Settle-Carlisle Railway

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Settle-Carlisle Railway
Carlisle
West Coast Main Line
Newcastle and Carlisle Railway to Newcastle
Armathwaite
Lazonby and Kirkoswald
Langwathby
British Gypsum Works, Kirkby Thore
Appleby
Kirkby Stephen
Wensleydale Railway to Hawes (Closed by Dr Beeching)
Garsdale
Dent
Dent Head Viaduct
Ribblehead Viaduct
Ribblehead
Horton-in-Ribblesdale
Settle
Airedale Line To Leeds


The Settle–Carlisle Railway (S&C) is a 72 mile (115 km) long main railway line in northern England. It is also known as the Settle and Carlisle. It is a part of the National Rail network and was constructed in the 1870s. Apart from temporary diversions (such as due to the closure of the West Coast Main Line) all passenger trains are operated by Northern Rail.

The line runs through remote regions of the Yorkshire Dales and the North Pennines, and is considered to be the most scenic railway in England. The drama of its history and construction mean that it is regarded as one of the culminating symbols of Victorian enterprise and engineering.

The line runs from near the town of Settle, beginning at a junction with the line from Leeds to Morecambe, extending to the city of Carlisle close to the England/Scotland border. On the way the line passes through the town of Appleby and a number of small communities.

Ribblehead station
Ribblehead station

Contents

[edit] History

The S&C had its origins in railway politics - the expansion-minded Midland Railway company, was locked in dispute with the rival London and North Western Railway over access rights to over the latter’s tracks to Scotland. The Midland board decided that the only solution was their own route to Scotland. Surveying began in 1865, and in June 1866, Parliamentary approval was given to the Midland’s plan.

Soon after, however, the Overend-Gurney banking failure sparked a financial crisis in the UK. Interest rates rose sharply, several railways went bankrupt and the Midland's board, prompted by a shareholders' revolt, began to have second thoughts about a venture where the estimated cost was £2.3m. As a result, in April 1869, with no work yet started, the company petitioned Parliament to abandon the scheme it had earlier fought for. However Parliament, under pressure from other railways which would benefit from the scheme but which would cost them nothing, refused, and construction commenced in November that year. .

[edit] Construction

The line was built by over 6,000 navvies - mechanical diggers had not yet been invented – who laboured in some of the worst weather conditions England can provide. Huge camps were established to house the navvies, many of them Irish. The Midland Railway helped pay for scripture readers to counteract the effect of drunken violence in an isolated neighbourhood. The camps were complete townships featuring post offices and schools and had names such as Inkerman, Sebastapol and Jericho. The remains of one of these camps - Batty Green - where over 2,000 navvies lived and worked, can be seen near Ribblehead.

A plaque in the church at nearby Chapel-le-Dale records the workers who died - both from disease and accidents - building the railway. The death toll is unknown but 80 people alone died at Batty Green folloeing a Smallpox epidemic.

The engineer for the project was John Crossley, a Leicestershire man who was a veteran of other major Midland schemes

The terrain traversed is some of the bleakest and wildest in England, and construction was halted for months at a time due to frozen ground, snowdrifts and flooding of the works. One contractor had to give up as a result of underestimating the terrain and the weather - Dent Head has almost four times the rainfall of London. Another long-established partnership dissolved under the strain.

The line was engineered to express standards throughout - local traffic was secondary and many stations were miles from the villages they purported to serve. It reaches a summit of 1,169 feet at Ais Gill, north of Garsdale, To keep the gradients down to no steeper 1 in 100, a requirement for fast running using steam traction, huge engineering works were required and even then the terrain imposed a 16 mile climb from Settle to Blea Moor, almost all of it at 1 in 100, and known to enginemen as ‘the long drag.’.

Even then, 14 tunnels and 22 viaducts were needed, the most notable being the 24 arch Ribblehead Viaduct which is 104 feet high and 440 yards long. The swampy ground meant that the piers had to be sunk 25 feet below the peat and set in concrete in order to provide a suitable foundation.

Soon after the crossing of the viaduct, the line enters Blea Moor tunnel, 2,629 yards long and 500 feet below the moor, before emerging again on to Dent Head viaduct. The summit at Ais Gill is still the highest point reached by main line trains in England.

To maintain speed, water troughs were laid between the tracks at Garsdale so that steam engines could take water without losing speed.

[edit] Operation

The line opened for freight traffic in August 1875 with the first passenger trains starting in April 1876. The cost of the line at the end was £3.6 million - 50 per cent above the estimate and a colossal sum for the time.

For some time the Midland set the pace for London-Glasgow traffic, actually providing more daytime trains than its rival. But in 1923 The Midland was merged into the London Midland & Scottish Railway in 1923, with the LNWR also forming part of the new company. In the merged company, the disadvantages of the Midland’s route were clear - its steeper gradients and greater length meant it could not compete on speed from London to Glasgow, especially as Midland route trains had to make more stops to serve major cities in the Midlands and Yorkshire.

The Midland had long competed on the extra comfort it provided for its passengers but this advantage was lost in the merged company.

After nationalisation in 1948, the pace of rundown quickened. It was regarded as a duplicate line, and control over the through London - Glasgow route was split over several regions which made it hard to plan popular through services. Mining subsidence severely affected speeds through the East Midlands and Yorkshire.

In 1962, for example, the Thames-Clyde Express travelling via the S&C took almost nine hours from London to Glasgow - over the West Coast main Line the journey length was 7 hours 20 minutes. In the 1963, Beeching Report into the restructuring of British Railways recommended the withdrawal of all passenger services from the line. Some smaller stations had already closed in the 1950s. The Beeching recommendations for the line were shelved, but in 1970 all stations except for Settle and Appleby West were closed, and its stopping passenger service cut to just two a day in each direction, leaving only freight.

Only a handful of express passenger services continued to operate, The Waverley from London to Edinburgh via Nottingham ended in 1968, while the more important Thames-Clyde Express from London to Glasgow via Leicester, lasted until 1975. Night sleepers from London to Glasgow continued until 1976. After that a residual service from Glasgow - cut back at Nottingham - survived until May 1982.

Artengill viaductnear Dent station
Artengill viaduct
near Dent station

[edit] Threat of closure

All through the 1970s, the S&C suffered a drought of investment, and most freight traffic was diverted onto the West Coast Main Line which had been electrified to Glasgow in 1975. Because of the lack of investment the condition of many of the viaducts and tunnels on the line was deteriorating. The only positive news came from the Dalesrail services operated to closed stations on summer weekends since 1974. These were promoted by the Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority to encourage ramblers to arrive by train.

2004 summer timetable for the line issued by the now-defunct Arriva Trains Northern advertising its loco-hauled service on the line.
2004 summer timetable for the line issued by the now-defunct Arriva Trains Northern advertising its loco-hauled service on the line.


In the early 1980s, the S&C was carrying only a handful of trains per day, and British Rail decided that the cost of renewing the viaducts and tunnels would be prohibitively expensive, given the small amount of traffic carried on the line. In 1981 a protest group, the Friends of the Settle-Carlisle Line (FoSCL), was established, and this group campaigned against the line's closure even before it was officially announced.

In 1984 closure notices were posted at the S&C's remaining stations. However, local authorities and rail enthusiasts joined together and started a campaign to save the S&C, pointing out that British Rail was ignoring the S&C's potential for tourism, ignoring the need to a diversionary route to the West Coast main line, and failing to promote through traffic from the Midlands and Yorkshire to Scotland.

There was outrage over the closure plan - critics pointed out that this was a main line, not a small branch railway. The campaign uncovered convincing evidence that British Rail had mounted a dirty tricks campaign against the line, exaggerating the cost of repairs (£6 million for Ribblehead Viaduct alone) and deliberately diverting traffic from the line in order to justify its closure plans, a process referred to as closure by stealth. Ironically, the publicity over Britiah Rail's tactics succeeded in a huge increase in traffic. Journeys per year were 93,000 1983 when the campaign to save the line began - and hit 450,000 by 1989. As a result of the campaign, the Government finally refused consent to close the line in 1989, and British Rail started to repair the deteriorating tunnels and viaducts ([1]).

[edit] The line today

The S&C is probably busier now (2007) than at any time in its history. In recent years, due to congestion on the West Coast Main Line, much freight traffic is using the S&C once again, especially coal from the Hunterston coal terminal in Scotland travelling to power stations in Yorkshire. Major engineering work has been needed to bring the line up to the standards required for such heavy freight traffic and further investment is required to reduce the length between signal boxes. Local passenger traffic has increased, with eight of the minor stations closed in 1970 now re-opened. That at Ribblehead features a special visitor centre. The line continues to be an important diversionary route from the West Coast Main Line during engineering works, though as it is unelectrified (unlike the WCML), electric trains such as Pendolinos require to be hauled by a diesel locomotive along that section.

However Anglo-Scottish expresses have not been fully restored. The now defunct Arriva Trains Northern had initiated a twice daily Leeds - Glasgow Central service (calling at Settle, Carlisle, Lockerbie and Motherwell), but this was withdrawn due to industrial action at the TOC and never restored, and there remains no link from Yorkshire or the East Midlands to Glasgow over the line, and the link from Lancashire operates only on Sunday for the benefit of ramblers

[edit] References

  • Baughan P E; The Midland Railway North of Leeds (1966)
  • WIlliams F S; Williams' Midland Railway (1875, reprinted 1968)
  • Towler J; The Battle for the Settle & Carlisle (1990)
  • Abbott S and Whitehouse A; The line that refused to die. (1990)

[edit] External links



Railway lines in Northern England:
Main lines:  Cross-Country Route · East Coast Main Line · Midland Main Line · West Coast Main Line
 Chester-Manchester Line  · Hope Valley Line · Liverpool-Manchester Lines  · Manchester-Preston Line · Settle-Carlisle Railway
Commuter lines:  Airedale Line · Blackburn-Bolton Line · Caldervale Line · Mid-Cheshire Line · Dearne Valley Line  
 East Lancashire Line · Glossop Line · Hallam Line · Harrogate Line · Huddersfield Line Kirkby Branch Line  
 Lancaster-Heysham Line · Leeds-Bradford Lines · Liverpool-Wigan Line  · Manchester Airport Line  
 Manchester-Southport Line · Northern Line · Oldham Loop Line · Northallerton-Eaglescliffe Line  
 Ormskirk Branch Line · Pontefract Line · Sheffield-Hull Line · Sheffield-Lincoln Line · Stockport-Stalybridge Line  
 Wakefield Line · Wharfedale Line · Wirral Line · York & Selby Lines · York-Scarborough Line
Rural lines:  Barton Line · Borderlands Line · Buxton Line · Cumbrian Coast Line · Doncaster-Lincoln Line  
 Durham Coast Line · Esk Valley Line · Tees Valley Line · Furness Line · Hull-York Line · 
 Oxenholme-Windermere Line · Penistone Line · Ribble Valley Line · Newcastle and Carlisle Railway  
 Yorkshire Coast Line

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