card-size tickets were the final manifestation of the Edmondson in the UK. The NCR21 system was used at Southern Region station booking offices from the late 1960s to the mid 1980s, until supplanted by the early generation of computerised systems including
128:
inch (0.79 mm). The whole system, from printing to bulk storage to ticket racks, dating and issue, was based on these measurements. Although there is some small variation nowadays (metricated to 30 x 57 x 0.75 mm for example), it is still a vital component of the system.
182:
Use of
Edmondson tickets issued by British Rail declined during the 1980s as computerised systems superseded them. After APTIS was launched in 1986, NCR21-equipped stations were converted to the new technology, concluding in June 1989 with the removal of Edmondson tickets from
334:
In Japan most local railway tickets keep the
Edmondson format. These are modern magnetic back tickets issued by vending machines, punched by automatic station entry gates and collected at the exit gates. In some rural stations hand-punching by railway employees is still done.
178:
To interest collectors, even the smaller stations would carry pre-printed ticket stock for single and return, adult and child journeys to numerous local stations and London, with "blank" stock also available for use for journeys for which no printed stock was available.
270:
While they are no longer used on main-line railways in
Australia, Edmondson tickets are still issued by some heritage and tourist railways including Pichi Richi Railway in Quorn, South Australia for their scheduled services and special events.
221:
has a number of
Edmondson printing machines that are to be placed on display in a specially-built museum at the front of Sheffield Park station. There are several small companies that still produce Edmondson tickets on request.
309:(ŽSR). The Prague printing house produced 50,000 tickets per day until start of decrement. Since 1999 ČD stopped ordering these tickets and production stopped. In 1999, the new private narrow-gauge railway company
158:
which met its annual demand for 320 million tickets. The last press was switched off in 1988 and the use of
Edmondson tickets by British Rail completely ceased in February 1990 after being replaced by the standard
297:, both part of the state transportation publishing house NADAS, since privatized as NADAS AFGH s. r. o. (Ltd.). In 1993 Czechoslovakia split into the Czech Republic and Slovakia and the state railway company
911:
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was a system for recording the payment of railway fares and accounting for the revenue raised, introduced in the 1840s. It is named after its inventor,
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411:
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267:. Edmondson tickets are still printed and distributed (also via internet order) by Druckerei Aeschbacher in Worb (Bern/Switzerland).
324:
They are still used in
Paraguay by the Ferrocarril Presidente Don Carlos Antonio Lopez, now Ferrocarriles del Paraguay SA (2011).
71:, but it was laborious for a ticket clerk to write out a ticket for each passenger and long queues were common at busy stations.
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A sale of special "last day of issue" commemorative
Edmondson tickets was commissioned. The sum of some £500 was raised for
21:
25:
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The reverse side of a ticket might be endorsed, "Subject to rules and regulations of the issuing railway company". In
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In Canada, Edmondson tickets were used on
Toronto-area GO Train service from service inception in 1967 until 1989.
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alternative (less popular) destinations were printed there (e.g., "albo Lucynów, albo Mienia" for a ticket from
57:
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surroundings) bought the machine accessories from Prague and since 2000 it has run its own printing house at
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print Edmondson tickets for their own use as well as for a number of other heritage lines. In Sussex the
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the ticket rack above its tube. It could then be used as another child ticket, or counted as a credit.
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In Switzerland, Edmondson tickets were issued until December 2007 at some stations, especially of the
802:
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lines, tickets for local trains also keep the Edmondson format as in Japan. Reserved tickets on the
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The Future's Green and Orange: Exploring and Explaining Ticketing in the Privatised Rail Industry
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365:) still use Edmondson tickets. In some cases, the combination of station names on the ticket are
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The Edmondson system is still in use on many heritage railways in the UK. For example, the
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but are still used sparingly and continue on heritage railways in India like the
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uses second-hand machines purchased from the Netherlands to print their tickets.
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728:"Jindřichohradecké lokálky od tradičních lepenkových jízdenek ustoupit nemíní"
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685:
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Farr, M (1997). "Edmondson, Thomas". In: Simmonds and Biddle (1997), Page 141
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there were two printing houses that printed Edmondson tickets, the first at
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144:
36:
Edmondson railway ticket dimensions in millimetres, centimetres and inches.
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702:
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The Oxford Companion to British Railway History: From 1603 to the 1990s
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schweizweit.net: Fahrplanwechsel: Edmondsonsches Billett verschwindet
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Railwaymen, Politics and Money: The Great Age of Railways in Britain
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The Edmondson system came into general use with the creation of the
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Edmondson tickets ceased in most countries in the 1980s or 1990s.
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and patterns helped distinguish the different types of tickets.
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Cabinet for Edmondson tickets, Sapucai station, FCPCAL, Paraguay
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Photo of Bellmatic ticket dispenser at National Railway Museum
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730:, Pressforum 2/2004, Pages 30–31, section Tiskárny/Na cestách
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as the result of the sale of last-day commemorative tickets.
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148:
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Saltley to Birmingham New Street Third Class Cheap Day Return
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Glover, John (1985). "Mechanisation of ticket issuing". In:
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tickets have a larger format. Some tourist lines (e.g., the
248:
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inches (31.0 by 57.2 mm), with a nominal thickness of
85:
264:
688:(German), 9 December 2007. Retrieved 14 September 2008.
742:"Popular auspicious train tickets to go on sale again"
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in 1842, becoming "the essential standard feature".
775:. Bishops Stortford: The Transport Ticket Society.
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16:System for recording the payment of railway fares
924:
376:The Edmondson tickets have been discontinued on
938:History of rail transport in the United Kingdom
388:Edmondson railway tickets from around the world
828:
829:Simmonds, Jack; Biddle, Gordon, eds. (1997).
740:Wan, Yu-chen; Xie, Dennis (5 February 2020).
147:'s centralised paper and printing centre at
880:Railway Tickets, Timetables & Handbills
247:to a then-popular summer vacation village,
882:. Ashbourne: Moorland Publishing Co. Ltd.
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917:Photo of 1951 Bellmatic ticket dispenser
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293:from 1898 until 1999, the second at
833:. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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63:He introduced his system on the
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307:Železnice Slovenskej republiky
58:Newcastle and Carlisle Railway
1:
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351:Taiwan Railway Administration
225:
901:, April 1985, Pages 192–195.
340:Japanese occupation of Korea
192:Great Ormond Street Hospital
185:Emerson Park railway station
65:Manchester and Leeds Railway
7:
278:Pichi Richi Railway tickets
211:Isle of Wight Steam Railway
10:
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878:Bray, Maurice I., (1986).
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634:"BR Ends Edmondson". In:
367:interpreted as auspicious
313:(JHMD, Local Railways of
161:APTIS orange card tickets
151:had a number of pre-1900
848:Vaughan, Adrian (1997).
459:Hungarian State Railways
404:Ferrocarriles Argentinos
382:Nilgiri Mountain Railway
42:Edmondson railway ticket
933:Fare collection systems
856:. London: John Murray.
771:Davis, Matthew (2013).
642:, March 1988, Page 148.
497:Odakyu Electric Railway
810:Farr, Michael (1991).
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255:Use in other countries
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80:Railway Clearing House
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726:Fořt, Martin (2004):
327:The government-owned
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203:West Somerset Railway
199:Severn Valley Railway
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814:. Andover: Author.
705:on 14 November 2010
581:(United Kingdom) -
329:Sri Lanka Railways
319:Kamenice nad Lipou
280:
138:
38:
30:
821:978-0-905033-13-6
782:978-0-903209-75-5
562:United Kingdom -
315:Jindřichův Hradec
301:was divided into
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371:collectable
363:Pingxi Line
338:Due to the
303:České dráhy
927:Categories
699:"Billette"
655:Davis 2013
622:, p.
591:References
355:Tzu-Chiang
226:Half fares
801:ignored (
791:cite book
667:Farr 1991
418:Australia
400:Argentina
346:process.
305:(ČD) and
751:10 April
709:19 March
682:Archived
640:Vol. 134
511:Paraguay
213:and the
153:Waterlow
899:Vol. 42
764:Sources
531:, 1960s
455:Hungary
349:On the
123:⁄
113:⁄
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566:, 1979
550:, 1954
525:Taiwan
480:, 2018
461:, 2009
424:, 1987
422:V/Line
295:Vrútky
291:Prague
245:Warsaw
241:Poland
209:, the
205:, the
201:, the
579:Wales
493:Japan
474:India
173:APTIS
169:INTIS
149:Crewe
75:day.
884:ISBN
858:ISBN
835:ISBN
816:ISBN
803:help
777:ISBN
753:2020
711:2009
249:Urle
171:and
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299:ČSD
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