Portstewart Tramway
Operation | |
---|---|
Locale | Portstewart |
Open | 28 June 1882 |
Close | 30 January 1926 |
Status | Closed |
Infrastructure | |
Track gauge | 3 ft (914 mm) |
Propulsion system(s) | Steam |
Statistics | |
Route length | 1.85 miles (2.98 km) |
The 3 ft (914 mm) narrow gauge Portstewart Tramway operated tramway services between Portstewart and Portstewart railway station at Cromore from 1882 to 1926.[1]
History
The Portstewart Tramway Company, formed by a group of local businessmen, built the Portstewart Tramway in 1882 to link Portstewart to Portstewart railway station on the Belfast and Northern Counties Railway Coleraine–Portrush railway line.
Services started around 21 June 1882, a few days in advance of the arrival of the formal permission from the Board of Trade on 28 June 1882. Two tram engines were obtained from Kitson and Company.
The tramway went into liquidation in 1897 and was purchased for £2,100 (equivalent to £215,000 in 2015)[2] by the Belfast and Northern Counties Railway. They invested in the tramway providing some additional passenger vehicles and a new steam tramway engine. A new depot was constructed in Portstewart by the railway engineer Berkeley Deane Wise in 1899, at the southern end of the promenade, opposite the Town Hall.[3]
It became part of the Midland Railway in 1903, and the London, Midland and Scottish Railway in 1923.
Closure
The service ceased on 30 January 1926. A replacement bus service was provided by the London, Midland and Scottish Railway
- Tram engine 1 is preserved at the Streetlife Museum of Transport Hull
- Tram engine 2 is in the Ulster Folk and Transport Museum
References
- ↑ The Golden Age of Tramways. Published by Taylor and Francis.
- ↑ UK Consumer Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Gregory Clark (2016), "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)", MeasuringWorth.com.
- ↑ The industrial archaeology of Northern Ireland, William Alan McCutcheon, Fairleigh Dickinson Universite Press, 1984