- Highland Railway
[
Glasgow Museum of Transport .]The Highland Railway (HR) was one of the smaller British railways before the
Railways Act 1921 ; it operated north of Perth railway station inScotland and served the farthest north of Britain. Formed by amalgamation in 1865,Harmsworth (1921)] it was absorbed into theLondon, Midland and Scottish Railway in 1923.Extent
The Highland Railway served the counties of Caithness, Sutherland, Ross & Cromarty, Inverness, Perth, Nairn, Moray and Banff. Southward it connected with the
Caledonian Railway at Stanley Junction, north of Perth, and eastward with theGreat North of Scotland Railway at Boat of Garten, Elgin, Keith and PortessieConolly (2004)] . The headquarters were at Inverness,Harmsworth (1921)] as were the workshops, Lochgorm WorksConolly (2004)] .History
*The "
Inverness and Nairn Railway (INR)": 15 miles (24km) in length, was incorporated in 1854; the first train ran5 November 1855 ; it was the original part of the HR;
*A railway between Nairn and Keith opened in 1858; in 1861 this was amalgamated with the INR to become the "Inverness and Aberdeen Junction Railway (I&AJR)";
*Two railways were to follow:
** theInverness and Perth Junction Railway , opened in 1863, which connected with the I&AJR at Forres, and which in turn joined thePerth and Dunkeld Railway (opened7 April 1856 ) at Dunkeld, completing the main line of the HR, which itself came into being in 1865;
*Lines to north were also being opened; all were merged with the HR by 1884:
**23 March 1856 theInverness and Ross-shire Railway , Inverness to Invergordon; it was extended to Bonar Bridge in 1864;
**13 April 1868 : theSutherland Railway , Bonar Bridge to Golspie;
**19 August 1870 : theDingwall and Skye Railway , Dingwall to Stromeferry and Kyle of Lochalsh opened throughout; the
**19 June 1871 : theDuke of Sutherland's Railway , Golspie to Helsmdale built by theDuke of Sutherland ;
**28 July 1874 : theSutherland and Caithness Railway , Helmsdale to Wick and Thurso completed the line.
**1 November 1898 : the "direct line" between Aviemore and Inverness opened, reducing the journey from 60 miles (96km) to 35 miles (56km).
* There were also several branch lines of the HR. From the south, these were:
** the Aberfeldy Branch;
** theBuckie and Portessie Branch : opened1 August 1884 , closed7 August 1915 (to passengers and central section between Aultmore and Buckie totally}
** the Fochabers Town branch: closed14 September 1931
** the Hopeman branch: also closed 14 September 1931
** the Findhorn Railway: opened 1860, closed 1869 as being a failure
** the Fort George branch: also closed 14 September 1931
** theFortrose Branch : closed1 October 1951
** the Strathpeffer Branch: closed to passengers23 February 1946 , closed to freight26 March 1951
* There were twolight railway s opened and run by the HR:
**2 June 1902 : theDornoch Light Railway , again under the auspices of the Duke of Sutherland, 7.5 miles (12km), between The Mound andDornoch ;
**1 July 1903 : TheWick and Lybster Light Railway , 13.5 miles (21.6km). The line was abandoned on3 April 1944 .
* In 1921, the railway comprised 484 miles of line and the company’s capital stood at nearly £7 million.Harmsworth (1921)]Company Officers
Chairman
1911 William Whitelaw
General Manager
*1865-1896 Andrew Dougall
*1896-1898 Charles Steel
*1898-1910 Thomas Wilson
*1911-1922 Robert ParkChief Engineer
The Chief Engineer (CE) of the originally proposed Perth and Inverness Railway was Joseph Mitchell. He held the same post for the Inverness and Nairn Railway, the Inverness and Aberdeen Junction Railway, the Inverness and Perth Junction Railway (that is the three that merged to form the Highland Railway). He relinquished the post in 1863. The work was then carried out by a private company (which just happened to be the one run by Mitchell), an arrangement that was terminated in June 1865 when the merger that formed the Highland Railway took effect.
June 1865 - 1869 J W Buttle (with title of 'Superintendent of Permanent Way'); later CEs included Peter Wilson 1870-1874; Murdoch Paterson 1875-1897; William Roberts 1898-1913 and Alexander Newlands 1914-1922.
Chief Mechanical Engineer
Inverness and Nairn railway
ee also
* Locomotives of the Highland Railway
References
Further reading
* "The Railway Year Book for 1912", The Railway Publishing Company Ltd
*
* H.A. Vallance. "The Highland Railway". ISBN 1-899863-07-9.
*External links
* [http://www.hrsoc.org.uk/ The Highland Railway Society]
* [http://www.railscot.co.uk/Highland_Railway/frame.htm The Highland Railway, includes a map of the system]
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