Railway archaeology

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An example of an abandoned railway line GlenrockCoalLineOnYuelarbahTrack.JPG
An example of an abandoned railway line

Railway archaeology is the study and enjoyment of relics from past eras of rail transportation (including railways and tramways of all gauges and sizes). The aim of railway archaeology is to learn about the history and see images of the previous appearance of a defunct rail system that became redundant or abandoned and to enjoy searching out these remains and exploring them.

Contents

Railway archaeology comes under the general ambit of the study of the industrial past and therefore is a sub-set of Industrial archaeology.

Societies undertaking railway archaeology

The Railway Archaeological Society, a UK-based group that seems to be defunct.

Light Railway Research Society of Australia is an Australian-based society that was formed in 1961 to promote interest in special-purpose railways. Much of its members' work would fall into the category of Railway archaeology.

Discoveries

London Bridge Station

Archaeologists have discovered hundreds of artefacts at an excavation site under the London Bridge Station. Excavation pits were dug 6 metres (20 ft) deep revealing many artefacts from Roman times. Timber piles that were recorded to be from 59 to 83 AD were used for buildings during the first London Bridge and Medieval floors. The Archaeologists continue excavating the site for more artifacts around the 16th and 18th centuries.[ when? ] [1]

Victorian era

Archaeologists in London have discovered a railway infrastructure near the London tube station created by Isambard Kingdom Brunel, an engineer that is well known for his invention approximately 200 years ago called the Broad-Gauge Great Western Steam Railway. The area has evidence of seven foot-wide broad gauge train tracks and buildings from the 1850s. At the moment, Archaeologists are further researching the site with laser scanning technology for more artefacts of the Victorian-era railway.[ when? ] [2] They are also using a series of 3D models of the architecture of the 1850s buildings in order to identify paths of the railway.

Derbyshire

In May 2013, a group of archaeologists have discovered what is believed as the oldest railway tunnel at Derbyshire, England. The tunnel lies on the route of the Butterley Gangroad, a horse-operated railway built by 1793 to link the Cromford Canal with the limestone quarries at Crich. The line closed in 1933 after being open for over 100 years and the tunnel was sealed up 50 years later in the 1980s. Trevor Griffin, who is project managing the work for the Derbyshire Archaeological Society, said he thought the tunnel could be older than the one regarded as the world's first – which is also in Derbyshire. He said: "The tunnel that was currently generally considered to be the world's oldest was on the Peak Forest Tramway and was built in 1795." The two-year project began in January. The society worked with Wessex Archaeology to reopen the tunnel and made a three-dimensional computer model of the interior using laser scanning. Written evidence suggested the railway was operating by 1793 and Mr Griffin says they were able to prove the line must have run through the tunnel. The Butterley Gangroad, which was engineered by Benjamin Outram, was modernised in the 1840s and turned into a narrow-gauge railway. When the work is completed, the tunnel will be sealed up for further preservation. [3]

See also

Related Research Articles

Tunnel Underground passage made for traffic

A tunnel is an underground passageway, dug through the surrounding soil/earth/rock and enclosed except for entrance and exit, commonly at each end. A pipeline is not a tunnel, though some recent tunnels have used immersed tube construction techniques rather than traditional tunnel boring methods.

Ripley, Derbyshire Town in Amber Valley district, Derbyshire, England

Ripley is a town in the Amber Valley borough of Derbyshire, England. Ripley engineers came up with some early improvements to the railway system.

William Jessop British civil engineer (1745-1814)

William Jessop was an English civil engineer, best known for his work on canals, harbours and early railways in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.

Midland Railway – Butterley

The Midland Railway – Butterley is a heritage railway at Butterley, near Ripley in Derbyshire.

Benjamin Outram was an English civil engineer, surveyor and industrialist. He was a pioneer in the building of canals and tramways.

Peak Forest Tramway

The Peak Forest Tramway was an early horse- and gravity-powered industrial railway system in Derbyshire, England. Opened for trade on 31 August 1796, it remained in operation until the 1920s. Much of the route and the structures associated with the line remain. The western section of the line is now the route of the Peak Forest Tramway Trail.

Stodhart Tunnel

Stodhart Tunnel is a 100-yard (91 m) tunnel on the Peak Forest Tramway at Chapel Milton, Derbyshire. The tunnel stretches under the Chapel-en-le-Firth to Glossop Road. Although one side has been blocked up, it remains one of the oldest rail-related tunnels in the world and was also the site of one of the earliest rail-related accidents, when a laden carriage rolled into two horses, killing them.

Nantlle Railway

The Nantlle Railway was a Welsh narrow gauge railway. It was built to carry slate from several slate quarries across the Nantlle Valley to the harbour at Caernarfon for export by sea. The line provided a passenger service between Caernarfon and Talysarn from 1856 to 1865. It was the first public railway to be operated in North Wales.

Butterley Company English manufactuering company

The Butterley Company was an English manufacturing firm founded as Benjamin Outram and Company in 1790. Portions of it existed until 2009.

Bullbridge Human settlement in England

Bullbridge is a small village in Derbyshire. The Bull bridge accident, in which a railway bridge failed as a goods train was just passing over it, happened here in 1860.

Butterley Tunnel

Butterley Tunnel is a 3,083-yard (2,819 m) disused canal tunnel on the Cromford Canal below Ripley, in Derbyshire, England, opened to traffic in 1794. Along with Butterley Works blast furnaces, part of the canal tunnel and its underground wharf were declared a scheduled monument in 2013.

The decade of the 1790s in archaeology involved some significant events.

Fritchley Human settlement in England

Fritchley is a small village in Derbyshire south of Crich and north of Ambergate. It falls under the civil parish of Crich. To the west of the village is the ruin of a windmill. Fritchley has an active Congregational Church, and there is a Quaker meeting house with an active Quaker Meeting. There is a pub, the Red Lion, but the post office closed in 2009. The village hosts a steam rally each August.

This article lists events relating to rail transport that occurred during the 1790s.

The year 2013 in archaeology involved some significant events.

Fritchley Tunnel is a disused railway tunnel at Fritchley in Derbyshire, England, which is believed to be the oldest surviving example in the world. The tunnel was constructed in 1793 by Benjamin Outram as part of the Butterley Gangroad, altered in the 1840s, and remained in use until the railway closed in 1933. It is a scheduled monument.

Butterley Gangroad

The Butterley Gangroad was an early tramway in Derbyshire of approximately 3 ft 6 in gauge, which linked Hilt's Quarry and other limestone quarries at Crich with the Cromford Canal at Bullbridge. The first railway project of Derbyshire civil engineer Benjamin Outram (1764–1805), the line was originally a horse-drawn and gravity-driven plateway, a form of tramway that Outram popularised. Unlike modern edgeways, where flanges on the wheel guide it along the track, plateways used "L" shaped rails where a flange on the rail guided the wheels.

Ticknall Tramway

The Ticknall Tramway was a 12.8 mi (20.6 km) long 4 ft 2 in gauge horse-drawn plateway terminating at Ticknall, Derbyshire, England. It operated from 1802 to 1913.

Scheduled monuments in Amber Valley

This is a list of scheduled monuments in the district of Amber Valley in the English county of Derbyshire.

References

  1. "Archaeological finds at London Bridge station". www.networkrail.co.uk. Archived from the original on 23 March 2016. Retrieved 28 March 2019.
  2. "Victorian railway infrastructure discovered by archaeologists near London tube station | Culture24". www.culture24.org.uk. Retrieved 28 March 2019.
  3. "Archaeologists find 'world's oldest railway tunnel' in Derbyshire". BBC News. 1 May 2013. Retrieved 28 March 2019.

Bibliography