fbpx
Wikipedia

Cork and Youghal Railway

The Cork and Youghal Railway (C&YR) was a company that built and operated a short 27 miles (43 km) railway built in the early 1860s in Ireland linking Cork with Youghal, a small resort with harbour at the mouth of the Munster Blackwater. There was an additional 6-mile (9.7 km) branch to Cobh (Queenstown), a deepwater port in Cork Harbour associated with transatlantic liners.[1][2] The railway was forced into administration within a few short years due to the bankruptcy of major shareholder David Leopold Lewis and was taken over by the much larger Great Southern and Western Railway (GS&WR). The branch to Cobh became the main line and by the late 1980s was the only part of the previously extensive rail network around Cork City to remain operational apart from the main line to Dublin. 2009 saw the Midleton branch re-open to Cork while the remainder of the route is being converted to a greenway in the 2020s.

Cork and Youghal Railway
GS&WR train at Youghal 1902
Overview
Other name(s)Cork, Youghal and Queenstown Direct
Service
Typeheavy rail
Services
  • Cork—Youghal
  • Cork—Cobh(Queenstown)
History
Opened10 November 1859 (1859-11-10)[a]
Completed10 March 1862 (1862-03-10)
Technical
Line length34 mi (55 km)
Track gauge5 ft 3 in (1,600 mm)
Route map

Cork Summerhill
Cork Penrose Quay (GS&WR)
(GS&WR to/from Dublin)
Cork Glanmire Road (Kent) 1893
(Junction opened 1866)
Tivoli (closed)
Dunkettle
Little Island
Glounthaune
Fota
Carrigaloe
Rushbrooke
Cobh (Queenstown)
Carrigtwohill
Midleton
Mogeely
Killeagh
Youghal
Cork and Youghal Railway (from Viceregal Commission 1906 map)
GS&WR Penrose Quay and C&YR Summerhill stations

History edit

C&YR edit

A group company called the Cork and Waterford Railway was established in the 1840 which explored a route between the two major south coast cities via Youghal and Dungarvan. Had this come to fruition it has been commented the traffic levels on the line would likely have been significantly larger.[3]

The rights to build a line from Cork to Youghal was established in law in 1854.[4][5] The C&YR was initially under the chairmanship of Isaac Butt, member of Parliament for Youghal, and leader of the Irish Party in the House of Commons.[6] Little progress seems to have been made until the arrival of a financier from London, David Leopold Lewis.[b] Lewis had grand plans to turn Youghal into a "Brighton-by-the-sea" resort and approached the project with gusto, not only buying C&YR shares at a 40% premium, acquiring a pleasure steamer for trips up the Munster Blackwater, and culminating in the purchasing of most of the town of Youghal from William Cavendish, 7th Duke of Devonshire in 1861.[6]

Butt was replaced in 1859 by Cusack Patrick Roney who had board level experience with the Cambridge and Lincoln Railway Company and Eastern Counties Railway in England;[6] and the Grand Trunk Railway Company of Canada. Murray and McNeil credit Roney with keeping the C&YR enterprise going despite the activities of Lewis; though Roney does seem to extol the railway; Youghal with its rejunvination by Lewis; and the Lewis pleasure steamship trip up the Blackwater in his book How to Spend a Month in Ireland.[6][7][c]

10 November 1859 saw the Dunkettle to Midleton section of the line opened for traffic by George Howard, 7th Earl of Carlisle, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland who also cut the first sod of the Cobh branch and knighted John Arnott, the incumbent Lord Mayor of Cork and a C&YR director, all on the same day.[8] Passengers were conveyed the two miles from King Street in Cork to Dunkettle by horse omnibus, an extra 40 minutes being allowed. Services extended to Youghal from 23 May 1860. From 1 October 1860 until May 1861 a temporary way was laid to the new terminus at Cork Summerhill, passing over the tunnel of the Dublin main line and convenient to the GS&WR Penrose Quay station, carriages on that section being hauled by Flemish horses. Following the laying of the permanent way the first scheduled first steam-hauled train for Youghal departed Cork Summerhill on 30 December 1861 at 09:45.[3][9]

The progress on the line to Cobh was delayed by The Admiralty being concerned that the six span steel bridge to Fota Island and the Belvelly bridge to Great Island would be a hindrance to navigation. Transatlantic liners had been calling at Cobh since the 1850s and the traffic on the Cobh branch was to exceed than on the Youghal line.[10][9] The C&YR seems to have been marketed as the Cork, Youghal and Queenstown Direct after this time, and seems to have been successful in capturing traffic from the Cork, Blackrock and Passage Railway and their ferries.

Lewis's financial over-ambition caught up with him in 1865, he was to be made bankrupt for the third time, owing £850,000. His only assets being C&YR shares this contributed to the GS&WR taking over operation of the railway from 1865 and buying it completely in 1866 for £310,000. Lewis was sent to gaol and died in 1868 with this emerging to have been his third bankruptcy.[10] Roney also was to die in 1868 before he was 60.

GS&WR edit

The GS&WR found the C&YR to be in a run-down condition but took steps to improve it to GS&WR standards, to the extent shareholders complained about the expenditures. The GS&WR implemented a junction from their line to the C&YR line in 1868. and doubled the line first to Cobh Junction in 1869, and then to Cobh in 1882, making in the main line with mileposts from Dublin. The line to Youghal then became the branch and the mileposts measured from Cobh Junction as zero. The GS&WR also paid substantially for a deep water harbour at Cobh.[10]

From 1 July 1876 the Dublin to Cork daily mail train was extended to Cobh.[11] It was known as the "American Mail" as it was possible to take mail from liner, transport it to Dublin for the steam Packets to mainland Britain and train to London, thereby cutting the delivery time by a day.

In 1893 the GS&WR closed their Dublin Penrose Quay station and the Summerhill[d] station and replaced them with Cork, originally known as Glanmire Road.[12]

As with other railways Civil unrest took its toll with the bridges to Great Island destroyed on 8 August 1922. The Daytime mail trains were stopped from running through to Cobh after this point.[11]

GSR, CIÉ and Irish Rail edit

The lines passed to the Great Southern Railways (GSR) with the amalgamation of 1925. Nationalisation into CIÉ followed some twenty years later in 1945 with control passing to Iarnród Éireann (Irish Rail) in 1987. Up to the 1960s Cobh had been the main departure point for Irish Emigrants to America, thereafter transatlantic air travel began to dominate and the liner trade died off. More recently this has been replaced to some extent by Cruise Ship tourists.

The last regular scheduled passenger train between Cobh Junction to Youghal ran on 2 February 1963 and was subsequently replaced by a bus service.[13] On 30 July 2009 following a 35-year campaign the line was re-opened to Midleton at a cost of €75m.[14] In July 2015 Irish Rail indicated they had no intention of re-opening to Youghal as funds would be better spent on the existing network. They indicated they supported a greenway as it would free them from existing maintenance costs whilst retaining a license to re-open the route in the unlikely event that became an option.[15] By April 2020 a €15 million euro project to open the Midleton to Youghal Greenway had begun but was being delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic.[16]

Route edit

The initial main line runs in a relatively straight direction from Cork to Youghal some, 28 miles (45 km) to the east.[17]

The branch to Cobh (formerly Queenstown) forks off south at Glounthaune (formerly Cobh Junction), some 6 miles (9.7 km) from Cork. Bridges and other works take the railway via the small Harpers Island and larger Fota Island to the port town of Cobh on Great Island, the largest island in Cork Harbour.

Rolling stock edit

 
Cork & Youghal Railway 2-4-0ST in GS&WR ownership as No. 63

The C&YR bought seven 2-4-0ST with 5 feet 9 inches (1.75 m) driving wheels from Neilson and Company, and also three of the 2-2-2ST configuration with 6 feet 0 inches (1.83 m) driving wheels from the same company. All passed to the GS&WR on takeover. The company commenced with eight passenger coaches from Ashburys, Manchester, England. 20 freight wagons were built locally by Long & Co. of Youghal.[12] Long also built a director's saloon carriage, named Crinoline. By the time of takeover the C&YR had accumulated 25 passenger carriages and 29 wagons, all of which passed to the GS&WR.[12]

The Railway magazine note the GS&WR used the 0-4-4BT tank locomotives designed by Alexander McDonnell in 1883 as the preferred locomotive for the lines.[18]

The second half of the 1950s seen the replacement of steam locomotives with diesel locomotives and railcars. The lines are currently worked by diesel railcars as part of the Cork Suburban Rail services.

Services edit

The regular general service for the line remained fairly constant at about five scheduled services each way to Youghal, supplemented by freight and special trains.[19] The Cobh branch has typically had an hourly service since 1863.[19]

Accidents edit

The line has been relatively free of accidents. The most serious was a collision at Summerhill in which over 100 people were injured, though without fatalities, where a train ran through a signal on 9 July 1882.[12] The derailment of a MacDonald 0-4-4WT at points may have been due to the wheel profiles being rather sharp and the track being slightly out of gauge.[18] A more recent accident was the overrun of a General Motors Diesel into the part of the Cobh station converted into a heritage centre - there were no injuries but one outcome was locomotives were required to have working speedometers or be retired from service until fixed.[20]

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Dunkettle to Midleton
  2. ^ David Leopold Lewis is not to be confused with the dramatist Leopold David Lewis, though both have London and Youghal connections and may be related
  3. ^ This is sourced from the 1968 edition of the book, it would seem probable this was also in the 1861 second edition also
  4. ^ Summerhill remained until 1927 with a weekly train visiting to maintain usage

Footnotes edit

Sources edit

  • Ask About Ireland (2009a). "The Cork and Youghal Railway". www.askaboutireland.ie.
  • Ask About Ireland (2009c). "The Cork and Youghal Railway Company (C&YR)". www.askaboutireland.ie.
  • Ask About Ireland (2009g). "The History of the Railway at a Glance". www.askaboutireland.ie.
  • Ask About Ireland (2009o). "Origins of the Youghal Railway Line". www.askaboutireland.ie.
  • Ask About Ireland (2009t). "Cork City Terminus". www.askaboutireland.ie.
  • Bowen Cooke, Charles John (1900) [1893]. British Locomotives: Their History, Construction, and Modern Developments (3 ed.). London & New York: Whittacker & Co. OCLC 10940674. OL 20545575M.
  • Creedon, Colm (2015a). Cork and Youghal Railway Album (PDF). Colm Creedon Collection (digital). Vol. 1. Cork: County Library. (PDF) from the original on 7 December 2017.
  • Creedon, Colm (2015b). Cork, Youghal and Queenstown (PDF). Colm Creedon Collection (digital). Vol. 2. Cork: County Library. (PDF) from the original on 7 December 2017.
  • Graham, Breda (19 April 2020). "Concern that coronavirus will threaten ambitious plans for Cork greenways". EchoLive.ie. from the original on 23 April 2020. Retrieved 7 July 2020.
  • Jenkins, Stanley .C.; Newham, Alan Thomas (1993) [1970]. The Cork, Blackrock and Passage Railway (2 ed.). Oxford: Oakwood Press. ISBN 0-85361-405-9. OCLC 30913122. OL 20882245M.
  • Locomotive Magazine, ed. (15 August 1906). "Bogie Tank Locomotive, Great Southern & Western Ry". The Locomotive Magazine. Vol. xii, no. 165. London: The Locomotive Publishing Company Ltd.
  • Gibson, Charles Bernard (1861). The History of the Count and City of Cork. Vol. 2. London: T. C. Newby. OCLC 1046522071.
  • McNamara, Rob (1 November 2018). "Irish Rail rules out reopening Youghal to Midleton line, backs greenway development". Cork News. from the original on 7 July 2020. Retrieved 7 July 2020.
  • Murray, K. A.; McNeill, D. B. (1976). The Great Southern & Western Railway. Irish Record Railway Society. ISBN 0904078051. OCLC 3069424.
  • Neele, George P. (1904). Railway Reminiscenes. London: McCorquodate & Co. OCLC 935365207. OL 19528560M.
  • O'Brien, Ciara (30 July 2009). "Cork-Midleton rail line opens". The Irish Times.
  • O’Kelly, Kevin (11 February 1963). Last Stop Youghal 1963. RTÉ. from the original on 14 May 2020. Retrieved 24 June 2020.
  • Roney, Cusack Patrick (1866). How to Spend a Month in Ireland (3 ed.). London and Dublin: W. H. Smiths and Sons.
  • Saunders, Lawrence, ed. (March 1882). "Official Reports on Railway Accidents". The Railway engineer : an illustrated monthly review of the construction, machinery, and administration of railways. Vol. iii, no. 3. Crane Court, Fleet Street, London. p. 81.

cork, youghal, railway, this, article, about, nineteeth, century, railway, company, history, line, modern, cork, suburban, rail, service, cork, suburban, rail, company, that, built, operated, short, miles, railway, built, early, 1860s, ireland, linking, cork, . This article is about the nineteeth century railway company and the history of its line For the modern Cork suburban rail service see Cork Suburban Rail The Cork and Youghal Railway C amp YR was a company that built and operated a short 27 miles 43 km railway built in the early 1860s in Ireland linking Cork with Youghal a small resort with harbour at the mouth of the Munster Blackwater There was an additional 6 mile 9 7 km branch to Cobh Queenstown a deepwater port in Cork Harbour associated with transatlantic liners 1 2 The railway was forced into administration within a few short years due to the bankruptcy of major shareholder David Leopold Lewis and was taken over by the much larger Great Southern and Western Railway GS amp WR The branch to Cobh became the main line and by the late 1980s was the only part of the previously extensive rail network around Cork City to remain operational apart from the main line to Dublin 2009 saw the Midleton branch re open to Cork while the remainder of the route is being converted to a greenway in the 2020s Cork and Youghal RailwayGS amp WR train at Youghal 1902OverviewOther name s Cork Youghal and Queenstown DirectServiceTypeheavy railServicesCork YoughalCork Cobh Queenstown HistoryOpened10 November 1859 1859 11 10 a Completed10 March 1862 1862 03 10 TechnicalLine length34 mi 55 km Track gauge5 ft 3 in 1 600 mm Route mapLegendCork SummerhillCork Penrose Quay GS amp WR GS amp WR to from Dublin Cork Glanmire Road Kent 1893 Junction opened 1866 Tivoli closed DunkettleLittle IslandGlounthauneFotaCarrigaloeRushbrookeCobh Queenstown CarrigtwohillMidletonMogeelyKilleaghYoughalCork and Youghal Railway from Viceregal Commission 1906 map GS amp WR Penrose Quay and C amp YR Summerhill stations Contents 1 History 1 1 C amp YR 1 2 GS amp WR 1 3 GSR CIE and Irish Rail 2 Route 3 Rolling stock 4 Services 5 Accidents 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Footnotes 6 3 SourcesHistory editC amp YR edit A group company called the Cork and Waterford Railway was established in the 1840 which explored a route between the two major south coast cities via Youghal and Dungarvan Had this come to fruition it has been commented the traffic levels on the line would likely have been significantly larger 3 The rights to build a line from Cork to Youghal was established in law in 1854 4 5 The C amp YR was initially under the chairmanship of Isaac Butt member of Parliament for Youghal and leader of the Irish Party in the House of Commons 6 Little progress seems to have been made until the arrival of a financier from London David Leopold Lewis b Lewis had grand plans to turn Youghal into a Brighton by the sea resort and approached the project with gusto not only buying C amp YR shares at a 40 premium acquiring a pleasure steamer for trips up the Munster Blackwater and culminating in the purchasing of most of the town of Youghal from William Cavendish 7th Duke of Devonshire in 1861 6 Butt was replaced in 1859 by Cusack Patrick Roney who had board level experience with the Cambridge and Lincoln Railway Company and Eastern Counties Railway in England 6 and the Grand Trunk Railway Company of Canada Murray and McNeil credit Roney with keeping the C amp YR enterprise going despite the activities of Lewis though Roney does seem to extol the railway Youghal with its rejunvination by Lewis and the Lewis pleasure steamship trip up the Blackwater in his book How to Spend a Month in Ireland 6 7 c 10 November 1859 saw the Dunkettle to Midleton section of the line opened for traffic by George Howard 7th Earl of Carlisle Lord Lieutenant of Ireland who also cut the first sod of the Cobh branch and knighted John Arnott the incumbent Lord Mayor of Cork and a C amp YR director all on the same day 8 Passengers were conveyed the two miles from King Street in Cork to Dunkettle by horse omnibus an extra 40 minutes being allowed Services extended to Youghal from 23 May 1860 From 1 October 1860 until May 1861 a temporary way was laid to the new terminus at Cork Summerhill passing over the tunnel of the Dublin main line and convenient to the GS amp WR Penrose Quay station carriages on that section being hauled by Flemish horses Following the laying of the permanent way the first scheduled first steam hauled train for Youghal departed Cork Summerhill on 30 December 1861 at 09 45 3 9 The progress on the line to Cobh was delayed by The Admiralty being concerned that the six span steel bridge to Fota Island and the Belvelly bridge to Great Island would be a hindrance to navigation Transatlantic liners had been calling at Cobh since the 1850s and the traffic on the Cobh branch was to exceed than on the Youghal line 10 9 The C amp YR seems to have been marketed as the Cork Youghal and Queenstown Direct after this time and seems to have been successful in capturing traffic from the Cork Blackrock and Passage Railway and their ferries Lewis s financial over ambition caught up with him in 1865 he was to be made bankrupt for the third time owing 850 000 His only assets being C amp YR shares this contributed to the GS amp WR taking over operation of the railway from 1865 and buying it completely in 1866 for 310 000 Lewis was sent to gaol and died in 1868 with this emerging to have been his third bankruptcy 10 Roney also was to die in 1868 before he was 60 GS amp WR edit The GS amp WR found the C amp YR to be in a run down condition but took steps to improve it to GS amp WR standards to the extent shareholders complained about the expenditures The GS amp WR implemented a junction from their line to the C amp YR line in 1868 and doubled the line first to Cobh Junction in 1869 and then to Cobh in 1882 making in the main line with mileposts from Dublin The line to Youghal then became the branch and the mileposts measured from Cobh Junction as zero The GS amp WR also paid substantially for a deep water harbour at Cobh 10 From 1 July 1876 the Dublin to Cork daily mail train was extended to Cobh 11 It was known as the American Mail as it was possible to take mail from liner transport it to Dublin for the steam Packets to mainland Britain and train to London thereby cutting the delivery time by a day In 1893 the GS amp WR closed their Dublin Penrose Quay station and the Summerhill d station and replaced them with Cork originally known as Glanmire Road 12 As with other railways Civil unrest took its toll with the bridges to Great Island destroyed on 8 August 1922 The Daytime mail trains were stopped from running through to Cobh after this point 11 GSR CIE and Irish Rail edit The lines passed to the Great Southern Railways GSR with the amalgamation of 1925 Nationalisation into CIE followed some twenty years later in 1945 with control passing to Iarnrod Eireann Irish Rail in 1987 Up to the 1960s Cobh had been the main departure point for Irish Emigrants to America thereafter transatlantic air travel began to dominate and the liner trade died off More recently this has been replaced to some extent by Cruise Ship tourists The last regular scheduled passenger train between Cobh Junction to Youghal ran on 2 February 1963 and was subsequently replaced by a bus service 13 On 30 July 2009 following a 35 year campaign the line was re opened to Midleton at a cost of 75m 14 In July 2015 Irish Rail indicated they had no intention of re opening to Youghal as funds would be better spent on the existing network They indicated they supported a greenway as it would free them from existing maintenance costs whilst retaining a license to re open the route in the unlikely event that became an option 15 By April 2020 a 15 million euro project to open the Midleton to Youghal Greenway had begun but was being delayed by the COVID 19 pandemic 16 Route editThe initial main line runs in a relatively straight direction from Cork to Youghal some 28 miles 45 km to the east 17 The branch to Cobh formerly Queenstown forks off south at Glounthaune formerly Cobh Junction some 6 miles 9 7 km from Cork Bridges and other works take the railway via the small Harpers Island and larger Fota Island to the port town of Cobh on Great Island the largest island in Cork Harbour Rolling stock edit nbsp Cork amp Youghal Railway 2 4 0ST in GS amp WR ownership as No 63The C amp YR bought seven 2 4 0ST with 5 feet 9 inches 1 75 m driving wheels from Neilson and Company and also three of the 2 2 2ST configuration with 6 feet 0 inches 1 83 m driving wheels from the same company All passed to the GS amp WR on takeover The company commenced with eight passenger coaches from Ashburys Manchester England 20 freight wagons were built locally by Long amp Co of Youghal 12 Long also built a director s saloon carriage named Crinoline By the time of takeover the C amp YR had accumulated 25 passenger carriages and 29 wagons all of which passed to the GS amp WR 12 The Railway magazine note the GS amp WR used the 0 4 4BT tank locomotives designed by Alexander McDonnell in 1883 as the preferred locomotive for the lines 18 The second half of the 1950s seen the replacement of steam locomotives with diesel locomotives and railcars The lines are currently worked by diesel railcars as part of the Cork Suburban Rail services Services editThe regular general service for the line remained fairly constant at about five scheduled services each way to Youghal supplemented by freight and special trains 19 The Cobh branch has typically had an hourly service since 1863 19 Accidents editThe line has been relatively free of accidents The most serious was a collision at Summerhill in which over 100 people were injured though without fatalities where a train ran through a signal on 9 July 1882 12 The derailment of a MacDonald 0 4 4WT at points may have been due to the wheel profiles being rather sharp and the track being slightly out of gauge 18 A more recent accident was the overrun of a General Motors Diesel into the part of the Cobh station converted into a heritage centre there were no injuries but one outcome was locomotives were required to have working speedometers or be retired from service until fixed 20 References editNotes edit Dunkettle to Midleton David Leopold Lewis is not to be confused with the dramatist Leopold David Lewis though both have London and Youghal connections and may be related This is sourced from the 1968 edition of the book it would seem probable this was also in the 1861 second edition also Summerhill remained until 1927 with a weekly train visiting to maintain usage Footnotes edit Ask About Ireland 2009a Ask About Ireland 2009c a b Murray amp McNeill 1976 p 37 Ask About Ireland 2009g Ask About Ireland 2009o a b c d Murray amp McNeill 1976 p 38 Roney 1866 pp 61 64 Creedon 2015a p 57of73 a b Ask About Ireland 2009t a b c Murray amp McNeill 1976 pp 38 39 a b Murray amp McNeill 1976 p 39 a b c d Murray amp McNeill 1976 p 40 O Kelly 1963 O Brien 2009 McNamara 2018 Graham 2020 Roney 1866 p 61 a b Saunders 1882 p 81 a b Murray amp McNeill 1976 pp 40 41 Creedon 2015b 72 74of80 Sources edit Ask About Ireland 2009a The Cork and Youghal Railway www askaboutireland ie Ask About Ireland 2009c The Cork and Youghal Railway Company C amp YR www askaboutireland ie Ask About Ireland 2009g The History of the Railway at a Glance www askaboutireland ie Ask About Ireland 2009o Origins of the Youghal Railway Line www askaboutireland ie Ask About Ireland 2009t Cork City Terminus www askaboutireland ie Bowen Cooke Charles John 1900 1893 British Locomotives Their History Construction and Modern Developments 3 ed London amp New York Whittacker amp Co OCLC 10940674 OL 20545575M Creedon Colm 2015a Cork and Youghal Railway Album PDF Colm Creedon Collection digital Vol 1 Cork County Library Archived PDF from the original on 7 December 2017 Creedon Colm 2015b Cork Youghal and Queenstown PDF Colm Creedon Collection digital Vol 2 Cork County Library Archived PDF from the original on 7 December 2017 Graham Breda 19 April 2020 Concern that coronavirus will threaten ambitious plans for Cork greenways EchoLive ie Archived from the original on 23 April 2020 Retrieved 7 July 2020 Jenkins Stanley C Newham Alan Thomas 1993 1970 The Cork Blackrock and Passage Railway 2 ed Oxford Oakwood Press ISBN 0 85361 405 9 OCLC 30913122 OL 20882245M Locomotive Magazine ed 15 August 1906 Bogie Tank Locomotive Great Southern amp Western Ry The Locomotive Magazine Vol xii no 165 London The Locomotive Publishing Company Ltd Gibson Charles Bernard 1861 The History of the Count and City of Cork Vol 2 London T C Newby OCLC 1046522071 McNamara Rob 1 November 2018 Irish Rail rules out reopening Youghal to Midleton line backs greenway development Cork News Archived from the original on 7 July 2020 Retrieved 7 July 2020 Murray K A McNeill D B 1976 The Great Southern amp Western Railway Irish Record Railway Society ISBN 0904078051 OCLC 3069424 Neele George P 1904 Railway Reminiscenes London McCorquodate amp Co OCLC 935365207 OL 19528560M O Brien Ciara 30 July 2009 Cork Midleton rail line opens The Irish Times O Kelly Kevin 11 February 1963 Last Stop Youghal 1963 RTE Archived from the original on 14 May 2020 Retrieved 24 June 2020 Roney Cusack Patrick 1866 How to Spend a Month in Ireland 3 ed London and Dublin W H Smiths and Sons Saunders Lawrence ed March 1882 Official Reports on Railway Accidents The Railway engineer an illustrated monthly review of the construction machinery and administration of railways Vol iii no 3 Crane Court Fleet Street London p 81 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cork and Youghal Railway Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cork and Youghal Railway amp oldid 1177278581, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.