Vale of Clwyd Railway

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Vale of Clwyd Railway
V-o-clwyd.png
Overview
Other name(s)VoCR
StatusClosed
Locale North Wales
Termini
Stations Foryd, Rhuddlan, St Asaph, Llannerch, Trefnant and Denbigh
Service
TypeStandard gauge
Operator(s) London and North Western Railway (from 1867)
History
Commenced23 June 1856 (1856-06-23)
Planned opening23 June 1856 (1856-06-23)
Opened5 October 1858 (1858-10-05)
Completed5 October 1858 (1858-10-05)
Connection to Rhyl1 January 1862 (1862-01-01)
Passengers Closure19 September 1955 (1955-09-19)
Absorbed by LNWR15 July 1867 (1867-07-15)
Closed1 January 1968 (1968-01-01)
Technical
Line length10 mi (16 km)
Number of tracksSingle line with space for double track
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge


The Vale of Clwyd Railway (VoCR) was a standard-gauge line, which connected the settlements of Rhyl, St Asaph and Denbigh in North Wales. It opened in 1858, at first without a connection to the main line at Rhyl, but this was provided in 1862. At Denbigh, a connection could be made on to the Mold and Denbigh Junction Railway. Although the area became popular with holidaymakers from the 1920s, the line never realised its potential; it closed to passengers in 1955 and completely in 1968.

Contents

Conception

The Chester and Holyhead Railway completed its main line in 1850. There was a considerable area of agricultural land south of the line, towards Denbigh, and a number of schemes were put forward to serve the area. The C&HR found itself short of funds to complete its main line, so it was left to independent promoters to put a scheme forward.

This proved to be the Vale of Clwyd Railway, which was authorised by Parliament on 23 June 1856. Contracts for construction were awarded to David Davies and Thomas Savin. [1] [2]

Opening

The line was 10 miles (16 km) in length, built as a single line with space on the formation for double track later. Construction was fairly rapid, and the line opened on 5 October 1858, for passengers and goods. There were four trains each way every weekday. [1] [2] The Denbigh station was a temporary structure, and the permanent building opened in December 1860.

Stations were at Foryd, Rhuddlan, St Asaph, Trefnant and Denbigh. A VoCR director, Whitehall Dod, had the right to stop trains adjacent to his estate at Llannerch, a mile north of Trefnant, until December 1871 when that right expired. [note 1] There was also a siding for a brickworks at the locality. The siding was extended during World War II for use in connection with an army stores depot. [2] [3] [4]

Extension to Rhyl

In 1860, the Company sought powers to enter Rhyl station with their trains; the station was on the main line, now controlled by the London and North Western Railway. The LNWR was agreeable, but demanded reciprocal running powers to Denbigh, obviously an unequal trade; as a result, the deal did not go ahead.

Hugh Robert Hughes of Kinmel Hall owned land at Foryd beach and a pier there, from which he operated steamers. He had hoped that the Vale of Clwyd Railway would run to his pier and make connections there, but this would have involved crossing the Chester and Holyhead Railway main line; that company objected, chiefly because they feared competing steamer traffic to Liverpool from Hughes' pier. However, the VoCR had laid a temporary branch siding to the beach from their Foryd station, for the purpose of acquiring track ballast. Hughes took possession of the branch siding, saying that he would use it for ordinary railway purposes and connect with the VoCR at Foryd station.

The C&HR forcibly ejected Hughes' men from the branch line, but Hughes secured an injunction in his favour and the short branch was operated as a full railway to and from the pier. The feared steamers to Liverpool operated in connection. However, the steamer operator discovered that the VoCR was negotiating with the LNWR to lease the line to the larger company; other internal hostilities surfaced and the VoCR was riven with dissension. [2]

Connections to other lines

Denbigh was not destined to be a terminus; the Denbigh, Ruthin and Corwen Railway was authorised on 23 July 1860. This, coupled with the Vale of Llangollen Railway and an extension to Corwen, meant that a viable route from Ruabon was likely to be created.

At this time, there was every likelihood of the Great Western Railway reaching Rhyl, an important regional centre, along the lines from Ruabon via Llangollen and Corwen. For some time this seemed inevitable but, in time, the GWR lost interest and the scheme was not pursued. [5]

On 30 June 1862, the extension sought by the pier owner Hughes was passed in Parliament; now the VoCR could legally reach the beach and a new pier, and a proper junction with the C&HR line (now under LNWR control) could be made. Goods traffic started in the latter half of 1864 and, after some difficulty, the extension was passed for passenger operation, but this was never acted upon. [6]

Train services

In December 1862, the Oswestry Advertiser newspaper reported that additional passenger services would be provided by attaching passenger coaches to goods trains:

"much increased accommodation, making... six trains daily between Rhyl and Denbigh and five between Ruthin and Rhyl... the Company do not of course guarantee exact time with the goods trains, having made these arrangements at the request of several inhabitants... in the Vale." [7]

In 1864, the LNWR was formally authorised to work the VoCR line, as they had been doing informally, and the company was absorbed by the LNWR by Act of 15 July 1867. [1] [8]

Bradshaw's Guide for 1895 listed the train service; there were six trains each way between Denbigh and Rhyl, calling at all stations. Most of the trains made reasonable connections at Denbigh. [9]

From railway grouping to closure

At the beginning of 1923, the railways of Great Britain were grouped into four new large companies, under the Railways Act 1921. The LNWR was a constituent of the new London Midland and Scottish Railway. Seaside holidays were increasingly popular and the North Wales coast was an attractive destination. The passenger trains service was augmented accordingly and seventeen trains ran each way daily in the summer in the 1930s. [10]

Nevertheless, the line remained a rural outpost and use of the line declined; it was closed to passengers on 19 September 1955 and completely from 1965. [10]

Today, only the northern section of the trackbed remains intact as far as the North Wales Expressway, just before St Asaph station.

Station list

Vale of Clwyd Railway
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Foryd Pier
Foryd
renamed Kinmel Bay
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BSicon STRl+4.svg
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BSicon exSTR+4.svg
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BSicon CONTf@Fq.svg
Rhyl
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BSicon exHST.svg
Foryd
original location
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St George
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Rhuddlan
Faenol Bach
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BSicon exHST.svg
St Asaph
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Llannerch
(private station)
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Trefnant
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quarry
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Denbigh
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Notes

  1. Baughan refers to this on page 67 as Nannerch, but he is confusing the name with a station between Mold and Denbigh. Llannerch is properly referred to by Rear, page 57.

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References

  1. 1 2 3 Donald J Grant, Directory of the Railway Companies of Great Britain, Matador, Kibworth Beauchamp, 2017, ISBN   978 1785893 537, page 575
  2. 1 2 3 4 Peter E Baughan, A Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain: volume 11: North and Mid Wales, David St John Thomas, Nairn, 1976, ISBN   0946537 59 3, pages 65 to 68
  3. John Peile, Biographical Register of Christ's College, 1505 to 1905, volume II, Cambridge University Press, 1913, page 382
  4. Bill Rear, From Chester to Holyhead: the Branch Lines, Oxford Publishing Company, Hersham, 2003, ISBN   0 86093 569 8, page 57
  5. Baughan, page 68
  6. Baughan, page 72
  7. Oswestry Advertiser, December 1862, quoted in Baughan, page 74
  8. Baughan, pages 74 and 75
  9. Bradshaw's Rail Times for Great Britain and Ireland: December 1895, reprint, Middleton Press, Midhurst, 2018, ISBN   978 1 908174 11 6
  10. 1 2 Baughan, page 79
  11. Michael Quick, Railway Passenger Stations in England, Scotland and Wales: A Chronology, the Railway and Canal Historical Society, Richmond, Surrey, 2002