Glasgow and South Western Railway

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Glasgow and South Western Railway
Logo
Locale Scotland
Dates of operation 1850–1923
Predecessor line Glasgow, Paisley Kilmarnock and Ayr and Glasgow, Dumfries and Carlisle Railways
Successor line London, Midland and Scottish Railway
Track gauge ft 8½ in (1435 mm) (standard gauge)
Length 1,128 miles (1,815 km)
Headquarters Glasgow

The Glasgow and South Western Railway (G&SWR), one of the pre-grouping railway companies, served a triangular area of south-west Scotland, between Glasgow, Stranraer and Carlisle. It assumed its title following an amalgamation in 1850[1] and became a constituent of the London, Midland and Scottish Railway at the 1923 grouping of the railways.

Contents

[edit] Extent

The main line ran from Glasgow along the west coast and to Gretna. The railway also served Paisley, Greenock, Ardrossan, Troon and the ports on the west coast, between which it had regular steamer services. It also owned the harbours at Troon and Ayr. The headquarters were at St Enoch Station, Glasgow. In 1921 the railway comprised 1,128 miles of line and the company’s capital was about £19 million [1].

The G&SWR, in association with the Midland Railway, provided a third Anglo-Scottish route, intermediate between the West Coast and East Coast routes. It was as a result of the Midland connection that Glasgow St Enoch station was designed in a style heavily influenced by London St Pancras.

[edit] History

On that latter date the GPK&AR amalgamated with the Glasgow, Dumfries and Carlisle Railway (GD&CR), to form what became the Glasgow and South Western Railway. Services could now operate between Glasgow, Bridge Street railway station, and Carlisle.

[edit] Other lines

The Prince's Pier, Greenock, in use today as a shipping terminus.
The Prince's Pier, Greenock, in use today as a shipping terminus.

[edit] Closures

St Enoch Station no longer exists, it closed in 1966 and it became a car park; the roof was demolished in 1975. In the mid 1980s, the site was redeveloped as the St Enoch Centre, opening in May 1989.

The Bridge of Weir Railway and the Greenock and Ayrshire Railway to Greenock Princes Pier was closed between Princes Pier and Kilmacolm in 1966. However, in 1971 the Princes Pier stub was connected to the Inverclyde Line, at Cartsburn junction, in order to serve the Clyde Port Authority container terminal. The Paisley Canal Line closed completely in 1983, and the original Paisley Canal station, on the east side of Causeyside Street, became a steak house. In the 1980s / 1990s the course of the line beyond Paisley was made into a footpath and cycle path. This connects Lady Octavia Park in Greenock, through upper Port Glasgow, Kilmacolm, past Quarrier's Village, and on to Paisley. It forms a section of the Sustrans scheduled National Cycle Route from Edinburgh to Gourock.[5]

The G&SWR Castle Douglas and Dumfries Railway closed in June 1965, as did the joint G&SWR / Caledonian Railway owned line between Castle Douglas and Challoch Junction (between Dunragit and Glenluce).

[edit] The G&SWR today

In 1990 the Paisley Canal Line reopened from Glasgow Central station as far as a new Paisley Canal railway station on the west side of Causeyside Street.

The various lines of the G&SWR still operate today out of the former Caledonian Railway's Glasgow Central station. They are the Paisley Canal Line (now truncated at Paisley Canal railway station) and the Ayrshire Coast Lines of the SPT network; the Glasgow South Western Line to Dumfries and Carlisle; and to Stranraer.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b Hammerton (1921)
  2. ^ a b c d John Thomas (1971)
  3. ^ Robertson (1983).
  4. ^ Greenock. Encyclopedia Britannica (1911).
  5. ^ Leisure - Sports. Inverclyde Council.

[edit] Sources

  • Robertson, C.J.A. (1983). The Origins of the Scottish Railway System: 1722-1844, 1st, Edinburgh: John Donald Publishers Ltd. ISBN 0-8597-6088-X. 
  • The Railway Year Book: 1912. London: Railway Publishing Company. OCLC 12305143. 


The "Big Four" pre-nationalisation British railway companies
v  d  e

Great Western London Midland & Scottish London & North Eastern Southern

GWR constituents: Great Western RailwayCambrian RailwaysTaff Vale Railway
Barry RailwayRhymney Railway(Full list)
LNER constituents: Great CentralGreat EasternGreat NorthernGreat North of Scotland
Hull & BarnsleyNorth BritishNorth Eastern(Full list)
LMS constituents: CaledonianFurnessGlasgow & South WesternHighland
Lancashire & YorkshireLondon and North WesternMidlandNorth Staffordshire(Full list)
SR constituents: London and South Western RailwayLondon, Brighton and South Coast Railway
South Eastern RailwayLondon, Chatham and Dover Railway(Full list)

See also: History of rail transport in Great Britain 1923 - 1947List of companies involved in the grouping



Major constituent railway companies of the London, Midland and Scottish Railway:

Caledonian | Furness | Glasgow & South Western | Highland | Lancashire & Yorkshire | London and North Western | Midland | North Staffordshire
(Full list of constituents)




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