Power stations were some of the last regular users of industrial steam locomotives in the United Kingdom, although most of these were standard gauge. However, several power generation facilities used narrow gauge railways.
Name |
Opened |
Closed |
Gauge |
Location |
Notes |
British Steel Corporation Aldwarke Works railway[1] |
|
after 1979 |
3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) |
Rotherham, England |
Internal steel works railway, with an entirely new line built in 1971 |
British Steel Corporation Micklam works[1] |
|
after 1987 [5] |
2 ft 6 in (762 mm) |
Lowca, England |
Underground railway serving the refractories. |
British Steel Corporation Shotton Steel Works railway[1][4][6] |
|
present |
2 ft 6 in (762 mm) |
Connah's Quay, Wales |
Internal steel works railway, with an entirely new line built in 1971 |
British Steel Corporation Stanton and Staveley Works[1] |
|
after 1979 |
3 ft (914 mm) |
Ilkeston, England |
Foundry railway worked by battery-electric locomotives |
Clay Cross Ltd. Spun Pipe works[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Clay Cross, England |
Internal locomotive-worked line |
Ebbw Vale Steel, Iron and Coal Company railway[7] |
|
|
18 in (457 mm) |
Ebbw Vale, Wales |
Internal steel works railway using Ramsbottom locomotives similar to those at the Crewe Works Railway |
Flather Bright Steels Ltd. Tinsley works[1] |
|
after 1979 |
18 in (457 mm) |
Sheffield, England |
Internal locomotive-worked line |
Goldendale Iron Works[8] |
|
after 1957 |
18 in (457 mm) |
Chatterley, England |
Horse-hauled works tramway used to move pig iron. |
Guest Keen Baldwins Iron and Steel Company Ltd. Briton Ferry Steelworks[9] |
|
after 1956 |
2 ft 4 1⁄2 in (724 mm) |
Glamorgan, Wales |
Steelworks line worked by steam locomotives |
Gurnos Tin Plate Works railway[4] |
before 1920 |
|
18 in (457 mm) |
Lower Cwmtwrch, Wales |
Internal steel works railway |
Sanders and Forster[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Stratford, London, England |
Diesel locomotive worked line |
Many construction contractors maintained depots that included narrow gauge equipment in store and under repair. While some of these were temporary locations and often unrecorded, others were long term yards with extensive stock and facilities.
Name |
Opened |
Closed |
Gauge |
Location |
Notes |
Arnold & Nathan Ltd. East Peckham depot[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) and 18 in (457 mm) |
Paddock Wood, England |
Battery electric locomotives for tunnelling |
Associated Tunnelling Co. Ltd. Lowton St. Marys Depot[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Warrington, England |
Battery electric locomotives for tunnelling |
Baillie Contracting Co. Ltd. Coventry Depots[1] |
|
after 1979 |
12 in (305 mm) |
Coventry, England |
|
C. Bryant & Sons Ltd. Doris Road Depot[1] |
|
after 1979 |
18 in (457 mm) |
Birmingham, England |
|
Cementation Mining Ltd. Bentley Works[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) and 18 in (457 mm) |
Doncaster, England |
|
Clugston Construction Scunthorpe depot[1] |
|
after 1979 |
12 in (305 mm) |
Scunthorpe, England |
|
Clydeside Constructional Co. Ltd. Bridge of Weir depot[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Strathclyde, Scotland |
|
J.F. Donelan & Co. Ltd. Manchester depot[1] |
|
after 1979 |
18 in (457 mm) |
Manchester, England |
|
Fairclough Civil Engineering Ltd. Swynerton depot[1] |
|
after 1979 |
18 in (457 mm) and 2 ft (610 mm) |
Swynnerton, England |
Extensive stock depot, on occasions including over 100 battery electric locomotives |
J.J. Gallagher & Co. Ltd. Armour Close depot[1] |
|
after 1979 |
18 in (457 mm) |
Birmingham, England |
|
J.C. Gillespie Civil Engineering. Ltd. Green Lane depot [5] |
after 1979 |
after 1987 |
18 in (457 mm) |
Timperley, England |
Two battery electric locomotives at depot (1987) |
M.J Gleesons (Contractors) Ltd. Mitcham depot[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
London, England |
|
Sam Henry & Partners[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
unknown location |
|
J.H. Tractors Ltd. Tickhill Plant Hire[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) and 18 in (457 mm) |
Doncaster, England |
|
Johnston Construction[1] |
|
after 1979 |
12 in (305 mm) |
Surrey, England |
|
Kier Ltd. Setchey depot[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Kings Lynn, England |
|
T & A.M. Kilroe Ltd. Lomax Street depot[1] |
|
after 1979 |
18 in (457 mm) |
Radcliffe, England |
|
Lilley/Waddington Ltd. Harvey Road depot[1] |
|
after 1979 |
18 in (457 mm) and 2 ft (610 mm) |
Basildon, England |
|
Lilley/Waddington Ltd. Horwich depot[1] |
|
after 1979 |
18 in (457 mm) and 2 ft (610 mm) |
Manchester, England |
|
Lilley/Waddington Ltd. Haunchwood Colliery depot[1] |
|
after 1979 |
18 in (457 mm) and 2 ft (610 mm) |
Nuneaton, England |
|
Lilley/Waddington Ltd. Charles Street depot[1] |
|
after 1979 |
18 in (457 mm) and 2 ft (610 mm) |
Glasgow, Scotland |
|
Macclesfield Corporation Engineers Department Store[5] |
|
after 1987 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Macclesfield, England |
4wPM locomotive in store |
Martin & Co. (Contractors) Ltd. Bristol Road South depot[1] |
|
after 1979 |
18 in (457 mm) |
Birmingham, England |
|
Sir Robert McAlpine & Sons Ltd. Kettering depot[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Kettering, England |
|
Miller Engineering & Construction Ltd. Sandiacre depot[5] |
|
after 1987 |
2 ft 11 in (889 mm)
and
2 ft (610 mm) |
Sandiacre, England |
Locomotives at construction depot |
Raynesway Plant Ltd.[10] |
|
after 1989 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Derby, England |
Three out of use locomotives on site in 1989 |
Tarmac Construction Ltd. Peterborough depot [5] |
|
after 1987 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Peterborough, England |
Collection of 4wBE locomotives used for construction |
M & H Tunnel & Civil Engineering Co. Ltd. Green Lane depot[1] |
|
after 1979 |
18 in (457 mm) and 2 ft (610 mm) |
Thurcroft, England |
|
Welham Plant Ltd. Barford Road depot |
|
after 1987 |
18 in (457 mm) and 2 ft (610 mm) |
St. Neots, England |
Battery electric locomotives at depot. |
Many narrow gauge lines were employed for short-term tunnelling contracts. Most of these are unrecorded, so this list represents only a few of the many such lines.
Name |
Opened |
Closed |
Gauge |
Location |
Notes |
Bedminster Water Outfall contract[4] |
1974 |
1975 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Bedminster, England |
Water tunnel construction scheme in Bristol, using eleven diesel locomotives |
Cockermouth Sewer Contract |
? |
1988 |
2 ft (610 mm) ? |
Cockermouth, England |
Temporary line to serve the renewal of the main sewer tunnel. Used battery electric locomotives. |
Eurotunnel contract[11] |
1988 |
1992 |
3 ft (914 mm) |
Dover, England |
Extensive rack and adhesion railway used in the construction of the Channel Tunnel. |
Nuttall Dover Sewer contract |
1996 |
1998 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Dover, England |
Construction railway for a one-mile long interception sewer tunnel. |
Nuttall Portsmouth Sewer contract[3] |
1998 |
2001 |
2 ft 6 in (762 mm) |
Dover, England |
Construction railway for an 8 km long sewer tunnel. |
Nuttall Southampton Rail Tunnel contract[3] |
1985 |
1987 |
2 ft 6 in (762 mm) |
Southampton, England |
Diesel locomotive worked temporary railway used to reline the standard gauge railway tunnel out of Southampton Central station |
Selby Road sewer tunnel contract[4] |
1971 |
1972 |
18 in (457 mm) |
Leyton, England |
Contractor's railway for building a new sewer tunnel in north east London. Used battery electric locomotives. |
Weymouth and Portland Long Sea Outfall[12] |
|
1983 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Wyke Regis, England |
3 km long sewage outfall tunnel built using battery electric locomotives |
Temporary and semi-permanent narrow gauge railways were often used during land reclamation schemes
Name |
Opened |
Closed |
Gauge |
Location |
Notes |
Anglian Water Authority Lincolnshire River Division[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Southrey, England |
Locomotive depot for river bank maintenance around Lincolnshire |
Anglian Water Authority Norfolk & Suffolk River Division[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Southrey, England |
Locomotives used for flood protection and river bank maintenance. |
Middle Level Commissioners Ashbeach Road Plant Depot[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
March, England |
Locomotive depot for river bank maintenance and land reclamation schemes in and around Cambridgeshire |
North West Water Authority Mersey and Weaver River Unit[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Great Sankey, England |
Locomotive used for river bank maintenance |
North West Water Authority Longdendale Headworks [5] |
|
after 1987 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Tintwistle, England |
|
Robert Stannard's Railway[15] |
1816 |
after 1821 |
18 in (457 mm) |
Chat Moss, England |
Portable hand-worked tramway used for the reclamation of Chat Moss. |
The Embankment Tramway[16] |
1808 |
about 1830 |
3 ft (914 mm) |
Porthmadog, Wales |
Horse-drawn tramway used to construct the "Cob" for the Traeth Mawr land reclamation scheme. Later replaced by the Ffestiniog Railway. |
The North Sea Camp Railway[1][17] |
1935 |
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Frieston, England |
Locomotive worked land reclamation scheme in the Lincolnshire Wash |
Severn Trent Water Authority Orston Road East Depot[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
West Bridgford, England |
Locomotives used in river bank maintenance |
Yorkshire Water Authority River Ouse scheme[4] |
|
1973 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Saltmarshe, England |
Temporary riverbank line used for repairs to the River Ouse |
Yorkshire Water Authority Ricall Plant Depot[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
York, England |
Locomotives used for river bank maintenance |
Many reservoirs constructed before the Second World War employed narrow gauge railways to move equipment and materials.
Name |
Opened |
Closed |
Gauge |
Location |
Notes |
Anglian Water Authority Marsh Farm Sewage Works[1] |
|
by 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Tilbury, England |
Locomotive worked railway |
Anglian Water Authority Nevendon Treatment Works[1] |
|
by 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Basildon, England |
Locomotive worked railway |
Brede Waterworks railway [25] |
1899 |
1935 |
18 in (457 mm) |
Brede, England |
Steam locomotive worked railway that hauled coal from barges unloaded from the River Brede to the Brede Valley water works. |
Chichester Sewage Works railway[25] |
1930s (?) |
1976 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Apuldram, England |
Short line around the sewage works |
Colne Valley Waterworks railway[26] |
1931 |
1967 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Watford, England |
Light railway connecting the LNWR Watford to Rickmansworth branch line with the Eastbury Pumping Station |
Dukinfield Sewage Works railway |
? |
late 1980s |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Manchester, England |
Small-scale railway at sewage works |
Knostrop Sewage Works railway[4] |
? |
after 1975 |
1 ft 11 1⁄2 in (597 mm) |
Leeds, England |
Experimental facility that used locomotives from the First World War into the 1970s |
Metropolitan Water Board Railway[24][27] |
1915 |
1947 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Hampton, England |
Transported coal from a wharf on the River Thames to the Kempton pumping station. |
North Bierley Sewage Works railway[28] |
|
|
2 ft (610 mm) |
Bradford, England |
Railway serving the sewage works |
North Surrey Joint Sewage Board railways[29] |
1939 |
after 1965 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Berrylands, England |
Railways serving the sewage works in Surbiton. |
North Surrey Water[24] |
|
present |
3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) |
Walton-on-Thames, England |
Diesel locomotive worked 400 yard long line in occasional use |
North West Water Authority Ashton works[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Dukinfield, England |
Locomotive-hauled railway |
North West Water Authority Llanforda Hall[1] |
? |
1989 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Oswestry, England |
Locomotive-worked railway serving the filtration beds and sand washing plant. |
North West Water Authority Lower Rivington Reservoir[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Horwich, England |
Locomotive-hauled railway |
North West Water Authority Spade Mill No. 2 Reservoir[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Longridge, England |
Locomotive-hauled railway |
Plantation Farm Sewage Works railway[4] |
? |
after 1975 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Dukinfield, England |
Railway serving the filter beds |
Severn Trent Water Authority Blithe Valley Works[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Uttoxeter, England |
Locomotive-hauled railway |
Severn Trent Water Authority Burslem Works[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Burslem, England |
Locomotive-hauled railway |
Severn Trent Water Authority Newstead Works[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Trentham, England |
Locomotive-hauled railway |
Severn Trent Water Authority Stoke Bardolph Sewage Works[1] |
|
after 1989[10] |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Nottingham, England |
Locomotive-hauled railway |
Severn Trent Water Authority Strongford Works[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Barlaston, England |
Locomotive-hauled railway |
Severn Trent Water Authority Tunstall Works[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Stoke on Trent, England |
Locomotive-hauled railway |
Wandle Valley Sewerage Board railway |
? |
1963 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Merton, England |
Internal sewerage railway |
Water Orton Sewage Plant railway[4] |
before 1968 |
1990 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Minworth, England |
Internal sewerage railway of the Upper Tame Main Drainage Authority |
Wood Lane Tip railway[4] |
before 1961 |
|
2 ft (610 mm) |
Kensington, England |
Railway serving the refuse tips operated by Kensington Council |
Yorkshire Water Authority Naburn Purification Works[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Naburn, England |
Locomotive-worked works railway |
Yorkshire Water Authority Old Whittington Sewage Works[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Chesterfield, England |
Locomotive-worked sewage works railway |
Name |
Opened |
Closed |
Gauge |
Location |
Notes |
Berkhamsted Gasworks Railway[4] |
? |
1955 |
16 1⁄2 in (419 mm) |
Berkhamsted, England |
Short horse-worked line connecting the gasworks with a goods yard |
Bournemouth Gas & Water Company Railway[12] |
1864 |
1930s |
3 ft (914 mm) and 2 ft (610 mm) |
Bournemouth, England |
3 ft (914 mm) gauge elevated railway for coal transport until 1918. 2 ft (610 mm) gauge locomotive worked line for gasholder construction in the early 1930s. |
Dundee Gasworks Railway |
? |
? |
1 ft 11 1⁄2 in (597 mm) |
Dundee, Scotland |
Internal steam-hauled gas works railway. |
Granton Gasworks Railway[30] |
? |
1965 |
2 ft 6 in (762 mm) |
Edinburgh, Scotland |
Internal steam-hauled gas works railway. |
Hilsea Gasworks Railway[3] |
|
|
2 ft 6 in (762 mm) |
Portsmouth, England |
Steam-locomotive hauled gasworks railway. |
Harrogate Gasworks Railway |
1908 |
1956 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Harrogate, England |
Steam-hauled railway running from the North Eastern Railway to Harrogate gasworks. |
London Gas Light Co. Nine Elms Works[24] |
1863 (?) |
1927 |
3 ft (914 mm) and 2 ft (610 mm) |
London, England |
Internal steam-hauled railway hauling coal to the gasworks, replaced by conveyor belts |
South Metropolitan Gas Company East Greenwich Works[24] |
before 1910 |
1933 |
750 mm (2 ft 5 1⁄2 in) |
London, England |
Internal steam-hauled gas works railway. |
South Metropolitan Gas Company Old Kent Road Works[24] |
1892 |
1953 |
3 ft (914 mm) |
London, England |
Internal steam-hauled gas works railway on the Old Kent Road. |
South Metropolitan Gas Company Vauxhall Works[24] |
1890s |
after 1951 |
3 ft (914 mm) |
London, England |
Internal steam-hauled gas works railway. |
Southern Gas Board, Poole Gasworks[12] |
1944 |
1972 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Poole, England |
Internal gasworks line using Lister locomotives |
Winnal Gasworks Railway[3] |
|
|
2 ft 8 in (813 mm) |
Winchester, England |
Overhead electric-locomotive hauled gasworks railway. |
York Gasworks Company[31] |
1915 |
1959 |
2 ft 3 in (686 mm) |
York, England |
Electrified railway, operated by a locomotive built by Dick, Kerr & Co. |
Name |
Opened |
Closed |
Gauge |
Location |
Notes |
Belvoir Castle Tramway[32] |
1815 |
1920 |
4 ft 4 1⁄2 in (1,333 mm) |
Belvoir Castle, England |
A short plateway used to haul coal and other goods from a canal wharf to the castle. |
Guilford Tramway[11] |
1903 |
1930 |
3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) |
Sandwich, England |
Steam locomotive worked, freight-only line serving the St. George's Golf Club. |
Portreath Tramroad[33] |
1809 |
1867 |
3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) |
Portreath, England |
Early freight and mineral horse-hauled hauling plateway. One director's carriage survives in the Royal Cornwall Museum |
Redruth and Chasewater Railway[33][34] |
1826 |
1915 |
4 ft (1,219 mm) |
Redruth, England |
Freight and mineral hauling line; horse-drawn until 1854; later steam worked. |
St. Michael's Mount Tramway[33] |
1879 |
present |
2 ft 5 in (737 mm) |
Marazion, England |
Cable-hauled railway and incline delivering supplies and guest's luggage to St Michael's Mount. |
Swanage Pier Tramway[12] |
1858 |
1930s |
2 ft 6 in (762 mm) |
Swanage, England |
Coal, stone and general freight line between Swanage town and Old Pier. Originally standard gauge but converted to narrow gauge between 1860 and 1880. Some track still exists in situ. |
Talisker Distillery |
? |
1930s |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Isle of Skye, Scotland |
Hauled goods from a pier to the whisky distillery. |
Name |
Opened |
Closed |
Gauge |
Location |
Notes |
Ampthill Timber Railway[35] |
1917 |
1918 |
3 ft (914 mm) |
Ampthill, England |
Controller of Timber Supply (CTS) forestry railway using one Kerr Stuart Haig class locomotive. |
Aviemore Light Railway[35] |
1917 |
1922 |
3 ft (914 mm) |
Aviemore, Scotland |
Extensive forestry railway built by the War Office Directorate of Timber Supply. |
Cefn Vron Tramway[35] |
1924 |
1926 |
2 ft 6 in (762 mm) |
Newtown, Wales |
Temporary timber hauling railway on the Welsh-English border. |
Dornoch forestry railway[35] |
1917 |
1922 |
3 ft (914 mm) |
Dornoch, Scotland |
Forestry railway built by the War Office Directorate of Timber Supply. |
Downham Hall timber railway[35] |
1917 |
1922 |
3 ft (914 mm) |
Brandon, England |
CTS timber railway using three Bagnall locomotives |
Kerry Ridgeway Railway[35] |
1941 |
1943 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Newtown, Wales |
Temporary timber-hauling railway at Kerry, Powys. |
Kerry Tramway[35] |
1887 |
1923 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Newtown, Wales |
Locomotive-worked line hauling timber from Kerry forest to Kerry Station on the Cambrian Railway |
Wool timber railway[35] |
1918 |
1920 |
3 ft (914 mm) |
Wool, England |
Forestry railway using a single Bagnall locomotive. |
Wolsingham railway[35] |
1917 |
1922 |
3 ft (914 mm) |
Wolsingham, England |
1½ mile long timber railway using three steam locomotives. |
Name |
Opened |
Closed |
Gauge |
Location |
Notes |
ABCO Petroleum[25][37] |
before 1910 |
after 1965 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Rye, England |
200-yard (183 m)-long internal railway serving the reprocessing plant. |
Ashton Canal Carriers |
1978 |
Present |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Guide Bridge, England |
Short loco-worked line within a boatyard. |
Ballard's Malt Vinegar Works[38] |
1894 |
after 1974 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Malvern, England |
Hand-worked line connecting the barley malting works to the piggery. |
Bedford and Jesty Ltd. Sylva Springs Watercress railway[4][12] |
before 1967 |
present (but only part of the original line) |
18 in (457 mm) |
Bere Regis, England |
Short line serving the watercress beds powered by a home made petrol locomotive |
Bedford and Jesty Ltd. Spetisbury Watercress railway[12] |
before 1970 |
1980 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Spetisbury, England |
Short line serving the watercress beds, using motorised flatbed wagons |
BICC Belvedere[11] |
1930s (?) |
1968 |
3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) |
Belvedere, England |
Steam-hauled railway at British Insulated Callender's Cables Ltd's cable plant. |
BICC Prescot Refineries Unit[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft 6 in (762 mm) |
Prescot, England |
Locomotive-worked line |
Biwater Pipes and Castings[37] |
? |
2000 |
2 ft 3 1⁄2 in (699 mm) |
Clay Cross, England |
Very short line for hauling pipes within the works. |
Bowaters Paper Railway[11] |
1906 |
1969 |
2 ft 6 in (762 mm) |
Sittingbourne, England |
Served Bowater's paper mills. The last steam-worked industrial narrow gauge line in Britain. |
British Ropes[24] |
|
after 1965 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Charlton, England |
Diesel locomotive worked line at rope factory |
Bude Canal Edge Railway[33] |
1823 |
1942 |
4 ft (1,219 mm), 2 ft (610 mm) after 1923 |
Bude, England |
Horse-hauled line conveying sand from Summerleaze Beach to Bude Canal. |
Cadbury's factory railway[39] |
1920s |
1950s |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Worcester, England |
Line connecting the canal to the chocolate factory taking timber for construction of packing cases. |
Clayton Canal Carriers[1] |
|
|
|
|
Error for Ashton Canal Carriers |
Civil Aviation Authority Laxey Airport[1] |
|
after 1979 |
3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) |
Laxey, Isle of Man |
Two railcars |
Daydawn Nurseries Ltd.[24] |
1965 (?) |
1971 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Bisley, England |
Diesel locomotive worked line around garden nursery |
Department of the Environment Harpur Hill Research Laboratory [5] |
|
after 1987 |
3 ft (914 mm) |
Buxton, England |
|
Droitwich Canal Trust[1] |
? |
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Salwarpe, England |
Short loco-worked line |
Faverdale Works railway[4] |
|
after 1975 |
20 in (508 mm) |
Darlington, England |
Railway at the Chemical and Insulating Co. Ltd. |
Gardner Machinery & Metals Dove Holes Station [5] |
|
out of use by 1987 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Buxton, England |
Scrap merchant yard with railway and 4wDM locomotive |
ICI Nobels Ardeer Works[10] |
|
after 1989 |
2 ft 6 in (762 mm) |
Strathclyde, Scotland |
At least nine locomotives on site in 1989 |
ICI Nobels Roburite Works[1] |
|
after 1979 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Shevington, England |
Locomotive worked line |
ICI Winnington Works[1] |
|
after 1987 [5] |
2 ft 6 in (762 mm) |
Winnington, England |
Locomotive worked line at the crystal plant at Winnington |
Lochaber Narrow Gauge Railway[40] |
1925 |
1977 |
3 ft (914 mm) |
Fort William, Scotland |
Long line built for the construction and maintenance of pipelines from Lochaber to Fort William. |
London Post Office Railway ('Mail Rail')[41] |
1927 |
2003 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
London, England |
Driverless electric mail-delivery service, serving nine sorting offices on a 6.5 mile route between Paddington and Whitechapel. Entirely underground; double track in single 9 ft tunnel. |
Lynlite Concrete Ltd. |
? |
1979 |
3 ft (914 mm) |
Ramsey, England |
Concrete suppliers. |
Nocton Potato Estate |
1920 |
1969 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Lincoln, England |
Extensive system to carry potatoes from the fields to the crisp processing plant. |
Oakhill Brewery[12] |
1904 |
1921 |
2 ft 6 in (762 mm) |
Oakhill, England |
Mile long steam operated railway connecting the brewery with the Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway at Binegar |
Pett Level Tramway[25] |
1934 |
1946 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Winchelsea, England |
Built to aid the construction and maintenance of sea defences on the Sussex coast. |
Port Sunlight |
1914 (?) |
early 1950s |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Port Sunlight, England |
Locomotive-worked industrial light serving Lever Brothers soap factory. |
Redland Pipes railway[4][24] |
before 1968 |
1972 |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Ripley, England |
Continuous circuit around the pipe works. |
Royal Ordnance Factory |
c 1938 |
not known |
2 ft 6 in (762 mm) |
Bishopton, Scotland |
Approx 80 mile-long system serving munitions and ordnance explosives production site now owned by BAE Systems and operated by the Global Combat Systems-Munitions arm of its Land & Armaments business unit. Tracks still in situ in places |
Royal Ordnance Factory |
c 1939 |
not known |
2 ft 6 in (762 mm) |
Puriton, England |
Extensive system serving explosives production site latterly owned by BAE Systems and operated by its Munitions & Ordnance business unit. Tracks still in situ in places when site ceased production and closed in 2007. |
Woodhead Tunnel railway[42] |
1960s |
Present ? |
2 ft (610 mm) |
Woodhead, England |
Locomotive worked railway for transporting workers maintaining the high voltage electrical cables in the old Woodhead Tunnel |