Freshwater, Yarmouth and Newport Railway

Last updated

Contents

Freshwater, Yarmouth
and Newport Railway
Freshwater
BSicon exKBHFa.svg
L&SWR ferry
to Lymington
Ferry symbol.svg
Yarmouth
BSicon exBHF.svg
Ningwood
BSicon exHST.svg
Calbourne & Shalfleet
BSicon exHST.svg
Watchingwell Halt
BSicon expHST.svg
Carisbrooke
BSicon exHST.svg
BSicon exSTR.svg
BSicon exCONTg.svg
Newport (FY&NR)
BSicon exHST.svg
BSicon exKMW.svg
FY&NR trains reverse
BSicon exSTRl.svg
BSicon exABZgr.svg
BSicon POINTER4.svg
Newport (IoWCR)
BSicon exBHF.svg
IoWCR to Ryde
BSicon exSTR.svg
BSicon WASSER.svg
BSicon exCONTg.svg
BSicon exSTRl.svg
BSicon WASSER.svg
BSicon lMKRZu.svg
BSicon excSTRq.svg
BSicon exABZr+r.svg
BSicon WASSER.svg
BSicon exCONTf.svg

The Freshwater, Yarmouth and Newport Railway was a railway line on the Isle of Wight, United Kingdom, connecting Freshwater and Yarmouth to Newport. It was intended to connect the thinly populated west of the island, and it opened in 1889. At Newport it relied on the existing Isle of Wight Central Railway's station, but trains entering it had to shunt back from the junction. The IoWCR worked the line until 1913.

The line was never commercially successful, and a break with the IoWCR in 1913 obliged the FY&NR hastily to build its own Newport station and acquire locomotives and rolling stock while in receivership.

After the Southern Railway absorbed the FY&NR in 1923, the SR developed holiday traffic, but it was highly seasonal and the heavy losses resulted in the line's closure in 1953.

Concept and construction

System map of the Freshwater, Yarmouth and Newport Railway FY&NR.png
System map of the Freshwater, Yarmouth and Newport Railway

By 1880 the Isle of Wight was well supplied with railways in its eastern and northern areas, connecting Ryde with Newport and Cowes, and Ryde and Newport with Sandown and Ventnor. The more beautiful, but more thinly-populated west was untouched. Newport was the industrial centre on the island, and its geographical position on the River Medina made it a natural connection point. The Cowes and Newport Railway had a junction station there.

In 1868 a Bouldnor, Yarmouth and Freshwater Railway was proposed, but it did not proceed. [1] In 1872 a Freshwater, Bouldnor and Newport Railway was promoted; Bouldnor is a hamlet a mile or so east of Yarmouth; this venture was unsuccessful. [2]

A parliamentary bill was submitted for a line connecting Freshwater and Newport, and this received royal assent on 26 August 1880, [3] [4] authorising the Freshwater, Yarmouth and Isle of Wight Railway. Share capital was £100,000. [1] [5] The new company was encouraged by support from the London and South Western Railway, which operated a ferry service from Lymington on the mainland to Yarmouth. There were many wealthy residents in the area to be served, and some also expressed support for a railway which, they believed, would facilitate their journeys to the mainland. [6]

The line was surveyed between 1883 and 1885, a second Act of 20 August 1883 was passed having authorised a further £42,000 of share capital. Construction started in 1886. The relaxed pace of events indicates a serious failure to generate share subscription. [note 1] [1] [5]

The line was laid out so as to avoid major engineering works, at the expense of many curves and steep gradients; there was a trestle viaduct 576 feet (176 m) in length at Hunny Hill, Newport, and a concrete viaduct over the Newtown River. The line was constructed with passing loops at Carisbrooke, Ningwood and Yarmouth. The line was opened for goods traffic on 10 September 1888 and for passengers on 20 July 1889.

Opening

An inaugural train was run on 10 August 1888 hauled by an 0-6-0 tank engine that had been used by the contractor constructing the line, and named Freshwater for the occasion. For this demonstration run the locomotive pulled a single mineral wagon fitted with seats. A revenue earning goods train ran from Newport to Freshwater with two wagons of coal on 1 September 1888. [1]

Passenger operation had to be approved by the Board of Trade and Major General Hutchinson visited the line on 2 May 1889 to inspect it. Reservations were expressed about some of the works, and an undertaking was required from the Board as to rectification; after some delay the approval was given, and a ceremonial opening took place on 11 July 1889, followed by a full public operation from 20 July 1889. [6]

Timetable from the Isle of Wight Observer 9 May 1891 Freshwater, Yarmouth and Newport railway timetable 1891.png
Timetable from the Isle of Wight Observer 9 May 1891

The line was worked by the Isle of Wight Central Railway for 53.625% of gross receipts, but the FY&NR remained responsible for maintenance of the infrastructure. The junction with the Cowes and Newport line was on the Cowes side of Newport station, and faced Cowes, so that the FY&NR trains running to Newport had to run round at the point of junction and run back to the station. (The Board had been required to give a formal undertaking that propelling without running round would not be carried out. [1] After many years a dispensation was procured from the Board of Trade permitting propelling for the short distance between the junction and the station.)

End of the working agreement

Yarmouth station in 2008 Yarmouth (IOW) Railway Station.jpg
Yarmouth station in 2008

From the outset the working agreement between the FY&NR and the IoWCR was contentious, due to the supposed inadequacy of structures and earthworks, for which the IoWCR was unwilling to accept the liability. The IoWCR may have suggested that a third-party contractor take that responsibility, for the FY&NR wrote to the IoWCR stating that "the principle of our line being maintained by any other person than the working company is not feasible. We find that there is no such case in the whole railway systems of Great Britain." [7]

Whether the FY&NR did the maintenance by direct labour or by contract, it was inadequate from the outset. There were also several disputes about charges for the use of stations. A further review of the working agreement in 1896 resulted in a 14-year arrangement, by which the IoWCR got 45% of traffic receipts. [1]

In 1910 that agreement expired, and the IoWCR was once more concerned that renewal of the working agreement committed them to steeply rising expenditure due to life expiry of much of the original FY&NR equipment, and discussions took place over the future working charge. In 1911 an 18-month agreement was settled, in which the IoWCR took 75% of receipts, their obligation including most infrastructure maintenance. The FY&NR agreed but was unhappy, and sought advice from Sam Fay of the Great Central Railway, who had a residence on the island. Fay recommended that the FY&NR should work its own line, and the FY&NR decided to proceed on that basis, procuring some passenger coaches from the Manchester, South Junction and Altrincham Railway, then starting electric passenger services with new stock. The FY&NR gave notice that they would work their line from 1 July 1913, and that they would not use the IoWCR station at Newport (to avoid the toll for its use).

The FY&NR provided its own station, a short distance before the point of junction at Newport. Goods sidings too had to be provided there. White refers to the station as being "a small corrugated iron one" but he meant the booking office; the platform and the accommodation generally was remarkably extensive. [8] The IoWCR had acquired additional passenger coaches under the 1911 agreement, and the FY&NR were obliged under that agreement to buy them on. They had to issue debenture stock to pay for them. [1] [9]

Blackburn and Mackett state:

Some accounts of the events leading to the break between the two companies imply that it was the IWCR who took the initiative by banning the Freshwater Company's trains from Newport station, and even that they forced the FYN to run its own services by refusing to work the line. No evidence could be found to support these views. On the contrary it appears that the FYN were entirely responsible for the break. Naturally there was some opposition from the Central, and Harry Willmott, who owned some FYN stock, tried to organise some of the other shareholders to veto the proposal to build another station at Newport, but was unable to get sufficient votes. It also appears that after the break the IWCR did all they could to facilitate the exchange of passengers, luggage and parcels between the two stations. [10]

The engine power the FY&NR procured now consisted of two locomotives only, indicating the limited volume of traffic it was running. They were second-hand 0-6-0 tank engines, dating from 1902 and 1876. The 1902 locomotive, no. 1, was the youngest to work on the Island and one of only two built in the twentieth century. [9] No. 2 was only fitted with the vacuum brake and consequently could only work one set of coaches, which were similarly fitted. No 1 was dual fitted. [11] In addition an open-sided Drewry petrol railcar seating 12 passengers was obtained, working from 1 July 1913. [6] [9] [12]

These expenditures pushed the FY&NR into insolvency almost immediately, and Fay was appointed by the receivers to manage the line, and in fact he assisted in getting hold of the rolling stock. [6] Allen and MacLeod suggest that Fay's interest was in the possible Solent tunnel. [11] In fact from this time the FY&NR was operated practically as a remote branch of the Great Central Railway. [1]

The arrangement of the station, some considerable walking distance from the IoWCR station, was very inconvenient to through passengers changing trains at Newport. This resulted in complaints to the Railway and Canal Commissioners, who put pressure on the companies to ameliorate the situation, and from 1914 most FY&NR passenger trains resumed using the IoWCR station, although running beyond that point remained discontinued.

A Solent tunnel

The former Watchingwell station building Watchingwellhalt old station.jpg
The former Watchingwell station building

In 1900 a proposal was put forward to construct a tunnel under the Solent connecting the FY&NR with the mainland network at Lymington. The idea got as far as an authorising Act of Parliament of 1901, incorporating the South Western & Isle of Wight Junction Railway. Nothing came of the scheme, but it was revived in 1913 as a means of reviving the finances of the FY&NR. However raising the capital for the works was problematical, and the onset of World War I put paid to the idea. [6]

It was suggested again after 1923, but at the time the Southern Railway had invested heavily in piers and ferryboats, and were opposed to the idea; the local authorities too considered it unacceptably expensive. [12] In fact in 1932 Dendy Marshall wrote to The Engineer magazine, proposing a tunnel with a revival of the atmospheric system. In a three-mile (5 km) smooth-walled tunnel; there would be trains of "one carriage fitted with about half a dozen transverse fins of india-rubber nearly fitting the tunnel". Powerful fans would propel the vehicle at up to 60 mph (97 km/h). [13]

Grouping of the railways

After World War I the Government considered the future of the railways of Great Britain, and passed the Railways Act 1921. In a process referred to as the "grouping", this set up four new railway companies which were to take over nearly all the existing companies. The Southern Railway absorbed all lines on the Isle of Wight from 1 January 1923, except for the FY&NR. The compensation to shareholders was to be negotiated, and although the FY&NR was in receivership, it argued that its prospects were good because of the hoped-for Lymington tunnel connection, and it attempted to obtain a better financial settlement. The negotiation dragged on and it was not until 1 August 1923 that the transfer took place. During the hiatus period, the FY&NR trains had to revert to using the separate station at Newport, with renewed inconvenience to passengers. [6]

The Southern Railway brought new vigour to the railways of the island, and a new Tourist Express was laid on in the summer months, with limited stops, linking Freshwater with Sandown. This started as the East and West Through Train, a name shown on carriage roofboards in 1932, and it proved a considerable success. In the following year further trains of this type were run, and the previous year's East and West Through Train was extended from Sandown to Ventnor, and named The Tourist in the public timetable. A through fast train from Ryde to Freshwater was also introduced, the first such for twenty years. [11] The crossing loop at Ningwood was lengthened to 400 feet (120 m) in 1936 to accommodate these services, while the loops at Carisbrooke and Yarmouth were removed. [9]

In the summer of 1939 there were thirteen trains in each direction with extra trains on Saturdays, and eight each way on Sundays. The journey time was about 37 minutes. [6]

The final years

The traffic on the line had always been highly seasonal, and the thin population in its area meant that the financial situation was precarious. Road transport of passengers and goods became increasingly dominant from the 1930s and further accelerated after World War II, and the losses on the line were unsustainable in the face of the low volume of custom. The line closed on 21 September 1953. [14] The locomotive used on the final journey was Alverstone, built in 1891 and brought to the Island in 1926.

Stations

The line opened on 20 July 1889 and closed on 21 September 1953.

Gradients

The first 3-mile (5 km) section of the line from Freshwater followed easy gradients, but then a climb of 1 in 64 followed for a mile, and that was the ruling gradient for 6 miles (10 km) of largely switchback (sawtooth) profile to beyond Watchingwell. After the summit a descent of the same gradient followed for 3 miles (5 km) into Newport. [9]

Locomotives

A1 Class 'Terrier' locomotive "Freshwater" in Southern Railway livery at the Isle of Wight Steam Railway. This locomotive was originally used on the Freshwater, Yarmouth and Newport Railway. W8 Freshwater at Havenstreet thumb.jpg
A1 Class 'Terrier' locomotive "Freshwater" in Southern Railway livery at the Isle of Wight Steam Railway. This locomotive was originally used on the Freshwater, Yarmouth and Newport Railway.
NumberNameBuilderClassTypeBuiltNotes
1MedinaManning WardleWorks 15550-6-0ST1902Originally Pauling & Elliot "Northolt". Withdrawn 1932.
2FreshwaterBrighton LB&SCR A1 Class 0-6-0T 1876Originally LB&SCR 646 "Newington" and later L&SWR 734 from May 1903 before purchase by FY&NR in February 1915. It was renumbered W8 in April 1932. In 1949 it was returned to the mainland for work on Hayling Island branches until 1963. In 1979 an agreement with the former owners saw it return to the Isle of Wight for preservation. It is now back in service following a £35,000 boiler replacement; its boiler certification expires in 2019.

Rolling stock

Until June 1913, the FYNR was worked by the IWCR. At the termination of the agreement, the IWCR sold five passenger coaches and 31 goods vehicles to the FYNR, and these all lasted to grouping in 1923.

The ex-IWCR passenger vehicles were insufficient, so the FYNR bought seven more secondhand from the Great Central Railway, and a four-wheeled Drewry petrol railcar was also bought in 1913. At the grouping, the FYNR had 12 passenger coaches and one railcar. These comprised five third-class (allotted SR numbers 2457–61), four composites (SR nos. 6358–61), two brake thirds (SR 4104–5), one brake composite (6990) and one railcar (2462). [16]

The goods vehicles bought from the IWCR comprised 26 open goods wagons (allotted SR numbers 28227–52), four covered goods wagons (SR nos. 47032–5) and one brake van (SR 56038). The open goods wagons were also used for coal, and had carrying capacities of 8 or 10 long tons (8.1 or 10.2 t). Four or five of these were converted into cattle wagons by the FYNR, and soon after the grouping the SR reconverted them back to open wagons, replacing them with proper cattle wagons from the mainland. [17]

Current situation

Former station buildings:

Former locomotives

See also

Notes

  1. Carter gives the authorised capital including 33% loans in both cases.

Related Research Articles

Isle of Wight Steam Railway Heritage railway on the Isle of Wight, England

The Isle of Wight Steam Railway is a heritage railway on the Isle of Wight. The railway passes through 5+12 miles (9 km) of countryside from Smallbrook Junction to Wootton station, passing through the small village of Havenstreet, where the line has a station, headquarters and a depot. At Smallbrook Junction, the steam railway connects with the Island Line.

The Isle of Wight Central Railway (IoWCR) was a railway company on the Isle of Wight, United Kingdom. It was formed in 1887 by the merging of three earlier railways, the Cowes and Newport Railway, the Ryde and Newport Railway and the Isle of Wight Railway,.

Isle of Wight Railway British pre-grouping railway (1864–1922)

The Isle of Wight Railway was a railway company on the Isle of Wight, United Kingdom; it operated 14 miles of railway line between Ryde and Ventnor. It opened the first section of line from Ryde to Sandown in 1864, later extending to Ventnor in 1866. The Ryde station was at St Johns Road, some distance from the pier where the majority of travellers arrived. A tramway operated on the pier itself, and a street-running tramway later operated from the Pier to St Johns Road. It was not until 1880 that two mainland railways companies jointly extended the railway line to the Pier Head, and IoWR trains ran through, improving the journey arrangements.

Shalfleet Human settlement in England

Shalfleet is a village and civil parish on the Isle of Wight. it is located between Yarmouth and Newport in the northwest of the island.

Newport railway station (Isle of Wight Central Railway)

Newport railway station was established in 1862 with the opening of the Cowes and Newport Railway. It was enlarged in December 1875 when the lines to Ryde and Ventnor were opened. The station was also used by the Freshwater, Yarmouth and Newport Railway from its opening in 1888 until 1913, when that company opened its own station nearby. Upon the formation of the Southern Railway in 1923 reverted to using this station. The station was closed by British Railways in 1966. It was then used as a base for the Wight Locomotive Society until January 1971, when it was demolished.

Newport railway station (Freshwater, Yarmouth and Newport Railway)

Newport FYN railway station was a railway station at Newport, Isle of Wight, off the south coast of England. For ten years it was the alternative terminus of the Freshwater, Yarmouth and Newport Railway.

Freshwater railway station

Freshwater railway station was the westerly terminus and largest station of the Freshwater, Yarmouth and Newport Railway, the platform being extended to accommodate the "Tourist Train", a non-stop service from Ventnor.

Yarmouth railway station (Isle of Wight) Former railway station in Yarmouth, Isle of Wight

Yarmouth railway station, was an intermediate station of the Freshwater, Yarmouth and Newport Railway.

Ningwood railway station

Ningwood railway station, was an intermediate station of the Freshwater, Yarmouth and Newport Railway, incorporated in 1860.

Calbourne & Shalfleet railway station Disused railway station in England

Calbourne and Shalfleet railway station, was an intermediate station of the Freshwater, Yarmouth and Newport Railway, incorporated in 1860, opened over a ten-month period between 1889 and 1889 and closed 65 years later. Situated between the two villages and serving a moderately populous rural area it was a "reasonably" successful station on an ultimately unprofitable line. Originally the station had a cottage style front but after absorption by the Southern a corrugated building from the acrimonious-split era was relocated to the site. The station itself, situated on the down side, has long been demolished and replaced with a modern bungalow; but the level-crossing keeper's cottage, a short distance away at Pounds Lane, is still visitable.

Watchingwell Halt railway station

Watchingwell Halt, was an intermediate station on the Freshwater, Yarmouth and Newport Railway, situated near the hamlet of Upper Watchingwell, that started life as a private halt. It was built at the behest of Sir John Barrington Simeon, M.P for Southampton, in 1897, not included in timetables available to the general public until the creation of the Southern in 1923, de-staffed in 1948 and closed in 1953. It was, by its very nature, a sparsely used station. It is now a private residence Watchingwell Station adorned with railway memorabilia.

Carisbrooke railway station Disused railway station in Isle of Wight, UK

Carisbrooke Station was a railway station situated near the village of Carisbrooke, just outside Newport, Isle of Wight, off the south coast of England. It was an intermediate station on the Freshwater, Yarmouth and Newport Railway. It originally had 2 platforms but one platform was abandoned in 1927. It was a busy station for the nearby castle until the advent of the bus routes, but little used thereafter. Closed in 1953, its goods yard was by then derelict and overgrown. The station has long been demolished and the site is no longer clearly discernible within a school playing field amongst modern development.

Medina Wharf Halt railway station

Medina Wharf Railway Station was a private halt between Cowes and Newport on the Isle of Wight that provided a way for workers at the nearby wharf to get to work before the road was laid. No shelter for its few passengers was ever provided and it never appeared on a public timetable. Additionally a non-passenger-carrying coal train transported coal from the siding via the halt to Ryde. After the Southern Railway took over from the IWCR the whole complex was extensively rebuilt.

Cowes railway station

Cowes railway station was a railway station in Cowes on the Isle of Wight, off the south coast of England. It took pride in being the "prettiest station on the Garden Isle".

Gunville Human settlement in England

Gunville is a small settlement on the Isle of Wight, off the south coast of England. It largely comprises housing, although there are also a small number of shops, a couple of charity shops, some retail warehouses, a snooker hall, Methodist Church and a fishing lake. The settlement seems to date from some time after 1800, although the vast majority of the buildings currently standing in Gunville date from after 1900.

Railways on the Isle of Wight Railways

There once existed a 55+12-mile (89.3 km) network of railway lines on the Isle of Wight, which operated both as a self-contained railway network, and as links to ferry services between the island and the South coast of Great Britain. The routes were opened by several companies between 1862 and 1901 and modernised after The Grouping in the 1920s. Most of them were permanently closed between 1952 and 1966, whilst the 8+12-mile-long (13.7 km) Island Line was temporarily closed in 1966 and rebuilt for electric train services, introduced in 1967. Replacement trains were introduced in 1990, and again in 2021 along with a major renewal of the line. A further 5+12 miles (8.9 km) have reopened as a heritage line known as the Isle of Wight Steam Railway and there have been several proposals to expand the network further since the 1960s, either with conventional heavy rail or by conversion to light rail.

LB&SCR A1X Class W8 Freshwater

W8 Freshwater is a Stroudley A1X Terrier class 0-6-0T steam locomotive, which is based at the Isle of Wight Steam Railway.

The Tourist was a train run by the Southern Railway on the railway lines of the Isle of Wight. It was set up in 1933 as an extension on the original East and West Through Train from the previous year. It was the only named train on the Isle of Wight, and one of the very few express trains.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Alan Blackburn and John Mackett, Freshwater, Yarmouth and Newport Railway, Forge Books, Bracknell, second edition 1988, ISBN   0 904662 17 9
  2. Michael Robbins, The Isle of wight (Newport Junction) Railway, in the Railway Magazine, October 1959
  3. Bennett, A. (1994). Southern Holiday Lines in Hampshire and the Isle of Wight. Cheltenham: Runpast. ISBN   1-870754-31-X.
  4. Maycock, R.J.; Silsbury, R. (2003). The Freshwater, Yarmouth and Newport Railway. Usk: Oakwood. ISBN   0-85361-601-9.
  5. 1 2 E F Carter, An Historical Geography of the Railways of the British Isles, Cassell, London, 1959
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 K Westcott Jones, The Freshwater, Yarmouth and Isle of Wight Railway, in the Railway Magazine, May and June 1947
  7. Letter from FY&NR to IoWCR prior to July 1889, partly quoted in Blackburn, page 11
  8. H P White, A Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain: volume 2: Southern England, Phoenix House Limited, London, 1961
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Vic Mitchell and Keith Smith, Branch Lines to Newport, Middleton Press, Midhurst, 1985, ISBN   0 906 520 26 6
  10. Blackburn and Mackett, page 16
  11. 1 2 3 P C Allen and A B MacLeod, Rails in the Isle of Wight, second edition, David & Charles, Newton Abbot, 1986, ISBN   9780715387016
  12. 1 2 C F Dendy Marshall, revised by R W Kidner, History of the Southern Railway, Ian Allan Limited, Shepperton, 1963 revised edition 1982, ISBN   0 7110 0059 X
  13. Letter from Dendy Marshall partly quoted in Blackburn, page 13
  14. Paye, Peter (1990). Isle of Wight Railways remembered. Oxford: OPC. ISBN   0-86093-212-5.
  15. M E Quick, Railway Passenger Stations in England Scotland and Wales—A Chronology, The Railway and Canal Historical Society, 2002
  16. Maycock, R.J.; Reed, M.J.E. (1997). Isle of Wight Steam Passenger Rolling Stock. Headington: Oakwood Press. pp. 49, 61. ISBN   0-85361-507-1. OCLC   38474127. X59.
  17. Bixley, G.; Blackburn, A.; Chorley, R.; King, Mike (September 2003) [1985]. An Illustrated History of Southern Wagons, volume two: LBSCR and Minor Companies. Hersham: Oxford Publishing Co. pp. 89–90, 93, 104–5. ISBN   0-86093-220-6. 0309/3.