Guernsey Railway
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The Guernsey Railway opened as the Guernsey Steam Tramway on 6 June 1879 with two steam tram engines, more being added later. It was later converted to an electric tramway, which began working on 20 February 1892. The system closed on 9 June 1934. This leaves Alderney as the only Channel Island with a working railway.
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[edit] Steam trams
List of steam tram engines:
No. | Date built | Builder | Works No. | Wheels | Name | Notes | Withdrawn |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1879 | Merryweather | 84 | 0-4-0 | Shooting Star | - | by 1899 |
2 | 1879 | Merryweather | 85 | 0-4-0 | Sampson | - | by 1896 |
3 | 1879 | Lewin | ? | 0-4-0 | - | - | by 1882 |
4 | 1877/8 | Hughes | 14 | 0-4-0 | - | arr. 1882 | by 1890 |
5 | 1877/8 | Hughes | 15 | 0-4-0 | - | arr. 1882/3 | by 1889 |
6 | 1877/8 | Hughes | 16 | 0-4-0 | - | arr. 1882/3 | by 1889 |
7 | 1877/8 | Hughes | 17 | 0-4-0 | - | arr. 1883 | by 1889 |
8 | 1879 | Hawthorn | 1802 | 0-4-0 | Haro | arr. 1890 | by 1899 |
- arr. = date arrived in Guernsey
[edit] Electric trams
The line was electrified in 1892 by Siemens. Apart from an experimental line in Leeds, it was the first street tramway in the British Isles to be supplied with current from an overhead wire.
[edit] Activity since closure
Guernsey Railway Co Ltd continued in existence (as a bus operator) until 1980, when its operation was taken over by Guernseybus. [1]
In 2004 there was a plan to run a heritage tram service and restore some original trams to operate it. The current status of this plan is not known. [2]
[edit] Sources
- The Railway Magazine, September 1934
- 100 Years of Public Transport - A Short History of the Guernsey Railway Co Ltd, by W J Carman, published by Guernsey Press c. 1978
- Railways of the Channel Islands, A Pictorial Survey compiled by C Judge, published by The Oakwood Press 1992, ISBN 0 85361 432 6