Public attention has been focused more intensely on railway closures by the dour 1963 report of the British Railways Board, The Reshaping of British Railways. Uneconomic sentiment had no part in the Board's mandate 'so to shape and operate the railways as to make them pay', a mandate it sought to achieve by 'developing to the full those parts of the system and those services which can be made to meet traffic requirements more efficiently and satisfactorily than any available form of transport and ... eliminating only those services which, by their very nature, railways are ill-suited to provide.'2 The scale of the proposed elimination of services took many by surprise, and has tended to overshadow the more important constructive suggestions. The process of elimination is as yet far from complete, and the time is not opportune to examine the pattern of closures which have taken place in consequence of this report. Concern with the present changes, dramatic though they are, has tended to obscure the extent to which the railway network has already undergone contraction, for the changes in the network presaged by the 1963 report are no more than a continuation, albeit at an accelerated rate and on a more consistent basis, of an existing process. Aspects of this theme have already been explored in a geographical context3 but hitherto little has been written of the actual pattern of earlier closures, nor have the closures themselves been mapped consistently. Maps have been constructed for limited areas or for limited periods, as for example by S. H. Beaver for the years 1925 to I936,4 whilst another approach has been that of A. C. O'Dell, whose recent map based on timetable evidence plots all stations from which passenger services were withdrawn between I899 and I962.5 The purpose of this paper is twofold, first to present maps of the routes in England and Wales from which railway passenger services had been withdrawn before 1963, and secondly to outline and illustrate the factors which gave rise to these withdrawals.