Wensleydale Railway | |
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Tornado at Newton-le-Willows in May 2019 | |
Locale | North Yorkshire |
Commercial operations | |
Name | Wensleydale Railway |
Original gauge | 4 ft 8+1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge |
Preserved operations | |
Operated by | Wensleydale Railway plc |
Stations | 7 |
Length | 22 miles (35 km) |
Preserved gauge | 4 ft 8+1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge |
Commercial history | |
Opened | between 1848 & 1878 |
Closed to passengers | 26 April 1954 |
Closed | 1992 |
Preservation history | |
Headquarters | Leeming Bar |
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The Wensleydale Railway is a heritage railway in Wensleydale and Lower Swaledale in North Yorkshire, England. It was built in stages by different railway companies and originally extended to Garsdale railway station on the Settle-Carlisle line. Since 2003, the remaining line has been run as a heritage railway. The line runs 22 miles (35 km) between Northallerton West station, about a fifteen-minute walk from Northallerton station on the East Coast Main Line, and Redmire.
Regular passenger services operate between Leeming Bar and Redmire, with a shuttle to Scruton, occasional freight services and excursions travel the full length of the line.
The line formerly ran from Northallerton to Garsdale on the Settle-Carlisle Railway but the track between Redmire and Garsdale has been lifted and several bridges have been demolished, although one of the stated aims of the Wensleydale Railway is to reinstate the line from Redmire to Garsdale. Additionally, a separate proposal exists to link Hawes to Garsdale with a view to providing commuter and tourist services rather than heritage services.
On 26 June 1846, an act of Parliament (the Great North of England and Bedale Branch Railway Act 1846) [1] authorised the Newcastle & Darlington Junction Railway, and its successor the York, Newcastle and Berwick Railway, to build a line between Northallerton and Bedale. [2] The 5+1⁄2-mile (8.9 km) section between Northallerton and Leeming Lane opened on 6 March 1848. [3] [4] The section between Leeming Bar and Bedale that was authorised by the act was not built, due to the collapse of George Hudson's railway interests. [5] This left the railway to terminate just west of the Great North Road in Leeming Bar, with passengers for Bedale being conveyed on the last section by horse and cart. [6]
Liverpool, Manchester and Newcastle-upon-Tyne Junction Railway Act 1846 | |
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Act of Parliament | |
Long title | An Act for making a Railway, to be called "The Liverpool, Manchester, and Newcastle-upon-Tyne Junction Railway," with a Branch to the Town of Hawes. |
Citation | 9 & 10 Vict. c. xc |
Dates | |
Royal assent | 26 June 1846 |
The Bedale and Leyburn Railway, financed by local landowners, was an 11+1⁄2-mile (18.5 km) extension between Leeming Bar and Leyburn that was authorised on 4 August 1853; the section between Leeming Bar and Bedale station opened on 1 February 1855 and the remainder on 28 November 1855 for goods and minerals and 19 May 1856 for passengers. [7] [4] [8] [9] The York, Newcastle and Berwick had become a founder member of the North Eastern Railway (NER) on 31 July 1854, [10] and the Bedale and Leyburn was absorbed into this larger company in 1859. [11]
The Liverpool, Manchester and Newcastle upon Tyne Junction Railway had been proposed in the mid-1840s railway mania to link Settle, Hawes and Askrigg, [12] and the Liverpool, Manchester and Newcastle-upon-Tyne Junction Railway Act 1846 (9 & 10 Vict. c. xc) gave permission for a main line from Elslack, on the Leeds and Bradford Railway, to Scorton on the Richmond branch of the Great North of England Railway, and a branch line to Hawes, [13] [14] but this scheme failed. [15]
In the late 1860s, several competing railways proposed to serve the agricultural land around Hawes. [16] Eventually, an Act of Parliament raised by the Midland Railway that mostly related to the Settle and Carlisle line but included a branch off this line between Garsdale and Hawes was authorised on 16 July 1866. [17] [18] An Act of Parliament raised by the North Eastern Railway for a railway between Leyburn and Hawes was authorised on 4 July 1870, [19] though work did not start until 1874. [20] The section of this railway between Leyburn and Askrigg opened on 1 February 1877; the section between Askrigg and Hawes was opened for goods on 1 June 1878. The Hawes branch of the Settle and Carlisle line was opened for goods on 1 August 1878; the sections between Askrigg and Hawes and between Hawes and Garsdale were both opened for passengers on 1 October 1878. [4] [21] [22] [23] The delays in the section between Hawes Junction and Hawes was down to the heavier engineering required on this section (one tunnel and two viaducts) with steeper gradients. In the months before the section opened, a landslip at Mossdale required extra work to excavate from the line. [24]
At this point, there was a through route between Northallerton and Garsdale. [25] Both companies had running powers over each others' lines; the NER ran passenger trains westwards from Hawes (but no freight) and the Midland only exercised their right to run trains eastwards to Leyburn with occasional excursion traffic. [26]
The line remained a single track branch line, except for the double track section between Leeming Bar and Bedale. Chief commodities transported on the line were coal, milk, and stone. [27] [28] [29] One passenger train each way was operated between Garsdale and Hawes until 14 March 1959 at which point this part of the line closed to all traffic, [30] however, freight continued from Northallerton to Hawes until 1964. [31] On 27 April 1964, the line between Redmire and Hawes closed completely. [30] The track west of Redmire was lifted and many bridges on this section of the line were demolished in 1965. [32] Most freight traffic on the line ceased in 1982, [33] with the exception of the limestone traffic from Redmire to Teesside for steel-making, though this freight flow ceased in December 1992 when British Steel switched its limestone source to Hardendale in Cumbria. [34] As a result of the removal of all but the one daily train, Leyburn loop and signal box were closed. [29] Some excursion tours ran to Redmire in the 1970s, 1980s and early 1990s [35] particularly the DalesRail services in 1977 which prompted interest in a renewed passenger service on the line. [36]
At the opening of the railway to Leyburn in 1856, services consisted of either five or six return journeys. [37] With the eventual opening of the line by 1878, the NER rans five trains per day between Northallerton and Garsdale, with the Midland Railway running an additional daily return train from Hellifield to Hawes, known colloquially as Bonnyface. [25] In the 1880s, the Midland Railway ran two stopping passengers trains on the Settle-Carlisle Line, which would connect with the NER local trains to Northallerton from Hawes Junction (Garsdale). [38] The Midland (and later the LMS) ran a second early morning train to Hawes on a Tuesday only, this was the day of the cattle market in Hawes. [26] The 1896 timetable shows five workings from Northallerton to Hawes, four of which continued on to Hawes Junction. The return number down the valley towards Northallerton was the same; five in total, with four originating at Hawes Junction. [39]
In 1914, services amounted to five daily return trips on the full length of the line. A further two trains went part way; Northallerton to Bedale arriving at 10:07 am, and Northallerton to Leyburn, arriving at 11:47 pm. In the other direction, the two extra trains were Leyburn to Northallerton leaving at 6:10 am and Hawes to Northallerton leaving at 9:05 am. [40] By 1939, three trains ran the full length of the line in both directions, with two extra services either terminating, or starting from Leyburn and Hawes. [41] By 1942, only two trains ran the whole length of the line, but the third service was reinstated by 1950. [42]
After services ceased running eastwards from Hawes in 1954, the Bonnyface became a once-daily train connecting Hawes with Hellifield. [43]
Point | Coordinates (Links to map resources) | OS Grid Ref | Notes |
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Northallerton West | 54°20′24″N1°26′54″W / 54.3400°N 1.4482°W | SE35979396 | |
Ainderby | 54°19′28″N1°29′56″W / 54.3245°N 1.4989°W | SE32689221 | Closed |
Scruton | 54°19′11″N1°32′01″W / 54.3196°N 1.5336°W | SE30439165 | |
Leeming Bar | 54°18′19″N1°33′39″W / 54.3053°N 1.5607°W | SE28689005 | |
Bedale | 54°17′20″N1°35′17″W / 54.289°N 1.588°W | SE26918823 | |
Crakehall | 54°17′52″N1°38′01″W / 54.2979°N 1.6335°W | SE23958920 | Closed |
Jervaulx | 54°17′59″N1°40′31″W / 54.2998°N 1.6753°W | SE21228940 | Closed |
Finghall | 54°18′21″N1°43′06″W / 54.3059°N 1.7182°W | SE18439006 | |
Constable Burton | 54°18′24″N1°44′44″W / 54.3066°N 1.7455°W | SE16659014 | Closed |
Spennithorne | 54°18′22″N1°46′49″W / 54.3060°N 1.7802°W | SE14409006 | Closed |
Leyburn | 54°18′29″N1°49′19″W / 54.3080°N 1.8220°W | SE11679028 | |
Wensley | 54°18′39″N1°52′45″W / 54.3108°N 1.8791°W | SE07969058 | Closed |
Redmire | 54°19′09″N1°55′43″W / 54.3192°N 1.9286°W | SE04749151 |
The Wensleydale Railway Association (WRA) was formed in 1990 with the main aim of restoring passenger services. [44] When British Rail decided to try to sell the line between Northallerton and Redmire following cessation of the quarry trains to Redmire, the WRA decided to take a more proactive role and aimed to operate passenger services itself. The Ministry of Defence (MoD) had an interest in using the line between Northallerton and Redmire to transport armoured vehicles to/from Catterick Garrison. The MoD paid for repairs and restoration of the line and the installation of loading facilities at Redmire, and did not object to WRC taking over the line. A trial train ran in November 1993 and full MoD operations started in July 1996. [45] These military transport trains continue to this day. [46]
In 2000, WRA formed a separate operating company, the Wensleydale Railway plc (WRC), and issued a share offer to raise funds. £1.2 million was raised through this method. Railtrack agreed to lease the line between Northallerton and Redmire to WRC and a 99-year lease was signed in 2003. Passenger services restarted on 4 July 2003 [47] with the stations at Leeming Bar and Leyburn being reopened. In 2004, the stations at Bedale, Finghall and Redmire were reopened. A passing loop was opened at the site of the former Constable Burton station, which enabled the railway to introduce a 2-train service when required. [48] [49]
In 2014, Scruton station was reopened and a new station built at Northallerton West, enabling passenger services to be extended east of Leeming Bar, [50] but this section was closed to passengers again in August 2016 following a collision between a train and a car at a level crossing near Yafforth. [51] It is hoped to recommence services at a future date once work to upgrade level crossing equipment is complete. [52]
In 2016, it was reported that the railway carries over 50,000 people a year and that for every £1 spent on the railway, £4 is spent at one of the towns or villages on the route. [53]
The company's longer-term aim is to reopen the 18 miles (29 km) of line west from Redmire via Castle Bolton, Aysgarth, Askrigg, Bainbridge, Hawes and Mossdale to join up with the Settle-Carlisle Railway Route at Garsdale. [50] A study commissioned by the railway indicated that an initial extension to Aysgarth from Redmire (3 miles (4.8 km)), would generate an extra income of £3.1 million per year into the local economy with an additional £500,000 in annual ticket sales for the railway. [54] The sale of Aysgarth Station and trackbed to a private individual in 2017 allowed the release of funds [55] and the short term plan is to extend some 0.75 miles (1.21 km) to a brand new station serving Castle Bolton. This has been costed at £2 million and is listed in a five-year plan. [56] In order to achieve this, the missing bridge that used to span Apedale Beck to the west of Redmire station will need to be replaced. There was a plan to do so utilising a redundant bridge from the Catterick branch line that was removed during the A1 to A1(M) upgrade in 2015 and stored in Redmire Station car park. [57] However the bridge was subsequently found to be unsuitable and it has been cut up and removed.
In January 2019, Campaign for Better Transport released a report identifying the line which was listed as Priority 2 for reopening. Priority 2 is for those lines which require further development or a change in circumstances (such as housing developments). [58]
In 2019, services were suspended between Leyburn and Redmire due to the deterioration of the track infrastructure. As of 2024, services are still to hopefully resume between the two stations with trains terminating at Leyburn. A fundraising appeal is currently taking place to fund the replacement of the life-expired track. [59]
In late 2019/early 2020, a separate organisation, the Upper Wensleydale Railway, was formed to campaign to reinstate the line between Hawes and Garsdale. [60] The group's objective is to have a timetabled year-round service run by a train operating company, rather than a heritage service. [61] This scheme was shortlisted for funding in the second round of the government's Reverse Beeching Fund, in June 2020. [62]
The Wensleydale Railway plc is responsible for the operation, maintenance and development of the railway line and passenger services. The company has a mixture of employed and volunteer staff.
The Wensleydale Railway Association (Trust) Ltd is a membership organisation and a registered charity [64] that supports the development of the railway through fund raising, volunteer working, providing training and supporting work on heritage structures such as Scruton station and Bedale signal box.
Number & Name | Description | History & Current Status | Livery | Owner(s) | Date | Photograph |
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No. 69023 Joem | Class J72 | Withdrawn for overhaul. [65] [66] | BR Apple Green | North Eastern Locomotive Preservation Group | 1951 |
Class 9F No. 92219 was removed from the railway in December 2020 to a private site in Tebay, subsequently moving to the Strathspey Railway in 2023. Other locos were also moved from the Wensleydale Railway at the same time due to the railway being overcrowded and needing space to operate. [67]
Number & Name | Description | Current Status | Livery | Owner | Date Built | Photograph |
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No. 37250 (D6950) | Class 37 | Operational [68] | EWS | Private Owner. | 1964 | |
No. 33035 (D6553) | Class 33 | Operational | BR Blue | Pioneer Diesels [69] | 1961 | |
No. D9523 [70] | Class 14 | Operational | BR Maroon | 1964 | ||
No. D9513 [70] | Class 14 | Operational | NCB Blue | Private Owner | 1964 | |
No. 03144 | Class 03 | Operational | BR Blue | |||
No. 47714 [71] | Class 47 | Undergoing Repair | Anglia |
The railway also has an 0-6-0 Sentinel Shunter and a Tyne and Wear Metro Shunter WL4.
Both 20169 and 37674, were moved from the Wensleydale Railway in December 2020. [72]
Previously stored or unused locomotives, numbers No. 25313 (D7663), No. 31454, [73] No. 37503 (D6717), [74] [75] No. 60086, [76] and No. 60050 [76] were all cleared from the railway in spring 2021. [77]
In the autumn of 2020, BR Class 144 Nos. 144004 and 144016, were temporarily stored at the railway, awaiting onward transport by road to the Aln Valley Railway. [81] They departed the Wensleydale Railway in December 2020. [82]
The above two accidents required the heritage railway to update and improve its safety management practices. [89]
Wensleydale is a valley in North Yorkshire, England. It is one of the Yorkshire Dales, which are part of the Pennines. The dale is named after the village of Wensley, formerly the valley's market town. The principal river of the valley is the Ure, which is the source of the alternative name Yoredale. The majority of the dale is within the Yorkshire Dales National Park; the part below East Witton is within the national landscape of Nidderdale.
Hawes is a market town and civil parish in North Yorkshire, England, at the head of Wensleydale in the Yorkshire Dales, and historically in the North Riding of Yorkshire. The River Ure north of the town is a tourist attraction in the Yorkshire Dales National Park.
Northallerton railway station is on the East Coast Main Line serving the town of Northallerton in North Yorkshire, England. It is between Thirsk to the south and Darlington to the north. Its three-letter station code is NTR.
Morton-on-Swale is a large village and civil parish in North Yorkshire, England. It lies on the A684 road about 4 miles (6.4 km) west of the county town of Northallerton. It is less than 1 mile (1.6 km) to the village of Ainderby Steeple. As the name suggests it lies on the River Swale.
Leeming Bar railway station is a railway station in Leeming Bar, North Yorkshire, England. It is the penultimate eastern rail passenger station of the Wensleydale Railway, though the line continues towards Northallerton. Trains are timed to link in with Dales and District service buses to Northallerton to connect with the National Rail network.
Bedale railway station is on the Wensleydale Railway and serves the town of Bedale in North Yorkshire, England. The station was opened in 1855, and closed under British Railways in 1954. It was re-opened as part of the heritage Wensleydale Railway in 2004.
Finghall railway station is on the Wensleydale Railway and serves the village of Finghall in North Yorkshire, England. Adjacent to the station is a manually operated gated crossing on the single-track Wensleydale Railway.
Leyburn railway station is on the Wensleydale Railway, a seasonal, heritage service and serves the town of Leyburn in North Yorkshire, England. During the summer months it is served by at least three trains per day; at other times of the year the service is mainly at weekends and public holidays.
Redmire railway station is the current western terminus of the Wensleydale Railway, although it is not currently served by passenger services, and serves the village of Redmire in North Yorkshire, England. Before temporary closure in 2019, it was the second busiest station on the Wensleydale Railway in terms of passenger numbers owing to its status as the western terminus of the line.
Garsdale is a railway station in Cumbria, England, on the Settle and Carlisle Line, which runs between Carlisle and Leeds via Settle. The station, situated 51 miles 29 chains (82.7 km) south-east of Carlisle, serves the village of Garsdale and town of Sedbergh, South Lakeland in Cumbria, and the market town of Hawes, Richmondshire in North Yorkshire. It is owned by Network Rail and managed by Northern Trains.
The A684 is an A road that runs through Cumbria and North Yorkshire, starting at Kendal, Cumbria and ending at Ellerbeck and the A19 road in North Yorkshire. It crosses the full width of the Yorkshire Dales, passing through Garsdale and the full length of Wensleydale.
Hawes railway station is a disused railway station that served the town of Hawes in North Yorkshire, England. It was closed in 1959 and now forms part of the Dales Countryside Museum. Since 2015, the museum has rented the building to a business operating a bike shop and later, also a cafe.
Constable Burton railway station is a disused railway station on the Wensleydale Railway, in North Yorkshire, England. It was built to serve Constable Burton Hall, the village and the farms in this rural area.
Aysgarth railway station is a disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England, near Aysgarth Falls. It was part of the Hawes Branch of the North Eastern Railway from its opening in 1877 until closure in April 1954.
Ainderby railway station was a railway station serving the villages of Ainderby Steeple and Morton-on-Swale in North Yorkshire, England.
Askrigg railway station is a disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England, and served the village of Askrigg. It was located 660 yards (600 m) west of the village, in the neighbouring civil parish of Low Abbotside. It was part of the Wensleydale Railway until it closed. The Wensleydale Railway Association aims to rebuild the railway from Northallerton to Garsdale, with an eventual aim of reopening the intermediate stations.
Jervaulx railway station was a railway station in Newton-le-Willows, North Yorkshire, England. Originally named after this place, it was renamed after Jervaulx, about 4 mi (6 km) to the southwest and known for its former abbey, to distinguish it from Newton-le-Willows in Merseyside. Reputedly the Marquess of Aylesbury was upset by many of his guests arriving at the wrong destination.
Northallerton West is a temporary station built by the Wensleydale Railway as part of plans to link the railway with Northallerton, North Yorkshire, England.
The network of railways in Northallerton, North Yorkshire, England, was constructed by three companies whose lines through the town were built between 1841 and 1852. They were all amalgamated into the North Eastern Railway (NER) which in turn was subsumed into the London and North Eastern Railway in 1923 and British Rail in 1948. British Rail closed two lines, the Wensleydale line in 1954 and a section of the Leeds Northern Railway to Harrogate in 1969. The Wensleydale line was retained as a freight branch and resurrected as a heritage railway in 2003 but the line to Harrogate closed completely. Despite closures and rationalisation, the station still is at a major junction on the East Coast Main Line.
DalesRail is a railway passenger service operated for tourism in the summer months across Cumbria, Lancashire and North Yorkshire, England. The service routinely uses the current freight-only line between Clitheroe and Hellifield, offering the opportunity to travel on a line rarely used by passenger trains. The trains then also traverse the full length of the Settle & Carlisle line. The DalesRail brand has also been used on the Wensleydale Line in the 1970s and 1980s, before that line reopened as a heritage railway.
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