From Flags to Electronics
Early railways used a simple time-interval system: trains left at set times, hoping the previous train had cleared the line. Policemen along the track used flags and hand signals to talk to drivers, but this basic system wasn't enough as traffic and speeds increased.
The electric telegraph changed railway communication in the 1840s. Signalmen could talk instantly across long distances, coordinating trains with new precision. This allowed the absolute block system, where no train could enter a section until the previous one had left it completely.
Mechanical signalling peaked with interlocked signal boxes containing hundreds of levers that operated semaphore signals and points across large areas. Running these installations safely took years of training and great awareness, as signalmen manually controlled every train movement in their area.