- South Devon Railway (1846-1876)
Infobox rail|railroad_name=South Devon Railway
gauge=7 feet 0¼ inch
length=52.85 miles
excluding branches
start_year=1846
end_year=1876
hq_city=Plymouth
locale=England
successor_line=Great Western Railway The South Devon Railway Company built and operated the
railway fromExeter toPlymouth andTorquay inDevon ,England . It was a RailGauge|84broad gauge railway built byIsambard Kingdom Brunel Chronology
* 1844 South Devon Railway Act passed by parliament
* 1846 opened to Newton Abbot
* 1847 opened to Totnes, atmospheric trains start running
* 1848 atmospheric trains withdrawn, Torquay branch opened
* 1849 line completed to Plymouth
* 1876 amalgamated with the Great Western RailwayHistory
Openings
The South Devon Railway was a RailGauge|84
broad gauge railway engineered byIsambard Kingdom Brunel . [cite book| last = Gregory| first = R H| title = The South Devon Railway| publisher = Oakwood Press| date = 1982| location = Salisbury| id = ISBN 0-853612-86-2]The first section of the line to be opened was from
Exeter toTeignmouth on30 May 1846 . The line was extended toNewton Abbot on30 December 1846 and reachedTotnes on20 June 1847 . It reached a temporary station at Laira on the outskirts ofPlymouth on5 May 1848 and finally reached the permanent terminus at Plymouth on2 April 1849 . The company built its offices outside this station.The line was extended the short distance into the new
Plymouth Great Western Docks in1850 and in1853 opened a branch to the older Plymouth harbour at Sutton Pool by converting a part of thePlymouth and Dartmoor Railway to broad gauge.Atmospheric trains
The railway was designed to be worked by atmospheric power which enabled a cheaper route to be taken, making use of steeper gradients and smaller curves than was considered practical with steam locomotives at that time. [cite book| last = Kay| first = Peter| title = Exeter - Newton Abbot: A Railway History| publisher = Platform 5 Publishing| date = 1991| location = Sheffield| id = ISBN 1-8725-2442-7]
Atmospheric trains started carrying passengers on
13 September 1847 but the service was withdrawn on9 September 1848 . The failure of the system resulted in financial difficulties for the company for many years, although arrangements with local businessmen such asGeorge Hennet allowed the provision of additional stations and rolling stock.The remains of several engine houses can still be seen alongside the line.
Branches and extensions
A branch was opened from Newton Abbot to
Torquay on18 December 1848 . This line was extended as the independentDartmouth and Torbay Railway on2 August 1859 , finally reachingKingswear on16 August 1864 . [cite book| last = Potts| first = C R| title = The Newton Abbot to Kingswear Railway (1844 - 1988)| publisher = Oakwood Press| date = 1998| location = Oxford| id = ISBN 0-853613-87-7]In the meantime, Plymouth had become a joint station with the opening of the
Cornwall Railway on4 May 1859 , [cite book| last = MacDermot| first = E T| title = History of the Great Western Railway, volume II 1863-1921| publisher =Great Western Railway | date = 1931| location = London] and theSouth Devon and Tavistock Railway on22 June 1859 . This latter line was extended by theLaunceston and South Devon Railway on1 July 1865 . [cite book| last = Anthony| first = GH| coauthors = Jenkins, SC| title = The Launceston Branch| publisher = Oakwood Press| date = 1997| location = Headington| id = ISBN 0-853614-91-3]Other independent branches were the
Moretonhampstead and South Devon Railway from Newton Abbot on4 July 1866 and theBuckfastleigh, Totnes and South Devon Railway which opened to Ashburton on1 May 1871 and added a branch to Totnes Quay on10 November 1872 . The South Devon Railway had also added a quayside branch, to theExeter Canal at City Basin on17 July 1867 .ubsequent history
The company was amalgamated with the
Great Western Railway on1 February 1876 , shortly after which theLondon and South Western Railway arrived in Plymouth and a joint station was opened at North Road.The gauge was converted to RailGauge|ussg standard gauge on
21 May 1892 . Previous to this, the line from Tavistock Junction to North Road in Plymouth had been mixed gauge to allow the London and South Western trains to travel over the broad gauge tracks. Similarly, one of the two tracks from Exeter as far as City Basin had been mixed. It is interesting to note that the conversion to standard gauge for the entire Exeter to Plymouth section was carried out after the last broad gauge train that ran to Plymouth on Friday20 May had returned empty to Swindon depot (where it was immediately scrapped). The work was complete ready for the first standard gauge train to run on Monday23 May .The Great Western Railway was nationalised on
1 January 1948 . It completed the doubling of the line and introduced a more intensive suburban service in Plymouth in1904 , along with several small new stations.Route
After leaving the
Bristol and Exeter Railway station at Exeter, the line crosses theRiver Exe and then passes through the suburbs ofExeter along a stoneviaduct . Once out in the countryside it follows the river down toDawlish Warren where it turns along the sea wall toTeignmouth and then follows theRiver Teign toNewton Abbot , where the company's workshops were located.Beyond Newton the line climbs up a steep gradient to Dainton Tunnel, then drops down to cross the
River Dart atTotnes . It then climbs steeply up to Rattery and then skirts the southern edge ofDartmoor before dropping down a steep gradient atHemerdon to terminate nearly back at sea level inPlymouth .tations
* Exeter to Plymouth (including those opened by the Great Western Railway after 1876)
** Exeter St Davids (joint with theBristol and Exeter Railway )
** Exeter St Thomas
** Exminster (1852 - 1967)
** Starcross
** Dawlish Warren (opened 1905)
** Dawlish
** Teignmouth
** Newton (later renamed Newton Abbot)
** Totnes
** Brent
** Wrangaton (named Kingsbridge Road 1849 - 1893)
** Bittaford Platform (1907 - ????)
** Ivybridge (closed, later reopened on a new site)
** Cornwood (1852 - ????)
** Plympton (closed 1959)
** Laira Halt (1904 - 1930)
** Laira (1848 - 1849)
** Lipson Vale Halt (1904 - 1942, joint with the Southern Railway)
** Mutley (1871 - 1939, joint with theLondon and South Western Railway )
**Plymouth railway station (opened 1877, joint with theLondon and South Western Railway )
** Plymouth (Millbay) (closed 1966, joint withCornwall Railway )
* Torquay branch
** Kingskerswell (1853 - 1964)
** Torquay (later renamed Torre)Locomotives
"Main article
South Devon Railway locomotives The company hired locomotives from the
Great Western Railway to haul their trains until the atmospheric system was ready for operation. In the event, locomotives were needed on a more permanent basis and so a series of contracts were entered into with contractors to provide the power for the trains. From1867 the company bought the locomotives and operated them.The South Devon Railway also operated all the connecting branches in Devon and so their locomotives operated on these. The Cornwall Railway also contracted their motive power from the same company as the South Devon Railway. From
1867 the South Devon Railway also bought the Cornwall Railway locomotives and operated them as a single fleet with their own, and also the ones now purchased for theWest Cornwall Railway .Most of the locomotives were
4-4-0 tank engines for passenger trains and0-6-0 tank engines for goods trains. Later some smaller locomotives were purchased for branch lines and the dock branches. [cite book| title = The Locomotives of the Great Western Railway, Part 2: Broad Gauge| publisher = The Railway Correspondence and Travel Society| date=1953| id = ISBN 0-90686-790-8] [cite book| last = Waters| first = Laurence| title = The Great Western Broad Gauge| publisher = Ian Allan Publishing| date = 1999| location = Hersham| id=ISBN 0-906867-90-8]References
Further reading
*cite book| last = Beck| first = Keith| coauthor = Copsey, John| title = The Great Western in South Devon| publisher = Wild Swan Publication| date = 1990| location = Didcot| id = ISBN 0-906867-90-8
*cite web | last =Mosley | first =Brian | title =South Devon Railway | work =Encyclopedia of Plymouth History | publisher =Plymouth Data | url =http://www.plymouthdata.info/RAIL-South%20Devon.htm | accessdate = 2008-07-22
* Records of the South Devon Railway and its successors can be consulted atThe National Archives
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