Technical | |
---|---|
Track gauge | 4 ft 8+1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) |
Length | 28 miles 47 chains (46.0 km) (1919) [1] |
Track length | 35 miles 24 chains (56.8 km) (1919) [1] |
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 (opened 1862), the Ryde and Newport Railway (opened 1875) and the Isle of Wight (Newport Junction) Railway, (opened in stages 1875 and 1879).
Its network ran from near Ryde to Cowes and from Sandown to Newport. It also worked the Freshwater, Yarmouth and Newport Railway until 1913, and in that year it purchased the Newport, Godshill and Ventnor Railway.
The IoWCR was always short of money, and operated with antiquated equipment. The heavily seasonal traffic and, later, competition from buses and cars limited profitable income.
In 1923, it was absorbed by the new Southern Railway, and the new owner put financial resources into worthwhile modernisation, but by the 1960s the financial situation became difficult and the whole of the former IoWCR network was closed in 1966. The Isle of Wight Steam Railway now operates on part of the line.
Early in the nineteenth century, the Isle of Wight was chiefly involved in agriculture; there was industrial activity in Newport, and Ryde was an established town. Cowes and Ryde both had ferry services from the mainland, but Cowes, on the River Medina, was dominant because of the better harbour there.
During the railway mania of the 1840s, it was proposed that railways should be built on the island to develop tourism, which was then beginning to become an important economic activity, as well as to handle the agriculture and other produce of the island. A number of schemes were put forward but failed to gain support, until in 1858 bills for three railway projects were submitted to Parliament; they were:
Cowes and Newport (Isle of Wight) Railway Act 1859 | |
---|---|
Act of Parliament | |
Long title | An Act for making a Railway from West Cowes to Newport in the Isle of Wight, and for other Purposes. |
Citation | 22 & 23 Vict. c. xciv |
Dates | |
Royal assent | 8 August 1859 |
The first two were rejected in the House of Lords' Committee, and only the Cowes and Newport Railway was authorised. [note 1] The Cowes and Newport (Isle of Wight) Railway Act 1859 (22 & 23 Vict. c. xciv) obtained royal assent on 8 August 1859. [2] [3] [4] [5]
The Cowes and Newport Railway was to be 4+1⁄2 miles (7 km) in length, running north to south along the west side of the River Medina. The authorised share capital was £30,000 (equivalent to £3,800,000in 2023). [6]
A construction contract was let to Albert H. Fernandez, and the first sod was cut on 15 October 1859. The construction had been thought to be simple, but in fact the nature of the ground and the wet weather made the work extremely difficult. In December 1861, the contractor had to give up the work, and the company continued for a period managing the work directly. The C&NR itself had financial difficulties as the authorised share issue was considerably undersubscribed. The Cowes station abutted Cross Street, where there was a level crossing, over which the line continued as a tramway; engine run-round movements had to cross the level crossing and use the tramway, contrary to stipulations in the authorising act of Parliament (The C&NR was later authorised to enlarge the station and close Cross Street. This work was done in early 1879). [5]
Captain Tyler of the Board of Trade inspected the line for passenger operation in May 1862, but found numerous deficiencies and recommended that the authorisation for opening be declined. He returned on 14 June 1862 and this time everything was in order; the line opened on 16 June 1862; passenger traffic only was carried for some time after opening; there were eight trains each way on weekdays. [3] [4] [7] [8] [9] Notice boards at the Newport station made it clear that onward conveyance to London, via Cowes and Southampton, was a primary objective.
The line was operated by a contractor, Henry Martin, for 50% of gross receipts at first, later 50% of net receipts. [5]
A wharf known as Medina Wharf was built adjoining the river between Cowes and Newport in 1877–78. [8] Writing in 1962 Rickard said that the Medina Wharf was then the sole means of entry for coal to the island. [9]
The business interests on the east coast of the island continued to put forward a scheme based in Ryde. The Cowes and Newport Railway proposed an extension from Newport, Isle of Wight to Ryde and Ventnor, forming a large triangle, and to rename their company the Isle of Wight Railway. The promoters of the Isle of Wight (Eastern Section) Railway resubmitted their scheme too. The Cowes and Newport bill failed standing orders, and although there was some opposition to it, the IoW(ES)R was authorised on 23 July 1860. In 1863, it changed its name to the Isle of Wight Railway; it opened between St John's Road station in Ryde and Shanklin on 23 August 1864 and on to Ventnor on 10 September 1866. [3]
This had a significant effect in shifting the route for trade access to the island: in February 1868 the Cowes and Newport Railway directors reported that their company's earnings were static following the opening of the IoWR; travellers forsook the Southampton and Cowes route in favour of Portsmouth and Ryde. Cowes railway station was inconveniently up a steep hill from the ferry port. [5]
From 1861, the pace of proposing further railways on the island accelerated. Some accepted that only one further line was commercially viable, but there was little agreement about its possible course. Nonetheless connecting Newport to the east coast was considered an important objective.
Isle of Wight (Newport Junction) Railway Act 1868 | |
---|---|
Act of Parliament | |
Citation | 31 & 32 Vict. c. clxxxi |
Dates | |
Royal assent | 31 July 1868 |
In 1868, three bills came to Parliament; they were considered to be mutually exclusive, and over a very lengthy hearing evidence was given in favour of each, and against its presumed competitors. The dominance of the Portsmouth–Ryde ferry route had not yet been established, and in any case Cowes was assumed to be the port of entry for goods and minerals. [note 2] The Isle of Wight (Newport Junction) Railway Act 1868 (31 & 32 Vict. c. clxxxi) was given royal assent on 31 July 1868, to build a line from Newport to the Sandown station of the Isle of Wight Railway. [5] [10] [11]
The competing proposals were rejected; those who favoured a line from Newport to Ryde were disappointed, and continued the struggle. [5]
The authorised capital of the Newport Junction line was £84,000, [12] but it was not planned to pass through any major population centre that was not already rail-connected, and the company found it difficult to raise the money it needed for construction. Moreover, successive resignations of directors made continuity of progress difficult. The first sod was finally cut at Shide on 14 October 1870. Early in 1871, a prospectus was published offering preference shares, although the Company was not authorised to issue these, and this was soon followed by acrimonious and public name-calling between the company and the Corporation of Newport. [5]
In 1872, the line between Sandown and Horringford was thought to be ready for opening, and on 20 June Colonel Yolland of the Board of Trade visited the line to carry out the inspection for passenger operation; as well as finding a considerable number of detail shortcomings, he was very critical of the rails. There were second-hand double-headed rails [note 3] formerly in use on the London and South Western Railway. They had been inverted on the LSWR line, using the second running table. The rails were badly galled by the chairs and there were splits and bulges in the head. They had been cropped to 16 feet (5 m), and the head wear was not matched, so that the joints were uneven. The fishplate bolts were not long enough in many cases. [13] [14]
Approval to open the line to passenger traffic was refused; the company tried to appeal against this, but failed; subsequent inspection visits took place on 31 July, 28 August and 26 September 1872, without success. [12] Creditors demanded payment, and one unfortunate contractor went into bankruptcy, having accepted the company's shares in payment: those shares were now worthless. In December 1872 it was calculated that the company had expended £77,490 and had nothing to show for it; and the line was now estimated to require £90,548 to complete.
Isle of Wight (Newport Junction) Railway Act 1872 | |
---|---|
Act of Parliament | |
Citation | 35 & 36 Vict. c. clxix |
Dates | |
Royal assent | 6 August 1872 |
Text of statute as originally enacted |
Isle of Wight (Newport Junction) Railway Act 1878 | |
---|---|
Act of Parliament | |
Citation | 41 & 42 Vict. c. xxviii |
Against this background the IoW(NJ)R had obtained a further act of Parliament, the Isle of Wight (Newport Junction) Railway Act 1872 (35 & 36 Vict. c. clxix), in August 1872, authorising additional capital as well as certain deviations and extensions. Somehow work proceeded, and in July 1874 Colonel Rich of the Board of Trade visited the Sandown to Horringford line; the bad rails seem to have been changed but Rich again refused sanction to open the line due to other faults. Further attention was given and in January 1875 Colonel Rich inspected the line from Sandown to Shide and found it satisfactory,
The company opened its line on 1 February 1875; in public announcements the company referred to the Shide station as "Newport". [5] [12] The company started running passenger trains on to Pan Lane at Newport, from 11 August 1875, but this was without permission from the Board of Trade: in effect illegally; Colonel Hutchinson visited for the necessary inspection on 6 October 1875, and on the company promising to rectify a number of issues, the running to Pan Lane continued. (The company sometimes used Pan Mill as the station name at first.) [5] [12] There were nine trains each way on weekdays. [8]
Ryde and Newport Railway Act 1872 | |
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Act of Parliament | |
Citation | 35 & 36 Vict. c. cxxxv |
The operation of the Isle of Wight Railway enhanced the importance of Ryde as the port of entry to the island, and it soon became more important than Cowes, particularly for passengers. 300,000 people travelled between Newport and Ryde annually, and the road coaches were not convenient. The necessity of connecting Newport revived the idea of a railway between them, and on 25 July 1872 the Ryde and Newport Railway was authorised by an act of Parliament, the Ryde and Newport Railway Act 1872 (35 & 36 Vict. c. cxxxv). The share capital was £65,000.
The Isle of Wight Railway agreed to the R&NR using its line to get access to Ryde, and to its station there, in exchange for running powers for the IoWR between Ryde and Newport. [note 4]
A contract for the construction was awarded to Barnett and Gale on 1 October 1872. [5] Instead of building its own line into Ryde, it arranged with the Isle of Wight Railway to join it at Smallbrook, a little over one mile (1.6 km) south of St John's Road; IoWCR trains were to run to Ryde on track provided by the IoWR.
A temporary connection was laid in at Smallbrook to assist in the delivery of materials for construction purposes. Work continued rapidly, but early in 1874 Barnett and Gale got into financial difficulties, and the contract was transferred to J & G Taylor. The construction and land acquisition expended much of the company's available cash, and a director, George Young, personally made money available to continue. In 1875, the railway company obtained authorisation to raise additional share capital (in fact, the £30,000 of preference shares could only be sold at a 30% discount). [5]
The original Cowes and Newport Railway station at Newport had been a very basic construction, and it had always been the intention to construct a new station for the use of the C&NR, the R&NR and the IoW(NJ)R; this involved agreeing on the crossing of the Medina at Newport with the borough corporation, and apportioning the costs. This took some time and the bridge, to be a swing bridge, was agreed in January 1875. By this time the line had been completed to the end of the bridge location. When completed, the bridge was operated manually by windlass; the two tracks could be opened individually and there was a long approach viaduct. [5]
The IoWR laid a second track alongside its own from Smallbrook to Ryde. There was to be no operational junction at this stage, and the two companies each were to work over one of the two single lines.
Lt Colonel Hutchinson visited the IoWCR in November 1875, but refused to sanction the opening of the line to passenger traffic as the station accommodation, in particular, was incomplete. On 17 December he visited again, and although some matters were imperfect, the desired sanction for opening was given. [5]
The Ryde and Newport Railway opened on 20 December 1875, and like the Cowes and Newport it ran seven passenger trains each way on weekdays. [8] The intermediate stations probably did not open until March 1876. [5]
Ryde and Newport and Cowes and Newport Railways Act 1875 | |
---|---|
Act of Parliament | |
Long title | An Act to authorise the raising of new capital by the Ryde and Newport Railway Company and the Cowes and Newport Railway Company; and for other purposes. |
Citation | 38 & 39 Vict. c. lx |
Dates | |
Royal assent | 14 June 1875 |
Text of statute as originally enacted |
Ryde and Newport Railway Act 1877 | |
---|---|
Act of Parliament | |
Citation | 40 & 41 Vict. c. lxxxviii |
The R&NR paid the IoWR a rental for the use of the Ryde station. The R&NR arranged with the Cowes and Newport Railway for their two lines to be worked jointly, an arrangement that was ratified by Parliament in the Ryde and Newport and Cowes and Newport Railways Act 1875 (38 & 39 Vict. c. lx), which also authorised the R&NR to build Medina wharf on the River Medina. The wharf was much more suitable for handling heavy goods and minerals, and it quickly became the chief port of entry to the island for that traffic. [3]
There was a racecourse adjacent to the line at Ashey, and excursion trains to the race meetings were popular. The Isle of Wight Railway had running powers to Newport and exercised them for the purpose of running to Ashey on race days.
A southwards tramway ran from the station to a chalk pit, running closely past the track and the grandstand. Some authorities [15] [16] state that there was an Ashey Racecourse station, used only for race meetings, on the tramway, in use from April 1882 to about 1930. It seems likely that this is a mistake: the empty rolling stock for the excursions was stabled on the tramway during the racing, but there was no passenger station. The tramway is clearly shown on the mapping of the period, but no station is marked on any Ordnance Survey map in the relevant period. Writing in 1946, Jones describes the route from Newport to Ryde and states [17]
Another climb... brings the line to Ashey station, with its disused passing loop. Many years ago there was a racecourse nearby, and the extra traffic on race days was accommodated on the loop, and also on a siding which ran to a worked-out chalk pit in Ashey Down. In the late 1920s the grandstands of the racecourse were destroyed by fire, and since then it has fallen into disuse.
The R&NR and the C&NR had always intended to operate collaboratively, and on 1 July 1876 the Ryde, Newport and Cowes Joint Committee was established to manage operational matters. This was successful so far as day-to-day running was concerned, but the difficult financial situation of the companies led to continuing failure to work together over completion of the line.
The R&NR was still heavily indebted and was struggling to pay off the outstanding sums. The IoW(NJ)R too needed some time to increase its income, although on 28 June 1876, the anniversary of the coronation of Queen Victoria, thirteen-coach trains were run between Sandown and Newport; rolling stock had to be hired in from the IoWR. Cheaply-constructed wooden platforms were opened at Alverstone, Newchurch, Merstone and Blackwater, probably just in time for Coronation Day 1876.
A vexatious dispute arose over the apportionment of contributions to the cost of the Newport viaduct and bridge, and resort to arbitration, and then a parliamentary bill to revive expired powers delayed opening. An inspection by Major General Hutchinson in October 1878 resulted in the design strength of the bridge girders being questioned.
This seems to have been resolved and in March 1879 he approved the bridge but objected to the junction connection between the two railways' lines. On 1 May 1879, the directors reported at a shareholders' meeting that the junction had been made and used for goods trains, and it seems to have been opened for all traffic on 1 June 1879. [3] [5]
Meanwhile, relations with the IoWR, which had been working the IoW(NJ)R, broke down completely, and that arrangement was terminated at the beginning of 1879. The IoW(NJ)R was steadily descending into heavy indebtedness, [14] with many landowners still waiting for their money, and debenture interest payments being left unpaid, and important track improvements being left undone. Against this background the Joint Committee took over the working of the IoW(NJ)R on 1 April 1879. [5]
The IoWCR ran over the IoWR into Ryde; the station was at St John's Road and the distance from there to Ryde Pier was a serious inconvenience to through passengers to Portsmouth on the mainland. The London, Brighton and South Coast Railway and the London and South Western Railway together decided to build the missing link, and the line from Ryde Pier Head to the IoWR's St John's Road station opened on 12 July 1880. At first there was limited accommodation at Ryde so the Newport trains were not admitted to the extension until October 1880. [3] [5]
Isle of Wight Central Railway Act 1887 | |
---|---|
Act of Parliament | |
Citation | 50 & 51 Vict. c. cxvi |
Dates | |
Royal assent | 19 July 1887 |
Commencement | 1 July 1887 |
Text of statute as originally enacted |
Isle of Wight Central Railway Act 1890 | |
---|---|
Act of Parliament | |
Long title | An Act to confer further powers on the Isle of Wight Central Railway Company; and for other purposes. |
Citation | 53 & 54 Vict. c. lxxiii |
Dates | |
Royal assent | 4 July 1890 |
Isle of Wight Central Railway Act 1902 | |
---|---|
Act of Parliament | |
Long title | An Act for empowering the Isle of Wight Central Railway Company to raise further moneys. |
Citation | 2 Edw. 7. c. xxvi |
Dates | |
Royal assent | 28 April 1902 |
The three central lines, the Cowes and Newport Railway, the Isle of Wight (Newport Junction) Railway and the Ryde and Newport Railway, were all in financial difficulties, but they had common cause. By common consent there were too many companies running the limited extent of the network, and they agreed on amalgamation as a way forward, and a combined company called the Isle of Wight Central Railway was authorised by the Isle of Wight Central Railway Act 1887 (50 & 51 Vict. c. cxvi) on 19 July 1887, [5] [11] [14] retrospectively applicable from 1 July 1887.
The combined company was of course no better resourced financially than the three smaller companies. Charles Conacher, its General Manager, wrote that it [18]
was over-capitalised, in order to pay off the arrears of interest and otherwise provide for the indebtedness of the amalgamated companies. This was apparently done by money borrowed at what is now the high rate of 4+1⁄2 per cent., and the Company has now been so engaged in meeting their fixed charges, amounting to about £13,000, out of a gross annual income of £30,000, as to leave nothing for dividend on Preference and Ordinary capital.
No extensions of the small network were planned. In fact, the IoWCR did not pay a dividend until 1913, and after that only on first preference shares. [3]
The IoWCR was impecunious throughout its existence, and the generally improving expectations of society: interlocking, the block system and continuous brakes, workmen's compensation, and improvements to working hours, coupled with the need to replace worn-out track and to repair bridges, all combined to ensure that the company never managed to escape from this plight. [5]
The western part of the island remained untouched by railways, but Yarmouth was a ferry terminal, with the ferry to Lymington operated by the London and South Western Railway. The LSWR encouraged the formation of a scheme for a railway that became the Freshwater, Yarmouth and Newport Railway, authorised on 26 August 1880. It opened for goods traffic on 10 September 1888, and for passengers on 20 July 1889. [11] [14] There were eleven passenger trains each way on weekdays. [8] The new line joined the IoWCR at Newport, but the layout at the junction did not enable FY&NR trains to run into the station directly; they were not permitted to propel to and from the station, so that they had to run around their train in both directions. [5] The line was worked by the IoWCR. [3] [8]
Notwithstanding the existence of the route through Sandown, the member companies of the IoWCR had long felt that a direct line from Cowes or Newport to Ventnor, independent of the IoWR, was desirable, and a number of schemes had been proposed.
In 1889, one of these schemes was authorised: the Newport, Godshill and St Lawrence Railway got its act of Parliament, the Newport, Godshill and St. Lawrence Railway Act 1889 (55 & 56 Vict. c. ccxl) on 12 August. [11] Long comments that constructing it was "probably the greatest economic folly of the Isle of Wight's railway network". [19] The IoWCR was to work the line for 55% of gross receipts. It would leave the IoWCR Sandown line at Merstone, and follow a southerly course from there. This Act was followed by a second act of Parliament[ which? ] in 1892 authorising an extension to Ventnor West. However the location available for the terminus there was, like the IoWR's own Ventnor station, somewhat inconvenient. It proved very difficult to persuade investors to subscribe in the railway, with corresponding shortages of cash for construction; there were also solvency problems for the contractor.
Eventually the section from Merstone to St Lawrence was ready and the Board of Trade inspector was critical of the tunnel, but sanctioned opening. There was a publicity demonstration run on 17 July 1897 and a public ceremonial opening on 19 July 1897, with normal public opening the following day. There were nine trains daily each way, and the line was worked by the IoWCR. The terminus was described as Ventnor (St Lawrence), although the station was two miles (3 km) from the town. F. Baker of Ventnor operated a horse omnibus over the distance, for a fare of sixpence. [5] [20]
Although the original contractor had failed financially, it proved possible to continue the extension to Ventnor, and Lt Colonel von Donop visited on 21 May 1900. Although there were some deficiencies he authorised the opening of the extension. A press run took place on 31 May 1900 and public services started on 1 June 1900. [20] The Ventnor station was described as Ventnor Town, and it was stated that "In eight or nine minutes passengers can walk to the centre of the town." [5]
There were now five trains each way daily, generally running through to Cowes trains on the Sandown former main line now made a connectional stop only at Merstone—and offering onward ferry connections via Southampton. From June 1901, it was arranged that the London and South Western Railway would run a train from London Waterloo to Southampton Royal Pier, making a swift connection to a ferry to Cowes and thence to Ventnor by train. This did not prove the commercial success that had been hoped. The preference of the Ventnor line over the Sandown line for the through trains was considered to be a mistake, and from 1 October 1903 the arrangement was reversed. [3] [5]
In 1905, the first motor bus service started work on the island. The primitive vehicles and poor roads of the day did not make for efficient travel, but the future threat was there. The IoWCR considered the adoption of railmotors—single-coach rail vehicles incorporating a small locomotive within the coach chassis. These vehicles offered lower operating costs, but still required a crew of three; and they did not have the power to haul additional vehicles at busy times. However they avoided the necessity of running round at the end of journeys. One was ordered from Hurst Nelson in October 1905. It was delivered a year later, on 4 October 1906. It went into service on the Ventnor line, but there were a succession of technical problems.
When the IoWCR agreed to work the Newport, Godshill and St Lawrence Railway, it guaranteed a minimum income of £2,000 to that company's shareholders. It anticipated that ordinary income would pay that sum off but the poor custom on the line failed to achieve that. The IoWCR preference shareholders were not getting dividends—the ordinary shareholders had no hope of that—and there was shareholder criticism of the payments. The issue came to a head at the shareholders' meeting of 1 March 1911, and several directors resigned, with new replacemnts then installed. One of the new men was Harry Willmott, who had long experience as a senior railway manager, including much in reviving the fortunes of the impecunious Stratford-upon-Avon and Midland Junction Railway. He was installed as the new chairman, and he soon brought in new managers and introduced more streamlined systems in the company. Incidentally, he negotiated with the Board of Trade about 1912 that Freshwater trains could be propelled to and from Newport station, overturning the old prohibition which required running around on every trip.
The guarantee to the NG&StLR remained a difficulty, and could hardly be negotiated away. The solution arrived at was the purchase of that company by the IoWCR. The Isle of Wight Central Railway (Godshill Transfer) Act 1913 (3 & 4 Geo. 5. c. xiii) of 4 July 1913 authorised the change, and it became effective on 1 October 1913. Godshill ordinary shareholders got fivepence in the pound (just over 2%); their railway had cost more than £250,000 to construct. [5]
The Freshwater, Yarmouth and Newport Railway had long been worked by the IoWCR. In 1910, the agreement needed to be renewed, and the IoWCR noted that major modernisation work was needed on the Yarmouth line infrastructure, and imposed less favourable financial terms. For a time this was accepted, but in April 1913 the IoWCR was informed that the FY&NR would work its own line from 1 July 1913. As well as suddenly needing to acquire rolling stock, the FY&NR had to provide its own station at Newport, just short of the convergence with the IoWCR. In fact two locomotives had to be acquired; the small number indicates how limited the train service was. [21] The new independent arrangement started on 1 July 1913; passengers now had to change stations at Newport, and the inferior service and higher costs eventually pushed the FY&NR into bankruptcy. [3] The FY&NR had its locomotives overhauled by the Isle of Wight Railway at Ryde, and the IoWCR charged a toll of £3 to pass them through Newport. The problem of the station at Newport was resolved in August 1914. [5]
The outbreak of World War I resulted in Government control of the railways; this resulted in infrastructure improvements being deferred and the income of the company was hit. A national strike and post-war Government control of fares, as well as much-improved bus competition and improved wage rates and working conditions for staff all attacked the financial situation of the line. [5]
Under the terms of the Railways Act 1921, the main line railways of Great Britain were "grouped" into four large companies; all of the Isle of Wight lines were absorbed into the new Southern Railway from 1 January 1923. [note 5] The ordinary shareholders of the IoWCR got £3 for each £100 share (The absorption of the FY&NR was delayed until 1 August 1923 due to negotiations over the financial terms; during the period from 1 January, when the FY&NR refused the offered settlement, the company's trains were again barred from the main Newport station). [3] [8]
The Southern Railway brought capital to the island to pay for improvements. The two single lines between Smallbrook and St John's Road were converted to a conventional double track by the installation of crossovers at Smallbrook in 1926; [22] the arrangement was applied in the summer months, and the Smallbrook Junction signal box was closed in winter, when line capacity was not an issue. A peak train service of 27 trains each way daily was run on the Newport to Cowes section by 1925. [8]
The antiquated locomotive fleet was improved, by retaining the A1X 'Terrier' class and bringing in some LSWR O2 class 0-4-4T engines that had been displaced by the electrification of London suburban services; [8] the four-wheel coaches were also abolished, and bogie coaches brought in. The improvements brought about a marked increase in business, but it was of course highly seasonal, and the buses running on improved roads were far more convenient for many travellers. The short distances on the island meant that goods traffic was at a serious disadvantage against road competition. [5] [23]
A new passing place was created at Havenstreet about 1926, as that was a more convenient crossing point on the line; Ashey and Whippingham loops were reduced to goods status only, and passenger trains did not cross there. [22] Ventnor Town station had its name changed to Ventnor West.
Weekly tickets for unlimited travel on the island were introduced and proved very popular with holidaymakers on the island. In the summer of 1932, new through trains were run: six coaches were labelled "East and West Through Train" and ran Mondays to Fridays from Shanklin to Freshwater and back, calling only at Sandown, Merstone Junction, Newport, Carisbrooke and Yarmouth. An E1 class engine worked this train between Shanklin and Newport, and an A1X from Newport to Freshwater. The old IoWCR railcar had been rebuilt several years before as an open third saloon with wooden slat seats was now rebuilt into a third-class corridor observation coach to run in the through train.
This was immediately popular, and additional through trains were run in the 1933 summer service between the Ryde–Ventnor line and the Freshwater branch. The original through train, now starting from Ventnor with an accelerated timing, and became the first named train, each coach carrying a board with The Tourist in gold on a red background. A second through fast train was also included in the programme between Ryde Pier Head and Freshwater, the first for twenty years. [22] [24]
In this period it was the practice at Cowes for the coaches to be gravitated into platform 1 (which was generally used) after the arriving engine had been released; this practice continued until closure. The facilities at Medina Wharf were modernised, with a large concrete pier structure being provided, equipped with two massive transporter cranes. Rolling stock brought in to modernise the island's fleet was generally brought in here. There was a staff halt on the main line. [8]
In 1932–33, the Southern Railway brought in four E1 tank engines to operate heavier freight trains. [8]
On 1 January 1948, the railways passed into nationalised ownership under British Railways, following the Transport Act 1947. World War II had caused further decline in the competitive position of the railways on the island, and the minimal carryings on the Merstone to Ventnor line resulted in its closure on 13 September 1952. [20] The Newport to Freshwater line was closed on 21 September 1953. The Newport to Sandown line continued for a while, but on 6 February 1956 it too closed. The former IoWCR line from Smallbrook to Cowes via Newport, carrying a passenger train service from Ryde to Cowes, was the only residual part of the IoWCR now extant.
The decision was taken to retain only the Ryde to Shanklin section on the island, and the Ryde–Newport–Cowes service, and the route from Smallbrook to Cowes closed on 21 February 1966, bringing about the end of the IoWCR network. [3] [8] [22]
In use IWCR/predecessor | Number | Name | Builder | Class | Type | Built | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1861 | 1 | Pioneer | Slaughter Gruning | Works 453 | 2-2-2WT | 1861 | Originally owned by C&NR from September 1861. Withdrawn 1901. |
1906 | 1 | Hawthorn Leslie | Works 2663 [25] or 2669 [26] | Railmotor | 1906 | Sold out of service 1918. | |
1861 | 2 | Precursor | Slaughter Gruning | Works 454 | 2-2-2WT | 1861 | Withdrawn 1901. |
1909 | 2 | Seaham Harbour | 0-4-4T | 1895 | Originally owned by Marquis of Londonderry's Railway (later North Eastern Railway) until July 1909. Sold out of service 1917. | ||
1870 | 3 | Mill Hill | Black Hawthorn | Works 116 | 0-4-2ST | 1870 | Withdrawn 1918. |
1876 | 4 | Cowes | Beyer Peacock | Works 1583 | 2-4-0T | 1876 | Originally owned by Ryde & Newport. Withdrawn 1925. |
1876 | 5 | Osborne | Beyer Peacock | Works 1584 | 2-4-0T | 1876 | Withdrawn 1926. |
1875 | 6 | Newport | R.W. Hawthorn | Works 1127 | 2-2-2WT | 1861 | Originally owned by Whitehaven Railway (later Furness Railway). Purchased by Newport Junction 1875. Withdrawn 1890. Scrapped 1895. |
1890 | 6 | Black Hawthorn | Works 999 | 4-4-0T | 1890 | Withdrawn 1925. | |
1880 | 7 | Whippingham | Slaughter Gruning | Works 443 | 4-4-0T | 1861 | Originally North London Railway No. 35A until March 1880. Withdrawn 1906. |
1908 | 7 | Beyer Peacock | Works 2231 | 2-4-0T | 1882 | Originally M&SWJR No. 6 until December 1906. Withdrawn 1925. | |
1898 | 8 | Beyer Peacock | Works 3942 | 2-4-0T | 1898 | Withdrawn 1929. | |
March 1899 | 9 | Brighton | LB&SCR A1 class | 0-6-0T | 1872 | Originally LB&SCR No. 75 Blackwall until March 1899. Withdrawn 1927. | |
April 1900 | 10 | Brighton | LB&SCR A1 class | 0-6-0T | 1874 | Originally LB&SCR No. 69 Peckham until April 1900. Withdrawn 1936. | |
January 1902 | 11 | Brighton | LB&SCR A1 class | 0-6-0T | 1878 | Originally No. 40 Brighton . Arrived in 1902. Renamed and renumbered in 1930. Returned to mainland 1947. Now preserved on Isle of Wight Steam Railway. | |
November 1903 | 12 | Brighton | LB&SCR A1 class | 0-6-0T | 1880 | Originally LB&SCR No. 84 Crowborough until November 1903. Withdrawn 1936. |
Between 1898 and 1905, the railway purchased four London, Brighton and South Coast Railway A1 "Terrier" class locomotives to operate its trains. One of these had been sent by the LBSCR to the Paris Exhibition of 1878, where it won a gold medal. In 1901, this locomotive was bought by the IoWCR and was numbered 11, then brought to the island on 8 January 1902. This locomotive is preserved at the Isle of Wight Steam Railway. [27]
At the grouping, the IWCR had 37 passenger coaches and 12 non-passenger coaching stock vehicles. The passenger coaches comprised sixteen third-class (allotted SR numbers 2441–2456), eleven composites (6347–6357), six brake thirds (4098–4103), three brake composites (6987–6989) and one first-class saloon (7995). The non-passenger coaching stock comprised six guard's vans (979, 990–994), six open carriage and baggage boxes (4385–4390) and one horse box (3369). One guard's van was described as a mail van. [28]
There were 317 goods vehicles lasting to grouping in 1923. These comprised 251 open goods wagons (SR nos. 27976–28226), 45 covered goods wagons (SR nos. 46987–47031), nine flat trucks (59024–59032), eight cattle wagons (53380–53387), three brake vans (56035–56037) and one tar tank (61383). In addition to these, there were eight in departmental stock: four ballast wagons (62881–62884), two water tanks, one travelling crane (429S) and a match truck (429SM). The open goods wagons were also used for coal, and had carrying capacities ranging from 6 to 10 long tons (6.1 to 10.2 t). The flat trucks included six designated as timber trucks – these had one or two transverse bolsters to support the load. The crane was hand-operated, and could lift 5 long tons (5.1 t); and the match truck was used to provide room for the crane jib when travelling. [29]
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Closed 21 February 1966.
Closed 6 February 1956.
Closed 15 September 1952.
The last steam trains on the Isle of Wight ran on the residual Ryde to Shanklin line on 31 December 1966. The steam locomotive W24 Calbourne and some carriages were purchased by an enthusiast group, and in 1971, the Isle of Wight Railway Co Ltd was formed to buy the 1+1⁄2-mile (2.4 km) length of track between Wootton and Havenstreet, operating steam trains as a heritage railway. In 1991 the line was extended to Smallbrook Junction on the Ryde–Shanklin line, where a new interchange station was built, enabling passengers to interchange with Island Line trains. [31]
The Island Line is a railway line on the Isle of Wight which runs along the island's east coast and links Ryde Pier Head with Shanklin. Trains connect at Ryde Pier Head with passenger ferries to Portsmouth Harbour, and these ferries in turn connect with the rest of the National Rail network via the Portsmouth Direct Line. The line also connects to the Isle of Wight Steam Railway, a heritage railway, at Smallbrook Junction. For much of its length the line runs alongside the A3055, criss-crossing this road by means of the Ryde Tunnel and bridges at Rowborough, Morton Common, Lake Hill and Littlestairs.
The Isle of Wight Steam Railway is a heritage railway on the Isle of Wight. The railway passes through 5+1⁄2 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.
Ryde Pier is an early 19th century pier serving the town of Ryde, on the Isle of Wight, off the south coast of England. It is the world's oldest seaside pleasure pier. Ryde Pier Head railway station is at the sea end of the pier, and Ryde Esplanade railway station at the land end, both served by Island Line trains.
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.
Sandown railway station is a railway station serving Sandown on the Isle of Wight, England. It is located on the Island Line from Ryde to Shanklin.
Shanklin railway station is a Grade II listed railway station serving Shanklin on the Isle of Wight. It is the present terminus of the Island Line from Ryde, although the line used to continue to Wroxall and Ventnor. The station now has one platform with a ticket office and a small shop, the second platform is now in use as a flower bed. The former subway has been filled in.
Southern Vectis is a bus operator on the Isle of Wight, founded in 1921 as "Dodson and Campbell" and became the "Vectis Bus Company" in 1923. The company was purchased by the Southern Railway before being nationalised in 1969. In 1987, the company was re-privatised, and it in July 2005, it became a subsidiary of Go-Ahead Group.
Lake is a large village and civil parish located on Sandown Bay, on the Isle of Wight, England. It is six miles south-east of Newport situated between Sandown and Shanklin, and 1+1⁄2 miles (2.4 km) to the east of the hamlet of Apse Heath.
Smallbrook Junction railway station is a railway station on the Isle of Wight, England. It is unusual because it has no public access but exists purely to provide a connection between two rail systems.
Ashey railway station is a station serving the village of Ashey on the Isle of Wight in England. It was on the line which ran from Ryde to Newport. It was resited during the BR era because of subsidence at the original site, it was also described in some timetables as Ashey for Nunwell.
Merstone is a hamlet on the Isle of Wight. It is home to Merston Manor, built in 1605 in the Jacobean style by Edward Cheeke, and rebuilt in the Victorian era. Merston Manor was first mentioned in the Domesday Book, and the present structure is arguably the oldest brick house on the Island. Prior to the Norman Conquest, Merston Manor was owned by the Brictuin family. The manor now belongs to the Crofts family. According to the Post Office the population of the hamlet was at the 2011 Census included in the civil parish of Arreton.
Island Line is a brand of South Western Railway which runs the 8.5-mile (13.7 km) Island Line on the Isle of Wight. A stand-alone franchise from 1996 until 2007, it then became part of the South Western franchise operated by South West Trains until August 2017 and since by South Western Railway.
Merstone railway station, was an intermediate station situated on the edge of Merstone village on the line from Newport to Sandown incorporated by the Isle of Wight Railway in 1868
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.
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.
There are several modes of Transport on the Isle of Wight, an island in the English Channel.
There once existed a 55+1⁄2-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+1⁄2-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+1⁄2 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.