- Hendre-Ddu Tramway
Infobox rail
railroad_name=Hendre-Ddu Tramway
gauge=RailGauge|24
start_year=1867
end_year=1954
length=3½ miles
hq_city=Aberangell
locale=Wales
successor_line=abandonedThe Hendre-Ddu Tramway was an industrial narrow gauge
railway built in 1867 to connect the Hendre-Ddu Slate quarry toAberangell station on theMawddwy Railway . It consisted of a main line 3½ miles long and several branch lines and spurs serving other quarries, local farms and the timber industry.History
Hendre Ddu slate quarry opened in the 1850s, and in 1864 the Hendre Ddu Slate and Slab Co. was established by Sir Edmund Buckley. The Company specialised in slate slabs for billiard table beds. The standard gauge Mawddwy Railway, opened in 1867 connected the Cambrian Railway at Cemmaes Road to Dinas Mawddwy, passing through the small village of Aberangell. Sir Edmund Buckley built the Hendre Ddu Tramway to carry slate from his quarry down to Aberangell station. Several other quarries had branches and spurs onto the Tramway, as well as a brickworks, a sawmill and several local farms. The slate slabs for billiard tables were carried on special trestle wagons similar to those on the nearby
Corris Railway . Quarry workers rode in open cars which were occasionally also used for tourist excursions. During the First World War a branch was laid in lightweight portable "Jublilee" track from Cefn Gwyn along Cwm Caws for timber extraction.When this work was finished in 1917 the track was lifted and re-laid on the trackbed of a long closed branch to Coed y Chwarel. It is believed that
Baguley petrol locomotive No. 774 was used on this line. This locomotive is now preserved as part of the collection of theNarrow Gauge Railway Museum .During 1940 the Coed y Chwarel branch was again re-laid using Jubilee track for further timber extraction. This line was not lifted until October 1954 although the Hendre Ddu Tramway itself was converted into a road in 1941 for the safer conveyance of munitions which were stored in the Hendre Ddu Quarries during the war and for some years afterwards.
Operation
The wagons descended by gravity and were hauled back by horses, later by a road tractor and then a Simplex petrol loco was used from 1922.
Locomotives
References
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*External links
* [http://www.ngrm.org.uk/narrow_gauge/narrow_gauge.php?railway_id=71&PHPSESSID=76e918b0bdf07911b6ff00ec0011d936 Narrow Gauge Railway Museum entry about the tramway]
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