Exeter to Plymouth railway of the LSWR
The Exeter to Plymouth railway of the London and South Western Railway (LSWR) was the westernmost part of a route competing with that of the Great Western Railway (GWR) and its 'associated companies' from London and Exeter to Plymouth in Devon, England. Whereas the GWR route from Exeter followed the coast to Newton Abbot and then went around the southern edge of Dartmoor, the LSWR route followed the northern and western margins of Dartmoor, passing through the towns of Crediton, Okehampton, and Tavistock.
Exeter to Plymouth via Okehampton | |
---|---|
Overview | |
Status | Partly closed |
Owner | London and South Western Railway |
Locale | Devon |
Termini | Exeter Queen Street Plymouth Friary |
Stations | 24 |
History | |
Opened | 1851-1891 |
Closed | 1968 (in part) |
Technical | |
Number of tracks | 2 |
Track gauge | 4 ft 8 1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge |
The route was constructed piecemeal by independent companies, in most cases supported by the LSWR. LSWR trains first reached Plymouth in 1876 and the route took on its final form in 1891. The central part of the line closed in 1968 leaving just local services at either end. After storms damaged the tracks in 2014 at Dawlish and disrupted services, Network Rail considered reopening the section of the line from Plymouth to Tavistock: this would create an inland alternative to the Plymouth-Exeter mainline that runs along the coast. Plans were not taken forwards.
History
Railways to Exeter
The broad gauge Bristol and Exeter Railway (B&ER) was the first line to reach Exeter. It had reached St Davids station in Exeter in 1844 and was allied with the Great Western Railway (GWR) with which it connected at Bristol, forming a continuous route from London. The South Devon Railway (SDR) continued the line westward from Exeter to reach Plymouth in 1848. These broad gauge 'associated companies' formed a powerful group dominating rail services to Devon and Cornwall.[1]
The London and South Western Railway (LSWR) had started out as the London and Southampton Railway, but the Company soon expanded and changed its name to reflect greater ambitions. Extensions and branch lines were soon built around the core route, but westward extension into Devon and Cornwall was a strategic objective that took much longer to achieve.[2][3]
The LSWR finally opened to Exeter on 19 July 1860 after considerable difficulty in gaining parliamentary approval and financial support. Its Exeter station was at Queen Street (now Exeter Central), in the city centre and a mile or so east of the B&ER line.[2]
West from Exeter
Having secured a presence in Exeter, the LSWR saw the opportunity to expand westward by leasing two local companies, the Exeter and Crediton Railway (E&CR) and the North Devon Railway (NDR). These were broad gauge companies originally allied to the B&ER. The E&CR branched off the B&ER main line at Cowley Bridge, some distance north of the St Davids station, and the NDR was an extension of it at Crediton. The chairman of the E&CR was William Chapman, who was also the Chairman of the LSWR; the line had opened 12 May 1851 and was leased to the B&ER.
The ceremonial opening of the NDR from Crediton to Barnstaple took place on 12 July 1854, but the full public opening was delayed until 1 August 1854.
To reach them the LSWR built a new line from Queen Street (converting it to a through station) to St Davids, from where it was granted running powers northwards over the B&ER to Cowley Bridge Junction, where the Crediton line branched off westwards.[4]
The Exeter and Crediton had been authorised by Act of Parliament on 21 July 1845, and opened on 12 May 1851. It was a broad gauge line operated by the B&ER, which owned 40% of the company’s shares, but the LSWR owned the other 60% and leased it from 1 February 1862. LSWR trains began running from Queen Street to Crediton two days later, after which time the B&ER only operated freight trains on the line. A third rail was laid along the line between St Davids and Crediton to give a 'mixed gauge' on which trains of either gauge could run. The Exeter and Crediton company was sold to the LSWR in 1879.[4]
The route was continued north of Crediton by the North Devon Railway which had opened on 12 July 1854. This too was a broad gauge line but it was operated by Thomas Brassey, the engineer who built it. This line was leased to the LSWR from 1 August 1862 which then ran its trains right through to Barnstaple and Bideford. At first it had to use Brassey’s broad gauge stock, but the line was also mixed gauge from 2 March 1863. The North Devon was amalgamated into the LSWR on 1 January 1865.[4]
On to Plymouth
The Okehampton Railway, an independent company supported by the LSWR, was authorised on 17 July 1862 to build a line from Coleford Junction (north west of Crediton) to Okehampton. Before the line was built it had been leased to the LSWR and an extension authorised to Lidford. In 1864 it was renamed as the Devon and Cornwall Railway and construction finally started. It opened slowly in sections: from Coleford Junction to North Tawton on 1 November 1865; from there to Okehampton Road (later renamed Sampford Courtenay) on 8 January 1867; to Okehampton itself on 3 October 1871; and finally to Lidford on 12 October 1874.[4] (This was spelt Lydford from 3 June 1897.)[5] The Devon and Cornwall Company had been taken over by the LSWR in 1872, before its line was complete.[6]
Lidford was chosen as the terminus because from there a connection with the SDR's Tavistock branch line could give LSWR trains access to Plymouth via Tavistock. However it was only on 17 May 1876 that the connection was made and trains could run through to Plymouth. This was a broad gauge line so, as at Crediton, a third rail was added to create a mixed gauge route.[5]
Running over the SDR line, the trains of the LSWR entered Plymouth from the east. Trains called at the cramped and inconvenient Mutley station, but on 28 March 1877 a new, more spacious, North Road station was opened a little further west. LSWR trains now used this as their principal Plymouth calling point, although some trains continued to call at Mutley. Both stations were shared with the broad gauge companies.[7] LSWR trains continued to the company's own Devonport and Stonehouse terminus.[8] At this time Devonport and Stonehouse were independent towns and the former, with its naval dockyards, was an important traffic source. To reach their station they used the 'Cornwall Loop', a newly built connection from the SDR to the Cornwall Railway which avoided a reversal at their Plymouth Millbay terminus.[9]
Having obtained a foothold in both Plymouth and Devonport, the LSWR now set about improving its facilities in the area so that it could reduce its dependency on the broad gauge companies. On 1 February 1878 it opened its own goods station at Friary on the east side of Plymouth. This used a connection over the SDR's Sutton Harbour branch, which made an east-facing connection with the main line at Laira Junction that allowed LSWR goods trains to run directly from the Lidford line to Friary. The LSWR opened a short extension from Friary to the wharves at nearby Sutton Harbour on 22 October 1879.[7]
In 1880 it made another line from near Friary to the Plymouth and Dartmoor Railway's old 4 ft 6 in (1,372 mm) gauge route to Cattewater, which gave it access to more quays. Meanwhile, on the other side of Plymouth, the Stonehouse Pool Improvement Company had been formed to create a quay that large vessels could use at all states of the tide. It proposed to build a railway connection to Devonport station which the LSWR agreed to rent, and this opened for freight traffic on 1 March 1886.[7] From 1904 to 1910 transatlantic passengers joined fast London boat trains at the quay.[10]
Independent route
Access to Plymouth was inconvenient as LSWR trains had to run over the GWR's lines from Lidford to Plymouth and Devonport, most of which was just a single-track where GWR trains were given precedence. In 1882 an Act of Parliament was passed to allow the construction of independent lines alongside the GWR route from Lydford to a new station in the centre of Plymouth. This scheme was replaced the following year by that of another independent company supported by the LSWR, the Plymouth, Devonport and South Western Junction Railway (PD&SWJR). This obtained its Act on 25 August 1883 for a new railway from Lidford which would pass to the west of Tavistock then down the valley of the River Tamar to reach Plymouth. In 1889 the idea of a central station in Plymouth was abandoned in favour of running to Devonport and converting Friary to a passenger terminus.[11]
The PD&SWJR line opened on 2 June 1890[12] and this changed Devonport into a through station. The new west-facing connection to Friary was brought into use on 1 April 1891. Trains to London now started from Friary, ran through Plymouth from east to west, called at North Road, and continued westwards through Devonport before heading north alongside the Tamar.[11] They might have passed a GWR train for London running in the other direction through Plymouth; at Exeter this anomaly was repeated when they ran southwards from Cowley Bridge to St Davids, where GWR trains to London ran northwards.
In 1897 a branch was opened from Friary to Turnchapel. Competition from tramways in Plymouth and Devonport in the first decade of the twentieth century spurred the company into constructing several new stations in the towns and running an intensive suburban railmotor service.[8]
The GWR had amalgamated with the B&ER, SDR and Cornwall Railway during the 1870s and 1880s, and converted their lines to standard gauge in 1892. In the weeks before the conversion, some of the new rolling stock required was worked over the LSWR to reach the Plymouth area, and during the two days that the line was closed they also sent the important London mail trains by this route.[1]
After the LSWR
Unlike the other companies supported by the LSWR, the PD&SWJR remained an independent company until, in 1923, it and the LSWR became a part of the new, larger Southern Railway. This in turn became the Southern Region of British Railways in 1948, at the same time as the GWR became the Western Region of British Railways. During the 1950s and 1960s there were many boundary changes between the two regions, but eventually all the former LSWR lines in Devon and Cornwall became part of the Western Region. Traffic was now concentrated on the former GWR routes. The last timetabled through service, from Brighton to Plymouth, used the route in March 1967.[11] Friary station had been closed to passengers on 15 September 1958 but was retained as the city's principal goods depot; passenger trains then used North Road as their terminus.[8] Devonport station closed on 7 September 1964 and trains were diverted to the former GWR route between Plymouth and St Budeaux. Here they regained the LSWR route by a connection that had been opened on 2 March 1941 as a precaution against damage on either line during World War II.[13] The line onwards to Bere Alston was retained as access to the Gunnislake branch, which is nowadays marketed as the Tamar Valley Line.[14]
Trains between Exeter and Plymouth via Okehampton were withdrawn from 6 May 1968. The 20-mile (32 km) section between Meldon Quarry and Bere Alston was lifted, and between Meldon and Okehampton the line was only retained for freight trains. Okehampton to Exeter passenger services were withdrawn on 5 June 1972. This left just Barnstaple line services between Exeter and Yeoford (the Tarka Line)[15]
Since 1997 a limited service has run between Okehampton and Exeter on Sundays during the summer.[8] The heritage trains of the Dartmoor Railway also operate between Meldon Quarry, Okehampton and Sampford Courtenay at other times. The Granite Way rail trail follows the route over Meldon, Lake, Wallabrook and Tavistock viaducts. The other two viaducts, at Lydford and Shillamill, remain intact.
Possible reopening of Plymouth to Tavistock section
There are proposals to reopen the line from Tavistock to Bere Alston for a through service to Plymouth.[16] In the wake of widespread disruption caused by damage to the mainline track at Dawlish by coastal storms in February 2014, Network Rail are considering reopening the Tavistock to Okehampton and Exeter section of the line as an alternative to the coastal route.[17] The line was listed in 2019 by Campaign for a Better Transport as a 'priority 1' candidate for reopening.[18]
Geography
Engineering features
As the line leaves Exeter Central it drops at 1 in 37 and passes through a tunnel to reach St Davids station, where the line is only just above the level of the River Exe. It follows this and crosses it shortly after leaving the GWR route at Cowley Bridge Junction. From here to Yeoford it follows river valleys,[4] but the next stage of the route, through Okehampton and Lydford, takes it around the northern edge of Dartmoor. Meldon Summit to the west of Meldon Junction was the highest point on the line. Indeed, it was the highest point on the whole of the Southern Railway, at 950 feet (290 m) above sea level.[11]
The GWR route from Lydford to Plymouth crossed many valleys on timber viaducts.[5] The PD&SWJR route into Plymouth followed the valley of the River Tamar but still involved much heavy engineering with gradients as steep as 1 in 73. Between Tavistock and the Tamar the line passes through the 605-yard (553 m) Shillamill Tunnel. Two wide tributaries join the Tamar which are crossed by the long iron Tavy Viaduct and Tamerton Viaduct. After passing twice beneath the GWR Cornish Main Line there and two tunnels of 363 yards (332 m) and 534 yards (488 m) at Ford and Devonport Park.[11] On the GWR section the line crossed the viaduct which carries the Cornwall Loop near North Road station, and dives through Mutley Tunnel.[19]
Stations
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Dates of opening and closure refer to passenger services unless otherwise stated.[8]
- Exeter Queen Street – opened 19 July 1860
- Exeter St Davids – LSWR services from 3 February 1862
- Newton St Cyres – LSWR services from 3 February 1862
- Crediton – LSWR services from 3 February 1862
- Yeoford – LSWR services from 1 August 1862
- Bow – opened 1 November 1865, closed 5 June 1972
- North Tawton – opened 1 November 1865, closed 5 June 1972
- Sampford Courtenay – opened 8 January 1867, closed 5 June 1972, reopened 23 May 2004
- Okehampton – opened 3 October 1871, closed 5 June 1972, reopened 24 May 1997
- Meldon Quarry - Staff Halt opened c.1925, closed 6 May 1968. New station opened in 2000
- Bridestowe – opened 12 October 1874, closed 6 May 1968
- Lydford – LSWR services from 12 October 1874, closed 6 May 1968
- Mary Tavy and Blackdown Halt – LSWR services from 17 May 1876 to 31 May 1890
- Tavistock GWR – LSWR services from 17 May 1876 to 31 May 1890
- Horrabridge – LSWR services from 17 May 1876 to 31 May 1890
- Yelverton – opened 1 May 1885, LSWR services to 31 May 1890
- Bickleigh – LSWR services from 17 May 1876 to 31 May 1890
- Marsh Mills – LSWR services from 17 May 1876 to 31 May 1890
- Brentor – opened 1 June 1890, closed 6 May 1968
- Tavistock – opened 1 June 1890, closed 6 May 1968, New station proposed
- Bere Alston – opened 1 June 1890
- Bere Ferrers – opened 1 June 1890
- Tamerton Foliot – opened 22 December 1897, closed 10 September 1962
- St Budeaux – opened 1 June 1890
- Weston Mill Halt – opened 1 November 1906, closed 27 June 1921
- Camels Head Halt – opened 1 November 1906, closed 4 May 1942
- Ford – opened 1 June 1890, closed 7 September 1964
- Albert Road Halt – opened 1 October 1906, closed 13 January 1947
- Devonport – opened 17 May 1876, closed 7 September 1964 (goods traffic to 7 March 1971)
- Plymouth North Road – opened 28 March 1877
- Mutley – LSWR services from 17 May 1876, closed 3 July 1939
- Lipson Vale Halt – SR services from 8 July 1930,[20] closed 22 March 1942
- Plymouth Friary – opened 1 July 1891, closed 15 September 1958 (goods traffic 1878 to 1963)
References
- MacDermot, E.T. (1931). History of the Great Western Railway. 2 (1863-1921) (1st ed.). London: Great Western Railway.
- Phillips, Derek; Pryer, George (1997). The Salisbury to Exeter Line. Sparkford: Oxford Publishing Company. ISBN 0-86093-525-6.
- Burkhalter, Paul (1996). Devonport Dockyard Railway. Truro: Twelveheads Press. ISBN 0-906294-37-1.
- Nicholas, John (1992). The North Devon Line. Sparkford: Oxford Publishing Company. ISBN 0-86093-461-6.
- Anthony, G.H.; Jenkins, S.C. (1997). The Launceston Branch. Headington: Oakwood Press. ISBN 978-0-85361-491-3.
- St John Thomas, David (1973). West Country Railway History. Newton Abbot: David and Charles. p. 102. ISBN 0-7153-6363-8.
- Williams, R.A. (1973). The London and South Western Railway. 2. Newton Abbot: David and Charles. ISBN 0-7153-5940-1.
- Oakley, Mike (2007). Devon Railway Stations. Wimbourne: The Dovecote Press. ISBN 978-1-904349-55-6.
- Gregory, R.H. (1982). The South Devon Railway. Salisbury: Oakwood Press. ISBN 0-85361-286-2.
- Kitteridge, Alan (1993). Plymouth: Ocean Liner Port-of-Call. Truro: Twelveheads Press. ISBN 0-906294-30-4.
- Cheeseman, A.J. (1967). The Plymouth, Devonport & South Western Junction Railway. Blandford Forum: Oakwood Press.
- "South Western Railway Extension. Lidford to Plymouth. Opening of the New Line". Western Times. England. 3 June 1890. Retrieved 23 September 2019 – via British Newspaper Archive.
- Crozier, Larry (2000). Mechanical Signalling in Plymouth. Wallasey: Signalling Record Society. ISBN 1-873228-18-X.
- "The Tamar Valley Line". Car Free days Out. Devon and Cornwall Rail Partnership. Archived from the original on 23 September 2009. Retrieved 3 August 2010.
- "The Tarka Line". Car Free days Out. Devon and Cornwall Rail Partnership. Archived from the original on 21 June 2011. Retrieved 3 August 2010.
- Harris, Nigel (2008). "Taking trains back to Tavistock". Rail. Bauer (590): 40–45.
- "Network Rail chooses Dawlish alternative route". BBC News. 10 February 2014. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
- "The case for expanding the rail network" (PDF). Campaign for Better Transport. January 2019. Retrieved 28 April 2019.
- Jacobs, Gerald (2005). Railway Track Diagrams Book 3: Western. Bradford-on-Avon: Trackmaps. ISBN 0-9549866-1-X.
- St John Thomas, David (1973). West Country Railway History. Newton Abbot: David and Charles. p. 249. ISBN 0-7153-6363-8.