- Portishead Railway
The Portishead Railway was a branch line
railway running from Portishead inSomerset to theGreat Western Main Line inBristol ,England .Awdry, Page 19] It was constructed in the 1860s by the Bristol & Portishead Pier and Railway, which was incorporated to build apier and a convert|10|mi|km RailGauge|84broad gauge link to theBristol and Exeter Railway at Bedminster Down. The line closed to regular traffic in 1964, and is currently only used by freight trains from the Great Western Main Line junction at Parson Street to theRoyal Portbury Dock s, via a new spur built in 2000/2.History
The line opened on
12 July 1867 and was extended to the docks on5 July 1879 . In 1876Isambard Kingdom Brunel 'sGreat Western Railway (GWR) took over the Bristol and Exeter Railway and operated the Bristol & Portishead Pier & Railway for 40 percent of the receipts.On
1 July 1885 the GWR bought the Portishead Railway and it became a branch line of the GWR to serve the pier and dock at Portishead, from which Brunel'ssteamships sailed to North America. In 1880 it was converted from the GWR's RailGauge|84 "broad gauge" tostandard gauge . Passenger services were discontinued in 1964 as part of theBeeching Axe , and freight was discontinued in 1981, but the railway was not dismantled.In 1985 a series of steam excursions ran along the line as part of the "GW150" celebrations. This is thought to be the last commercial use before the line was rebuilt.
The route
The railway branches from the mainline at
Bedminster /Ashton Gate in south Bristol and runs north along the south west bank of the River Avon. The first station was Ashton Gate, opened 1906, followed by Clifton Bridge, half a mile south of theClifton Suspension Bridge , near the Cumberland Basin and modern Brunel Way road. In theAvon Gorge the railway runs through a short tunnel where theClifton Suspension Bridge runs overhead. In 1928 a halt was opened at Nightingale Valley, a footpath which leads up to theLeigh Woods suburb of Bristol, but this was closed four years later. The railway then crosses the flood plains south of the Avon estuary on an embankment, passes through another short tunnel and across a viaduct at Pill. Ham Green Halt, serving a now demolished hospital just east of Pill, opened in 1926. There were then stations at Pill, andPortbury . From there the line then runs west to Portishead.In the 1920s a second Portishead Station was built to serve a planned shipyard, though this was never built and the station soon closed. In 1954 the original Portishead station was demolished, to provide space for the second
Portishead power station , and a new station constructed in a new location, lasting only a decade before the line stopped carrying passengers.Reopening of the line
Between 2000 and 2002 the railway was repaired as far as Pill, and a short spur constructed to the
Royal Portbury Dock to transport freight, at a cost of £21 million.Local politicians and organisations have been campaigning to have the remaining 3.3
mile s (5.3km ) repaired and a new station constructed at Portishead. The coastal town largely serves as a dormitory town forBristol workers, and the main route into the city, a single carriageway, theA369 , is often unable to cope with the volume of commuter traffic. When current construction work is completed Portishead will be the largest settlement in the country without a link to the rail network.Fact|date=October 2008 TheDepartment for Transport currently do not support the proposals, estimating the costs to be too high at £17 million, and because of scheduling complications due to its use by freight trains. The 2006-2011 JointLocal Transport Plan reserves £1 million for the project.Current operations
The route is currently served by both English Welsh & Scottish Railway and Freightliner services. The major freight flows along the line are bulk coal and newly delivered vehicles. All services are operated by
class 66 locomotives.Notes
ources
* Awdry, Christopher, (1990). "Encylopaedia of British Railway Companies". London: Guild Publishing.
* Portishead Railway Group, 2006. " [http://www.portisheadrailwaygroup.org/index.html History of the Portishead Railway] ." Accessed2006-04-15 .
* [http://www.theyworkforyou.com/debates/?id=2005-01-24.134.0&m=841 Transcript of House of Commons debate on reopening the railway, 24 January 2005]
* [http://www.greaterbristoltransportplan.org Local Transport Plan] (Ch 3, P 51)External links
* [http://www.portisheadrailwaygroup.org/index.html Portishead Railway Group]
* [http://www.cotch.net/special:search.php?key=Portishead_Railway Photographs of the Portishead Railway]
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