Tarka Valley Railway
Tarka Valley Railway | |
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Torrington Railway Station | |
Terminus | Torrington |
Commercial operations | |
Built by | North Devon Railway |
Original gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) standard gauge |
Preserved operations | |
Stations | 1 |
Length | 300 yards (274 m) |
Preserved gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) standard gauge |
Commercial history | |
Opened | 1872 |
Closed | 25 January 1983 |
Preservation history | |
2008 | Railway society formed |
2013 | Planning approved for 300 yards (274 metres) of track |
Headquarters | Torrington |
Website | |
www |
The Tarka Valley Railway in Devon, England, is a proposed heritage railway based on plans to rebuild the Barnstaple to Halwill Junction railway line. So far only a short demonstration line has been set up, and planning permission was granted for 300 ft (91 metres) of track in the direction of Bideford. The railway has been fenced off from the Tarka Trail ensuring the safety of all involved. Restoration of various items of railway stock is currently under way.
History of the line
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Built by the North Devon Railway, it opened on 18 July 1872, operated by the London and South Western Railway. Torrington railway station operated services to Bideford and Barnstaple, as well as to Exeter St Davids. From 1880 the line connected with the narrow gauge freight only Torrington and Marland Railway. On grouping in 1923 the Torrington to Barnstaple line became part of the Southern Railway (SR). In 1925 the Torrington and Marland Railway was rebuilt as a standard gauge line and opened through to Halwill Junction as the North Devon and Cornwall Junction Light Railway. A passenger service operated until 1965, when the line again reverted to carrying goods only, until the line through Torrington was closed completely.
Milk trains
The SR and later the Southern Region of British Railways ran two regular milk trains up from Torrington every day, which served both the United Dairies creamery and bottling plant at Vauxhall and the Express Dairies creamery at Morden (both in London). Filled by road tankers from the Torridge Vale Dairies, the first train (of eight wagons) left Torrington at 14:47, the second (of six) at 16:37, split due to the weight of the full milk tank wagons. The first train arrived at Clapham Junction in the evening, and reduced its length by half so that it did not block Vauxhall station while unloading. It would then proceed to Vauxhall, and pull into the "down" side platform, where a discharge pipe was provided to the creamery on the other side of the road. There was also pedestrian access from below the station, under the road to the depot, in the tunnel where the pipeline ran. Unloaded trains would then proceed to Waterloo, where they would reverse and return to Clapham Junction to pick up the other half of the train. The procedure was then repeated, so that the entire first milk train was unloaded between the end of evening peak traffic and the start of the following morning. The second train from Torrington would also split at Clapham Junction, but only half of its milk tanks would be hauled to Vauxhall, while the other half were dispatched to the Express Dairies depot at Morden. In the late morning, both trains with empty milk tanks would be combined into one express train, and returned to Torrington. Milk trains from Torrington stopped in 1978, the last milk train on the former SR.[1]
Closure
Torrington railway station was closed for regular passenger services in 1965 under the Beeching Axe. Due to both the china clay and the milk train traffic, freight trains and the occasional passenger special used the line until 1982.
After full closure, the station building was converted to a public house, which it still is.
Preservation
During the 1990s the track was lifted and the station became a public house. The former track bed was not to be built on, in case British Rail decided it wanted to rebuild the line. The ownership of the line was transferred to Devon County Council, who turned it into a cycle trail.[2] The owner of the public house 'The Puffing Billy' started to acquire rolling stock and a small diesel locomotive, and in 2008 the Tarka Valley Railway Group was formed.[2] In 2013 the railway gained planning approval to relay 300 yards of track in the direction of Bideford.
Rolling stock
Name & Number | Image | Notes |
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4000001 "Progress" | Built 1945 by John Fowler manufacturers number 4000001. 60 h.p. 6-cylinder Leyland diesel engine installed in 1977. Hydrostatic drive and braking with Westinghouse air brakes as a secondary system. Progress is currently operational.[3] | |
"Torrington Cavalier" | Ruston Hornsby last one built in 1969. Ran on diesel/electric power for the first time in month April 2021. |
Name & Number | Image | Notes |
---|---|---|
British Rail Class 143
143617 |
Arrived at the railway on November 16th 2022. Currently painted in Unbranded GWR green |
Number | Image | Notes |
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BR Mk1 TSO 3924 | Used as static buffet painted in BR Green.[4] | |
PO 653 4 wheel oil tank | Restored in Bideford gas and coke co livery | |
BR 743169 China clay wagon | ||
BR 954681 Toadfit brake van | Under restoration. going to be used for brake van rides | |
London Transport 402 Steel Hoppper | Arrived July 2022 from swanage railway | |
BR 774178 4 wheel ventilated goods van | Body only. used as a workshop. |
Future
The future plans of the railway are to build the 300 yard extension and expand its presence at Torrington railway station, with the removal of overgrown vegetation. This would mean they can operate short brake van rides. After this, the railway plans to extend the line towards Bideford railway station.[5] Work has started on extension.
See also
- Other local railway attractions:
References
- ^ "The Torrington Milk Train". SVS Films. 21 January 2012.
- ^ a b "Preservation".
- ^ "History".
- ^ "BR 3924 Mk 1 Tourist Second Open built 1954".
- ^ "Future Developments".