Newquay and Cornwall Junction Railway
Overview | |
---|---|
Headquarters | Par, Cornwall |
Locale | United Kingdom |
Dates of operation | 1869–1874 |
Successor | Cornwall Minerals Railway |
Technical | |
Track gauge | 7 ft (2,134 mm) |
Length | 3.13 miles (5.04 km) |
The Newquay and Cornwall Junction Railway was a 7 ft (2,134 mm) broad gauge railway intended to link the Cornwall Railway with the horse-worked Newquay Railway. It opened a short section to Nanpean in 1869, the remainder being built by the Cornwall Minerals Railway who took over the company in 1874. Its main traffic has always been china clay.
Chronology
- 1864 Newquay and Cornwall Junction Railway Act
- 1869 Line opened
- 1874 Taken over by the Cornwall Minerals Railway
- 1892 Converted to standard gauge
- 1896 Amalgamated with Great Western Railway
History
Joseph Treffry had opened a tramway to connect mines and pits in the Hendra and St Dennis area of Cornwall in 1849. His tramway was horse-operated and led to Pontsmill, where transshipment was necessary to a canal, also built by Treffry, for onward conveyance to Par Harbour. The practical limitations of his line were insignificant at first, but as time passed were seen to inhibit trade.
The Cornwall Railway opened in 1859, providing a broadly west-to-east line giving easier access to markets for the extracted minerals, but although the lines crossed at Par, there was at first no connection; moreover the Cornwall Railway was built on the broad gauge and Treffry's line on the standard gauge, then usually referred to as "narrow gauge". The Cornwall Railway opened a station at Burngullow in 1863 and this was used as a railhead for some china clay production, which was carted to the station.
On 4 July 1864 the Newquay and Cornwall Junction Railway was authorised by Act of Parliament to build a 5¼ mile line from Burngullow to connect with the St Dennis branch of Treffry's Newquay line.[1] [2] Burngullow is located about 2 miles (3 km) west of St Austell station, on the Cornwall Railway main line. The authorised capital was £36,000.[note 1]
The Company was authorised to make agreements with the Treffry Estate Trustees to convert the Newquay tramway line to broad gauge and take it over, connecting Newquay to the Cornwall Railway. The Company would reach Hendra, "affording direct communication with Newquay, Par, Fowey and Falmouth".[3] Access over the Treffry lines would involve a break of gauge.
In fact difficulties in raising the required funds prevailed for some time; in addition the route was required to be alter; an authorising Act was obtained in 1868 for an 82 chain (1.65 km) deviation, as well as permitting more capital.[2]
At last the short main line (3.5 miles (5.6 km) in length) was opened from Burngullow to Drinnick Mill Clay Works, near Nanpean on 1 July 1869. The Company had exhausted its funds and abandoned plans to extend further.[2][4] The offices for the company were at Par and shared with the Lostwithiel and Fowey Railway.[5][6]
In 1872 it was agreed to lease the line to the newly formed Cornwall Minerals Railway which would complete the connection to the Newquay Railway. It would also convert both this and the Par Tramway for steam engines, and connect these together and with quays at Fowey. The lease took effect from 1 June 1874 but the company never received everything that it had been promised and took legal action against the Cornwall Minerals Railway. The Newquay and Cornwall Junction Railway directors stopped meeting in 1885.
The Great Western Railway took over the operation of the Cornwall Minerals Railway from 1 October 1877 and was amalgamated with this company on 1 July 1896. In the meantime, the line had been converted to 4 ft 8+1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge along with all the other lines west of Exeter over the weekend of 21 May 1892, finally enabling through trains from Burngullow to St Dennis Junction.[7]
The railway has only ever carried goods traffic. The line no longer extends to St Dennis, but the original line still carries china clay from Parkandillack to Fowey.
Locomotives
The contractor who built the line, William West of St Blazey, also contracted to operate the railway. The Cornwall Minerals Railway operated the same or similar locomotives, but these were withdrawn when the Great Western Railway took over operation. An engine shed was provided at Burngullow. It is unclear how many locomotives were operated but two have been positively identified.[8]
- Newquay, an 0-4-2ST which had previously worked the South Wales Mineral Railway.
- Phoenix, a tank engine which may have come from Roland Brotherhood, an engineer at Chippenham.
Present day trains are usually powered by EWS Class 66 locomotives.
Notes
- ^ Date of Act according to Carter; Vaughan says 14 July 1964. Vaughan quotes the capital as £27,000; probably borrowing powers of £9,000, the usual one-third proportion, was authorised, making the £36,000 total.
References
- ^ E F Carter, An Historical Geography of the Railways of the British Isles, Cassell, London, 1959
- ^ a b c John Vaughan, The Newquay Branch and its Branches, Oxford Publishing Company, Sparkford, 1991, ISBN 0-86093-470-5
- ^ From a prospectus partly quoted in Vaughan, page 127; there is ambiguity whether this prospectus was issued prior to the first Act, or after it.
- ^ Barton, RM (1966). A History of the Cornish China-clay Industry. Truro: D Bradford Barton.
- ^ Bradshaw's Railway Manual, Shareholders' Guide and Directory (1871).
- ^ E T MacDermot, History of the Great Western Railway, vol II, published by the Great Western Railway, London, 1931: page 289
- ^ Alan Bennett, The Great Western Railway in Mid Cornwall, Kingfisher Railway Publications, Southampton, 1988, ISBN 0-946184-53-4
- ^ Reed, P.J.T. (February 1953). White, D.E. (ed.). The Locomotives of the Great Western Railway, Part 2: Broad Gauge. Kenilworth: The Railway Correspondence and Travel Society. p. B49. ISBN 0-901115-32-0. OCLC 650490992.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help)
Further reading
- Papers relating to the Newquay and Cornwall Junction Railway can be consulted at The National Archives at Kew. The minute books are believed to have been destroyed but an index to them is held.