Nantlle railway station

Nantlle

Nantlle railway station c 1875
Location
Place Talysarn
Area Gwynedd
Coordinates 53°03′08″N 4°15′28″W / 53.0522°N 4.2577°W / 53.0522; -4.2577Coordinates: 53°03′08″N 4°15′28″W / 53.0522°N 4.2577°W / 53.0522; -4.2577
Grid reference SH 487 529
Operations
Original company London and North Western Railway
Post-grouping London, Midland and Scottish Railway
Platforms 1[1]
History
1 October 1872 Opened
1 January 1917 Closed as a wartime economy measure
5 May 1919[2] or July 1919[3] Reopened
8 August 1932 Closed to passengers
2 December 1963 Closed completely[4][5][3]
Disused railway stations in the United Kingdom
Closed railway stations in Britain
A B C D–F G H–J K–L M–O P–R S T–V W–Z
UK Railways portal

Nantlle was a railway station located in Talysarn, a neighbouring village to Nantlle, in Gwynedd, Wales.

From 1828 the narrow gauge, horse-drawn Nantlle Railway ran from wharves at Caernarfon through Penygroes and through the site of the future Nantlle station to slate quarries around the village of Nantlle. In the 1860s the Carnarvonshire Railway built a new standard gauge line southwards from Caernarfon to Afon Wen, replacing the Nantlle Railway's tracks as far south as Penygroes. The Nantlle quarries and railway were very much still in business, so they continued to send their products to Caernarfon by transhipping them onto the new railway at Tyddyn Bengam a short distance north of Penygroes.

This arrangement continued until 1872 when the LNWR repeated the earlier process and built a standard gauge branch partly on the Nantlle Railway trackbed from Penygroes to Talysarn, where it built a wholly new passenger station which it called Nantlle, though in reality the branch only reached half way to the village of Nantlle. This station included a locomotive servicing area at its eastern end.[6]

From then onwards products were transshipped from the quarry wagons onto standard gauge wagons in the goods yard[7] at "Nantlle" station. The narrow gauge wagons were manoeuvred by horse and by hand, a way of working which, remarkably, survived until 1963, becoming British Railway's last horse-drawn line.[8][9][10]

Passenger traffic along the branch, which was less than a mile and a half long, was not heavy. The station closed to normal passenger traffic in 1932, though excursion traffic (mostly outbound from Nantlle) continued until 1939.

The station closed completely in 1963. The station building was still standing in 2012, though most other infrastructure had long been built over.[11]

References

Sources

Further material

Preceding station Historical railways Following station
Terminus   London and North Western Railway   Penygroes
Line and Station closed
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