Launceston Steam Railway
The Launceston Steam Railway is a 1 ft 11 1⁄2 in (597 mm) narrow gauge railway, in Cornwall, England. The railway operates from the town of Launceston to Newmills, where there is a farm park; it is 2 1⁄2 miles (4.0 km) long. The railway is built on the trackbed of the former standard gauge North Cornwall Railway.[1][2]
Launceston Steam Railway | |
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Locale | Launceston, Cornwall, UK |
Terminus | Launceston |
Commercial operations | |
Name | North Cornwall Railway |
Original gauge | 4 ft 8 1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge |
Preserved operations | |
Owned by | The Spice Settlement Trust Co. Ltd |
Operated by | The Spice Settlement Trust Co. Ltd |
Stations | 4 |
Length | 2 1⁄2 miles (4 km) |
Preserved gauge | 1 ft 11 1⁄2 in (597 mm) |
Commercial history | |
Opened | 21 July 1892 |
Closed | 30 January 1967 |
Preservation history | |
1965 | Steam locomotive Lilian rescued |
1983 | Launceston Steam Railway opened |
1995 | Extension to Newmills opened |
History
Standard gauge railway
The first railway to reach Launceston was the Launceston and South Devon Railway, opened in 1865 from Launceston to Plymouth, and later absorbed into the Great Western Railway. In 1886 the London and South Western Railway opened its railway from Halwill Junction, extended to Padstow in stages in the 1890s, and later part of the Southern Railway. The two Launceston stations were side by side: the Great Western closed in 1962 and the Southern in 1966.
Narrow gauge revival
In 1965, Nigel Bowman, a trainee teacher, rescued the steam locomotive Lilian from the Penrhyn Slate Quarry in North Wales, and restored her to working order at his home in Surrey. He then set about looking for a site to build a railway for Lilian to run on, and settled on Launceston in 1971, after considering a stretch of trackbed from Guildford to Horsham and the Lynton & Barnstaple Railway. Purchase of the trackbed took several years, and the first 1⁄2 mile (0.8 km) of track opened on Boxing Day 1983. The railway was extended progressively, the latest opening to Newmills in 1995 bringing the line to its current 2 1⁄2-mile (4 km) length.
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Route
The LSR starts at a new station just west of the original LSWR station, which is now an industrial estate. Launceston station is the main station on the railway, and the sheds and engineering facilities are located here. The line runs from the station through a cutting, passing under a road bridge and aqueduct carrying a mill leat, before crossing the River Kensey on a two-arch viaduct. The line is now on an embankment and crosses a bridge over a farm track before arriving at Hunt's Crossing, where it is planned to lay a passing loop. After Hunt's Crossing the line crosses two farm crossings and then reaches Canna Park which was the temporary terminus before the extension to Newmills. From Canna Park there is a fairly short run to Newmills, the terminus. Adjacent to the Newmills station is the Newmills Farm Park.
Locomotives
All public train services are operated by the steam locomotives, whilst the internal combustion locomotives are used for maintenance work.
Steam locomotives
Number | Name | Builder | Type | Works Number | Built | Origin | Notes |
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Lilian | Hunslet Engine Company | 0-4-0ST | 317 | 1883 | Penrhyn Quarry | New boiler fitted in 1993 and tender added in 2008. Overhauled 2016 | |
Covertcoat | Hunslet | 0-4-0ST | 679 | 1898 | Dinorwic Quarry | Cab and tender added at Launceston | |
Velinheli | Hunslet | 0-4-0ST | 409 | 1886 | Dinorwic Quarry | Privately owned by James Evans, ex. Inny Valley Railway. Stored at the Ffestiniog Railway where a new boiler is being constructed. | |
Dorothea | Hunslet | 0-4-0ST | 763 | 1901 | Dorothea Quarry | Restored over 22 years by Kay Bowman, first steamed in November 2011 and entered passenger service in 2012. | |
89 | Perseverance | C. Parmenter | 4wVBT | 2004 | Originally constructed on a Hudson wagon chassis, rebuilt with a new chassis in 2010 |
Internal Combustion and Battery Electric
Number | Name | Builder | Type | Works Number | Built | Origin | Notes |
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38 | English Electric | 2w-2-2-2wRE | 761 | 1930 | Post Office Railway | On display in the museum | |
Motor Rail | 4wDM | 5646 | 1933 | Grove Heath, Ripley, Surrey | |||
N. Bowman | 4wBE | 1986 | Inspection trolley | ||||
Launceston Steam Railway | 4wDE | 2004 | Inspection trolley | ||||
Launceston Steam Railway | 4w-4DER | 2010-17 | New build diesel railcar |
Visiting locomotives
Number | Name | Builder | Year Visited | Location | Notes |
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Lilla | Hunslet | 1998 | Ffestiniog Railway | ||
Pearl 2 | A. Civil | 2001 | Golden Valley Light Railway | ||
Dame Ann | Exmoor Steam Railway | 2004 | Wales West Light Railway, Alabama | ||
19 | Sharp Stewart | 2009 & 2019 | Beeches Light Railway | ||
Gertrude | Andrew Barclay Sons & Co. | 2009 | Exmoor Transport | ||
Lyd | Boston Lodge Works | 2010 | Ffestiniog Railway | ||
Roanoke Engineering | 2010 & 2011 | Private | Vertical boilered tram locomotive |
Rolling stock
The railway has four passenger carriages, all built on site and based on those built for the Manx Electric Railway, Torrington and Marland Railway and the Plynlimon and Hafan Tramway. There are also several ex. Royal Naval Armaments Depot box vans, slate wagons and tipping wagons.
References
- "The Launceston Steam Railway". Narrow Gauge Pleasure. Archived from the original on 18 August 2017. Retrieved 17 August 2017.
- "Launceston Steam Railway". British Railway Heritage. Retrieved 18 August 2017.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Launceston Steam Railway. |
- The Railway website
- "Lauceston Steam Railway" (Video) – via YouTube.