Taff Vale Railway

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Taff Vale Railway
Rhondda Fawr Collieries
exKDSa exLUECKE
to Brecon
exSTR exKDSa exSTR
Cyfartha Iron Works
exSTR exSTR exBHF
Merthyr Tydfil
to Neath and Swansea
exHLUECKE exABZlg exSTR exSTR
exSTR xKBFa exSTR
Merthyr Plymouth Street
Treherbert
exBHF STR exSTR
exSTR STRlf xABZlg
exSTR eABZrg exHLUECKE
Dowlais Ironworks
Collieries of Taff Valley
exSTR exKDSa STR
including Tower Colliery
Ynyswen
exHST exSTR STR
exSTR exBHF STR
Aberdare
Treorchy
exHST exSTR STR
exSTR exHST STR
Cwmbach
exSTR exSTR HST
Pentre-bach
Ton Pentre
exHST exSTR STR
Maerdy
exSTR exKBFa exSTR STR
exSTR exSTR exHST STR
Fernhill
exSTR exSTR exSTR HST
Troed-y-rhiw
Ystrad Rhondda
exHST exSTR exSTR STR
Ferndale
exSTR exHST exSTR STR
Gelli Halt
exHST exSTR exSTR STR
exSTR exSTR exHST STR
Mountain Ash
exSTR exSTR exSTR HST
Merthyr Vale
Llwynypia
exHST exSTR exSTR exTUNNELe STRlf STRlg
to Aberdare
Tylorstown
exSTR exHST exSTR exSTR exLUECKE STR
to Merthyr
Penrhiwceiber
exSTR exSTR exHST exSTRlf exABZlg STR
Quakers' Yard and
exSTR exSTR exSTR STRrg xKRZo STRrf
Merthyr Joint Railway
exSTR exSTR exSTR HST exSTR
Quakers Yard Low Level
exSTR exSTR exSTR STR exHST
Quakers Yard High Level
Matthewstown Halt
exSTR exSTR exHST eABZlf exABZlg
Pontycynon Bridge Halt
exSTR exSTR exHST STR exLUECKE
to Nelson
Tonypandy
exHST exSTR exSTR STR
Ynyshir
exSTR exHST exSTR STR
exSTR exSTR exHST STR
Abercynon North
exSTR exSTR exSTR HST
Abercynon South
Dinas Rhondda
exHST exSTR exSTRlf xABZ3lf STRlg
exABZrg exSTRrf STR
Porth
exHST STR
Aerw Valley
exHLUECKE eABZlg STR
Industrial Railway
STR STR
Trehafod
HST STR
to Barry
exHLUECKE eABZrf STR
STRlf HSTR ABZlr HSTR STRrf
BHF
Pontypridd
eABZlf exHLUECKE
to Caerphilly
BHF
Trefforest
exHLUECKE eABZrf
to Llantrisant
HST
Trefforest Estate
HST
Taffs Well
eABZrg exHLUECKE
to Caerphilly
Penarth to Rhymney
exHLUECKE exHSTR eKRZu exHSTR exHLUECKE
BHF
Radyr
DST
Radyr Junction
Penarth Harbour
exHLUECKE eABZrf
and Dock Railway
HST
Llandaff
eABZlf exHLUECKE
to Cardiff
ABZrg KDSl
Carriage & Wagon works
HST
Maindy Halt
HST
Cathays
eABZrg exHLUECKE
to Caerphilly
Cardiff Queen Street
BHF
exSTRrg eKRZo exHLUECKE
to Newport and London
xABZrg ABZrl STRlg
Cardiff Central
BHF STR
exABZlf exSTRlg HST
Bute Street
exSTR exSTR KDSe
Queen Alexandra Dock
exSTR exSTR BOOT
P and A Campbell services
exSTR exSTR
across the River Severn
exSTR exSTR
exSTR exABZld exABZa exHLUECKE
to Barry
Penarth and Vale of Glamorgan
exSTR exSTR exSTR
Cardiff Canton
exSTR exDST exSTR
Locomotive Depot
exABZrg exSTRrf exHST
Ninian Park
to Taffs Well
exHLUECKE exKRZu exHSTR exABZrf
exABZrg exHSTR exSTRrf
exLUECKE
to Swansea

The Taff Vale Railway (TVR) is a railway in Glamorgan, South Wales, and is one of the oldest in Wales.

Contents

[edit] History

In 1804, a young engineer, Richard Trevithick, drove the world's first ever steam locomotive along a track at the Penydarren ironworks, near Merthyr Tydfil. The track, which was built as a tramway to carry iron ore in horse-drawn carriages from Penydarren and Dowlais to the Glamorganshire Canal basin at Abercynon, proved too weak to carry his heavy loco, but this isolated experiment would foreshadow the creation of the Taff Vale Railway 32 years later.

In 1835 Anthony Hill, owner of the Plymouth Iron Works, asked his friend Isambard Kingdom Brunel, to estimate the cost of building a railway from Merthyr to Cardiff and to Bute Docks. Brunel's estimate was £190,649. Local industrialists held a meeting, chaired by John Josiah Guest, at the Castle Inn in Merthyr, to discuss the issue, and decided to request Parliamentary permission to form a company to build the railway.

[edit] Act of Parliament

On 21 June 1836, Royal Assent was given to The Taff Vale Railway Company's Act, allowing for the creation of the Taff Vale Railway Company. The founding capital of the Company was fixed at £300,000, in £100 share units. The directors were Josiah Guest, Walter Coffin, Edward Lee, Thomas Guest, Thomas Guppy, Thomas Powell, Christopher James, Thomas Carlisle, Henry Rudhall, William Wait, William Watson, and Peter Maze. Company profits were capped at 7% originally, with a clause allowing for an increase to 9% subject to a reduction in the rates and tolls charged for use of the line. The Act also capped the speed of the trains on the line to 12 mph (19 km/h), with stiff penalties for any speeding.

[edit] Construction

Construction of the railway was started in 1836, and the stretch from Cardiff to Navigation House (later named Abercynon) was opened in a formal ceremony on October 9, 1840, with public services starting the next day. The stretch from Abercynon to Merthyr was opened on April 12, 1841. The railway was single-line for its entire length, with passing only possible at or near the stations. It was not until 1857 that it became a double line. Brunel, the chief engineer, had chosen a narrower gauge (4 feet 8.5 inches or 1.435 m) than the 7 foot (2.134 m) gauge he would later choose for his Great Western Railway in order to fit the railway into the narrow, curvy space allowed to him by the River Taff valley.

Construction of the main line was relatively straightforward. The line mostly followed the course of the valley, and therefore needed few bridges and no tunnels. Brunel designed an impressive skew stone arch viaduct at Pontypridd, which spanned 110 feet (34 m) over the River Rhondda; the viaduct is still in use today, although it has been supplanted by a second, parallel viaduct. A similar viaduct exists at Quakers Yard.

The main line of the TVR was 24 miles (39 km) long. However, no fewer than 23 branch lines took the full length of track to 124 miles 42 chains (200.4 km). Many of those branch lines were smaller lines taken over by the TVR. (see below)

In 1841, two branch lines were opened. The TVR entered the Rhondda with a 4-mile-38-chain (7.2 km) route from Pontypridd to Dinas, and the 3-mile-29-chain (5.4 km) Llancaiach branch was opened from Stormstown Junction (north of Pontypridd) to Llancaiach colliery.

In 1849, the Rhondda branch was extended into Rhondda Fach, with a short line from Porth to Ynyshir. This was extended to Ferndale in 1856, and finally to Maerdy. The Rhondda Fawr line was extended from Dinas to Treherbert, also in 1856.

The TVR proved its worth immediately. At its peak, two trains a minute passed through the busiest station, Pontypridd. By 1850, the TVR was carrying 600,000 long tons (610,000 t) of coal per annum, and was paying a 6% dividend.

As the first steam railway in the area, the TVR was the obvious main target for nearly all of the companies that followed. For example, a monopoly on traffic from the Rhondda meant the TVR was able to charge more than in valleys where it faced competition. This led to Rhondda mine owners creating the Barry Railway.

[edit] Passenger Services

The line was conceived as a goods line, carrying iron and coal. However, it also ran passenger services from the beginning. There were two passenger trains each way daily, including Sundays. This was extended to three weekday services in 1844. Single fares from Cardiff to Merthyr were 5 shillings for first class, 4s for second class, and 3s for third, and were each reduced by a shilling in 1845.

Passenger services to Treherbert began on January 7, 1863; to Ferndale in 1863; and to Maerdy in 1889.

[edit] Summary of the TVR system

[edit] Main line

The main stations on the TVR main line were:

[edit] Branch lines

Some branch lines include:

[edit] Railways amalgamated with TVR

August 26 1889

  • Cowbridge Railway, (Aberthaw - Llantrisant) opened 1865
  • Dare Valley Railway opened 1866
  • Llantrisant and Taff Vale Junction Railway opened 1863
  • Rhondda Valley and Hirwain Junction Railway opened 1878
  • Treferig Valley Railway opened 1883
  • Cardiff, Penarth and Barry Junction Railway opened 1887

January 1 1895

  • Cowbridge and Aberthaw Railway opened 1892

July 1 1902 Aberdare Railway opened 1846

TVR leased two railways:

  • Penarth Harbour, Dock and Railway opened 1865
  • Penarth Extension Railway opened 1878

It also had ‘running powers’ over several other companies’ lines, including the Barry Railway, Great Western Railway and the Rhymney Railway.

Information in this section from The Railway Year Book for 1912 (Railway Publishing Co Ltd).

[edit] Locomotives

Main article: Locomotives of the Great Western Railway

Tom Hurry Riches was the Locomotive Superintendent of the Taff Vale Railway from 1873-1910 [1]. He was President of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers from 1907-1908 and was the father of C. T. Hurry Riches who was Locomotive Superintendent of the Rhymney Railway from January 1906.

[edit] Strike

See: Taff Vale Case

In 1901 the Taff Vale Railway Company successfully sued the Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants, a trades union, for damages due to losses accrued during a strike by their members (who were seeking to compel the company to recognise the union). The Company was awarded £23,000 in a landmark decision, shattering the belief that unions were immune to damages due to the actions of their members. It led, following the election of the Liberal Party in the general election of 1906, to the Trade Disputes Act 1906, guaranteeing union immunity from damages.

[edit] Later history

The TVR became a part of Great Western Railway in 1923, and part of British Rail following the nationalisation of the UK railways in 1948.

The sections still in use for passenger traffic - to Treherbert, Aberdare, Merthyr Tydfil and Cardiff Bay - are currently run by Arriva Trains Wales, formerly (under a previous franchise) Valley Lines.

    • A selection of original Taff vale coaches have survived into the present day and are preserved at the Gwili Steam railway in west Wales and are in the care of the Gwili Vintage Carriage group[1].

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] Sources

Much of the information in this article comes from Taff Vale Railway Miscellany by John Hutton, published by the Oxford Publishing Company, ISBN 0-86093-414-4, and from The Taff Vale Railway by D.S.M Barrie, published by The Oakwood Press. See also The Taff Vale Railway by John Hutton, published by Silver Link, 2006.

[edit] External links


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