fbpx
Wikipedia

Penrhyn Quarry Railway

The Penrhyn Quarry Railway was a narrow-gauge railway in Caernarfonshire (now Gwynedd), Wales. It served the Penrhyn quarry near Bethesda, taking their slate produce to Port Penrhyn, near Bangor. The railway was around six miles (9.7 km) long and used a gauge of 1 ft 10+34 in (578 mm).

Penrhyn Quarry Railway
The railway's locomotive sheds at Port Penrhyn
Overview
HeadquartersOrig.: The Quarry Office, Port Penrhyn, Bangor[1]
New: Felin Fawr, Bethesda
LocaleWales
Dates of operation1801–1962
SuccessorPenrhyn Rail Ltd
Technical
Track gauge1 ft 10+34 in (578 mm)
Previous gauge2 ft 12 in (622 mm) (until 1879)

The railway opened in June 1801 and was one of the earliest overground narrow gauge railways in the world. It closed on 24 July 1962, the track being lifted in 1965 and sold to the Ffestiniog Railway.[2][3]

In 2012, a section of the railway was restored at Felin Fawr and regular services were run beginning in February 2017. In July 2017, the railway closed just ahead of the fifth anniversary of operations.[4]

History edit

Llandegai Tramway (1798–1831) edit

 
Possible route of the Llandegai Tramway

Author James Boyd suggests that the earliest predecessor to the Penrhyn Quarry Railway was the 1 mile (1.6 km) long 2 ft 12 in (622 mm) gauge Llandegai Tramway, built in 1798.[5] The tramway connected the Penlan Mill at Llandegai with Port Penrhyn. The mill ground flint shipped in from Sussex into a powder, which was then shipped on to a pottery in Liverpool.[6] The tramway would have been was one of the earliest overground railways in Britain.[7] It included two balanced gravity inclines one from the floor of the Cegin valley near Llandegai to the hills above Bangor, the other dropping from there to the mill. Both inclines used vertically mounted winding drums. Research in 2021 suggests the tramway may not have existed.[6]

Penrhyn Railroad (1801–1878) edit

 
Penrhyn Railroad

In 1793, William Jessop suggested that the owners of the Penrhyn Quarry build a tramway to connect the quarry to the sea at Port Penrhyn. Jessop and his partner Benjamin Outram were then constructing the Little Eaton Gangway in Derbyshire. Samuel Wyatt was also involved in the construction of the gangway, and his brother Benjamin was the Penrhyn estate manager.[6] Before the railroad was constructed, slate was transported to the port by horses along slow and difficult mountain paths.

Benjamin Wyatt was put in charge of building the tramway. Construction started on 2 September 1800, with the first slate train travelling on 25 June 1801. The line cost £170,000 to build.[6] The track used oval rails designed by Benjamin Wyatt, and their quoted gauge of 2 ft 12 in (622 mm) was measured between the centres of the rails. The railroad was operated by horse power along with gravity and three balanced inclines – "Port" (sometimes called "Marchogion"), "Dinas" north east of Tregarth and "Cilgeraint" a short distance north of Coed-y-Parc workshops in Bethesda. The longest was 220 yards (200 m). The cost of transport fell from 4 shillings per ton using horses with panniers, to 1 shilling using the railroad.[8]

In 1832, Wyatt's oval rails were replaced with more conventional T-rails. The gauge of this new track was 1 ft 10+34 in (578 mm), measured between the inner edges of the rails - the conventional way of measuring track gauge.[5]

In 1868, Charles Easton Spooner, who had been responsible for introducing steam locomotives on the nearby Festiniog Railway wrote to Lord Penrhyn proposing that he replace the railroad with a new line with steam haulage. Spooner was commissioned to survey a suitable route in 1872. The quarry suffered a strike in 1874, which slowed down plans to replace the railroad, but in July 1875 the decision was made to build a new railway and introduce steam. In 1877, two De Winton were delivered from Caernarfon to the port. They were steamed there on 22 June.[6]

Construction of the new railway started on 7 March 1878 at the port. Contractor Richard Parry and civil engineer Robert Algeo were in charge of building a completely new railway that took a more circuitous route to the quarry but avoided the need for any inclines. The work was planned to take two years but was completed early. The first steam-hauled train on the new Penrhyn Quarry Railway on 3 October 1879.[6]

Penrhyn Quarry Railway (1878–1962) edit

 
Penrhyn Quarry Railway

The first locomotives used on the new railway were three De Winton's with horizontal boilers. Although successful, these locomotives were not powerful enough for the substantial traffic that passed down the line. In 1882 the railway ordered 'Charles', a large 0-4-0ST from Hunslet. Charles proved very successful and was followed by 'Blanche' and 'Linda' in 1893 to the same basic design. These locomotives were the mainstay of the railway for the rest of its life.[5]

There was a significant demand for building materials after the First World War, as Britain recovered from the conflict and many new houses were built to replace slums. The slate industry had been largely mothballed during the conflict, but now found itself in a boom period. Shortly after the war, the quarry began producing Fullersite - ground slate waste - which was shipped in large quantities along the railway. In 1924, with traffic continuing the rise, three additional Baldwin locomotives were purchased. These had been built for war use by the United States Army Transport Corp, and were refurbished before being sold to the railway, but were not successful, and after three years of intermittent use they were put aside. [5]

Immediately after the Second World War, there was a short boom in demand for Welsh slate, to meet reconstruction needs throughout the United Kingdom. However this proved to be a short-lived period of success, and cheap foreign imports of slate and new man-made roofing materials quickly began to eat into the market for the higher-quality and more expensive Penrhyn product. A steady decline in traffic through the 1950s and growth in the use of roads for transporting slates direct from the quarry to market meant the end of the railway was inevitable. In June 1962, the last slate train ran, though a few unofficial trips were run as late as the summer of 1963.[9]

Traffic and rolling stock edit

Heading seawards (northwards) from the quarry at Bethesda the first (Cilgeraint) incline was bypassed by building an almost parallel straight line at a gentler end-to-end gradient whose foot was some distance north of the foot of the incline. A similar approach was not feasible for the other two inclines, so the traditional approach was taken – to increase the length of the line to spread the grade. The old route was retained to the head of the Dinas Incline where the new line swung through 180 degrees in a horseshoe bend, thereby changing from heading northeast to southwest. It then swung past a new halt at Tregarth before swinging northwards again past a new halt at Felin Hen, whereafter the line headed more or less straight for Port Penrhyn, meeting the original alignment below the foot of the Marchogion Incline.

The main line's primary purpose was to carry finished slates and Fullersite (powdered slate)[10][11] to Port Penrhyn where they were loaded onto ships or, from February 1852 when the Chester and Holyhead Railway opened its Port Penrhyn Branch,[12][13] onto standard gauge trains.[14] The ships and standard gauge trains took the products to national and international markets. Secondary traffic consisted of slate materials which were finished at workshops at Port Penrhyn into bitumen blocks and, notably, writing slates on which the port had a British near-monopoly in the 1930s.[15][16] Paying backloads were few, but sufficient coal was brought from the port to the quarries to warrant the company buying a fleet of 50 coal wagons. The line also carried internal user traffic such as spare parts. The intermixing of standard and narrow gauge lines at the port produced some remarkable pointwork.[17][18]

 
Main line locomotive Charles with Lord Penrhyn's saloon at the Penrhyn Castle Railway Museum

Lord Penrhyn had his own saloon coach,[19] which has survived into preservation.[20] An example of the second type of passenger vehicle – an Incline Carriage – has survived in the Penrhyn Castle Railway Museum. It was intended for conveying visitors and guests round the quarry itself, having inclined seats for comfort when travelling up and down inclines between levels.[21]

Workmen's trains were provided,[22] along with specials for visitors and dignitaries, but the railway never provided a public passenger service.[23] The quarrymen's carriages were unsprung and open to the elements, having neither roofs nor doors.[24] In the frequent event of rain and cold passengers usually covered themselves with sacks to keep out the worst. Each carriage could carry 24 quarrymen "at a pinch". The carriages resembled enlarged versions of many used on garden railways in fine weather.[25] 16 of these were built in two batches between 1878 and 1908, each bore a single letter in the series A to P. The service was withdrawn on 9 February 1951,[26] rendering the carriages redundant. Seven survived, six were given or sold to the Talyllyn Railway where they were modified[27] or cannibalised to such an extent that no Penrhyn bodies survive there. The seventh survivor was acquired by the Penrhyn Castle Railway Museum,[28] where it remained on view in 2016. Contradicting this to a degree is the Moseley Railway Trust which has carriage "O", which came into their hands after a long tour of various preservation sites, starting with Bressingham Steam and Gardens.[29] The trust has also built a replica of carriage "H".[30]

Restoration edit

 
Heritage event on the restored tracks, 2015

Penrhyn Quarries Ltd completed the restoration of a section of the original railway at Felin Fawr, Bethesda in 2012, and further sections were planned.

The section of restored railway was approximately one-fifth mile (0.3 km) in length and ran between Coed y Parc bridge (Felin Fawr) (grid ref. SH 615662) and St. Anns (grid ref. SH 614661).[31] A second phase of the restoration was planned which would add a further mile of track running in a southerly direction. "Open weekends" with public running were held annually from 2013 onwards. From 2016 onwards, a series of "Steam Galas" and regular weekend running with diesel locomotives took place.[32]

The Penrhyn Quarry Railway Society[33] is no longer involved with the team carrying out the restoration work, but continues to record and document the history of the railway. The rebuilding of the line, overseen by PQR Engineering Ltd and the operating company Penrhyn Rail Ltd,[34] - was supported by the Penrhyn Railway Supporters, formed in 2013.[35] To commemorate the 50th. anniversary of the closure of the original railway, original Penrhyn Quarry Hunslet locomotive 'George Sholto' was operated on the restored section.

In July 2017, all railway operations ceased at short notice and the rolling stock was removed from the site.[4] The track remained in place in August 2017, though the lines leading to the loco shed and crossing the footpath, which were removed in September 2017.[citation needed]

Main line locomotives edit

These are the locomotives that worked trains between the quarry and the port, often known as the "main line" locomotives.

No. Name Image Builder Type Date built Disposal Notes
Bronllwyd (or "Fronllwyd", previously named "Coctinor"[36]) Valley Foundry, Holyhead 0-4-0VBT 1875 Scrapped 1906 Used in the construction of the railway by contractor Richard Parry
3 George Sholto Stephen Lewin or De Winton or "Hughes" 0-4-2WT or 0-4-0T[36][37] 1875 Scrapped 1880 Not to be confused with the 1909-built Hunslet, also named George Sholto, since preserved[37][38]
Edward Sholto De Winton 0-4-0ST 1876 Scrapped 1907[36] Not to be confused with the 1909-built Hunslet, also named Edward Sholto, since preserved[39][40]
Hilda De Winton 0-4-0T 1878 Scrapped 1911[36]
Violet De Winton 0-4-0T 1879 Scrapped 1911 (or 1902[36][41])
Charles   Hunslet 0-4-0ST 1882 Preserved at Penrhyn Castle Railway Museum, Bangor Out of regular use since 1955, though did run one trip on 31 May 1963.[42] Static display. Awaiting restoration.[43]
Linda   Hunslet 0-4-0ST 1893 Loaned to the Ffestiniog Railway in 1962, and sold to them in December 1963.[44] Rebuilt as a 2-4-0ST+T. In regular service.
Blanche   Hunslet 0-4-0ST 1893 Loaned to the Ffestiniog Railway in 1962, and sold to them in December 1963.[44] Rebuilt as a 2-4-0ST+T. In regular service.
1 Llandegai Baldwin 2-6-2PT 1916 Converted to stationary engine 1929, stored 1931, scrapped 1940.[45] ex-War Department Light Railways
2 Felin Hen Baldwin 2-6-2PT 1916 Sold 1940 to Australia, now privately owned in France[46] ex-War Department Light Railways
3 Tregarth Baldwin 2-6-2PT 1916 Withdrawn April 1928, scrapped 1940[47] ex-War Department Light Railways

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Jones 1985, p. 8.
  2. ^ Turner 1975, p. 63.
  3. ^ Rails to the Festiniog in detail, via Festipedia
  4. ^ a b Crump, Eryl (15 July 2017). "Sudden closure of one of North Wales' oldest railways base". Daily Post. North Wales.
  5. ^ a b c d Boyd 1985.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Quine 2021.
  7. ^ Richards 2001, p. 27.
  8. ^ Turner 1975, pp. 42–3.
  9. ^ Quine 2016
  10. ^ Peters 1976, Plates 115-8.
  11. ^ Fullersite wagon, via Festpedia
  12. ^ Lee 1945, p. 223.
  13. ^ Richards 2001, p. 49.
  14. ^ Peters 1976, Plate 149.
  15. ^ Jones 1985, pp. 7–9.
  16. ^ Turner 1975, p. 43.
  17. ^ Messenger 2008, p. 13.
  18. ^ Peters 1976, Plate 115.
  19. ^ Turner 2003, Rear cover.
  20. ^ Images of Lord Penrhyn's saloon
  21. ^ Image of an Incline Carriage, via Jaggers Heritage
  22. ^ Turner 2003, pp. 42 & 123.
  23. ^ Jones 1985, pp. 15–17.
  24. ^ Hatherill & Hatherill 2009, p. 99.
  25. ^ Welbourn 2000, p. 107.
  26. ^ Turner 2003, p. 42.
  27. ^ Messenger 2008, p. 12.
  28. ^ Turner 1975, p. 115.
  29. ^ Carriage "O", via Moseley Railway Trust
  30. ^ Replica carriage "H", via Moseley Railway Trust
  31. ^ Penrhyn Quarry Railway Website
  32. ^ . Archived from the original on 12 September 2016. Retrieved 4 October 2016.
  33. ^ "Home - Penrhyn Quarry Railway Society".
  34. ^ "Penrhyn Quarry Railway". Penrhyn Quarry Railway. Retrieved 17 April 2017.
  35. ^ . Archived from the original on 28 August 2016. Retrieved 4 October 2016.
  36. ^ a b c d e Lee 1945, p. 224.
  37. ^ a b Turner 1975, p. 108.
  38. ^ Images of the preserved "George Sholto"
  39. ^ Turner 1975, p. 107.
  40. ^ Images of the preserved "Edward Sholto"
  41. ^ Turner 1975, p. 100.
  42. ^ Quine 2016.
  43. ^ Images of the preserved "Charles"
  44. ^ a b Johnson 2017.
  45. ^ Turner 1975, p. 101.
  46. ^ Images of the preserved "Felin Hen"
  47. ^ Turner 1975, p. 102.

Sources edit

Further reading edit

  • Lee, Charles E. (May 1945). "The Penrhyn Railway and its Locomotives-1". The Railway Magazine. 91 (557). London: Tothill Press Limited: 138–142. ISSN 0033-8923.
  • Poulter, Michael; Tibble, Leslie (June 2017). "A Peek at Penrhyn". Railway Bylines. 22 (7). Clophill: Irwell Press. ISSN 1360-2098.
  • Richards, Alun John (2003). Fragments of Mine and Mill in Wales. Llanrwst: Gwasg Carreg Gwalch. ISBN 978-0-86381-812-7.
  • Richards, Alun John (2007). Slate Quarrying in Wales. Llanrwst: Gwasg Carreg Gwalch. ISBN 978-1-84527-026-1.

External links edit

  • Penrhyn Quarry Railway Society Website
  • Railway items at Penrhyn Castle Railway Museum, via Penrhyn Castle
  • Port Penrhyn and the 1800 Horse Tramway, via Jaggers Heritage
  • Railways and Quarrying at Bethesda, via Jaggers Heritage
  • Felin Fawr workshops, via History Points
  • Penrhyn railway in 1963, via Industrial Railway Society
  • The quarry up to modern ownership, via Douglas Archives
  • Archive cine film of the line1, via YouTube
  • Archive cine film of the line and quarry1, via YouTube
  • Archive cine film of the line and quarry2, via YouTube

penrhyn, quarry, railway, narrow, gauge, railway, caernarfonshire, gwynedd, wales, served, penrhyn, quarry, near, bethesda, taking, their, slate, produce, port, penrhyn, near, bangor, railway, around, miles, long, used, gauge, railway, locomotive, sheds, port,. The Penrhyn Quarry Railway was a narrow gauge railway in Caernarfonshire now Gwynedd Wales It served the Penrhyn quarry near Bethesda taking their slate produce to Port Penrhyn near Bangor The railway was around six miles 9 7 km long and used a gauge of 1 ft 10 3 4 in 578 mm Penrhyn Quarry RailwayThe railway s locomotive sheds at Port PenrhynOverviewHeadquartersOrig The Quarry Office Port Penrhyn Bangor 1 New Felin Fawr BethesdaLocaleWalesDates of operation1801 1962SuccessorPenrhyn Rail LtdTechnicalTrack gauge1 ft 10 3 4 in 578 mm Previous gauge2 ft 1 2 in 622 mm until 1879 The railway opened in June 1801 and was one of the earliest overground narrow gauge railways in the world It closed on 24 July 1962 the track being lifted in 1965 and sold to the Ffestiniog Railway 2 3 In 2012 a section of the railway was restored at Felin Fawr and regular services were run beginning in February 2017 In July 2017 the railway closed just ahead of the fifth anniversary of operations 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Llandegai Tramway 1798 1831 1 2 Penrhyn Railroad 1801 1878 1 3 Penrhyn Quarry Railway 1878 1962 1 4 Traffic and rolling stock 2 Restoration 3 Main line locomotives 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Sources 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory editLlandegai Tramway 1798 1831 edit nbsp Possible route of the Llandegai TramwayAuthor James Boyd suggests that the earliest predecessor to the Penrhyn Quarry Railway was the 1 mile 1 6 km long 2 ft 1 2 in 622 mm gauge Llandegai Tramway built in 1798 5 The tramway connected the Penlan Mill at Llandegai with Port Penrhyn The mill ground flint shipped in from Sussex into a powder which was then shipped on to a pottery in Liverpool 6 The tramway would have been was one of the earliest overground railways in Britain 7 It included two balanced gravity inclines one from the floor of the Cegin valley near Llandegai to the hills above Bangor the other dropping from there to the mill Both inclines used vertically mounted winding drums Research in 2021 suggests the tramway may not have existed 6 Penrhyn Railroad 1801 1878 edit nbsp Penrhyn RailroadIn 1793 William Jessop suggested that the owners of the Penrhyn Quarry build a tramway to connect the quarry to the sea at Port Penrhyn Jessop and his partner Benjamin Outram were then constructing the Little Eaton Gangway in Derbyshire Samuel Wyatt was also involved in the construction of the gangway and his brother Benjamin was the Penrhyn estate manager 6 Before the railroad was constructed slate was transported to the port by horses along slow and difficult mountain paths Benjamin Wyatt was put in charge of building the tramway Construction started on 2 September 1800 with the first slate train travelling on 25 June 1801 The line cost 170 000 to build 6 The track used oval rails designed by Benjamin Wyatt and their quoted gauge of 2 ft 1 2 in 622 mm was measured between the centres of the rails The railroad was operated by horse power along with gravity and three balanced inclines Port sometimes called Marchogion Dinas north east of Tregarth and Cilgeraint a short distance north of Coed y Parc workshops in Bethesda The longest was 220 yards 200 m The cost of transport fell from 4 shillings per ton using horses with panniers to 1 shilling using the railroad 8 In 1832 Wyatt s oval rails were replaced with more conventional T rails The gauge of this new track was 1 ft 10 3 4 in 578 mm measured between the inner edges of the rails the conventional way of measuring track gauge 5 In 1868 Charles Easton Spooner who had been responsible for introducing steam locomotives on the nearby Festiniog Railway wrote to Lord Penrhyn proposing that he replace the railroad with a new line with steam haulage Spooner was commissioned to survey a suitable route in 1872 The quarry suffered a strike in 1874 which slowed down plans to replace the railroad but in July 1875 the decision was made to build a new railway and introduce steam In 1877 two De Winton were delivered from Caernarfon to the port They were steamed there on 22 June 6 Construction of the new railway started on 7 March 1878 at the port Contractor Richard Parry and civil engineer Robert Algeo were in charge of building a completely new railway that took a more circuitous route to the quarry but avoided the need for any inclines The work was planned to take two years but was completed early The first steam hauled train on the new Penrhyn Quarry Railway on 3 October 1879 6 Penrhyn Quarry Railway 1878 1962 edit nbsp Penrhyn Quarry RailwayThe first locomotives used on the new railway were three De Winton s with horizontal boilers Although successful these locomotives were not powerful enough for the substantial traffic that passed down the line In 1882 the railway ordered Charles a large 0 4 0ST from Hunslet Charles proved very successful and was followed by Blanche and Linda in 1893 to the same basic design These locomotives were the mainstay of the railway for the rest of its life 5 There was a significant demand for building materials after the First World War as Britain recovered from the conflict and many new houses were built to replace slums The slate industry had been largely mothballed during the conflict but now found itself in a boom period Shortly after the war the quarry began producing Fullersite ground slate waste which was shipped in large quantities along the railway In 1924 with traffic continuing the rise three additional Baldwin locomotives were purchased These had been built for war use by the United States Army Transport Corp and were refurbished before being sold to the railway but were not successful and after three years of intermittent use they were put aside 5 Immediately after the Second World War there was a short boom in demand for Welsh slate to meet reconstruction needs throughout the United Kingdom However this proved to be a short lived period of success and cheap foreign imports of slate and new man made roofing materials quickly began to eat into the market for the higher quality and more expensive Penrhyn product A steady decline in traffic through the 1950s and growth in the use of roads for transporting slates direct from the quarry to market meant the end of the railway was inevitable In June 1962 the last slate train ran though a few unofficial trips were run as late as the summer of 1963 9 Traffic and rolling stock edit Heading seawards northwards from the quarry at Bethesda the first Cilgeraint incline was bypassed by building an almost parallel straight line at a gentler end to end gradient whose foot was some distance north of the foot of the incline A similar approach was not feasible for the other two inclines so the traditional approach was taken to increase the length of the line to spread the grade The old route was retained to the head of the Dinas Incline where the new line swung through 180 degrees in a horseshoe bend thereby changing from heading northeast to southwest It then swung past a new halt at Tregarth before swinging northwards again past a new halt at Felin Hen whereafter the line headed more or less straight for Port Penrhyn meeting the original alignment below the foot of the Marchogion Incline The main line s primary purpose was to carry finished slates and Fullersite powdered slate 10 11 to Port Penrhyn where they were loaded onto ships or from February 1852 when the Chester and Holyhead Railway opened its Port Penrhyn Branch 12 13 onto standard gauge trains 14 The ships and standard gauge trains took the products to national and international markets Secondary traffic consisted of slate materials which were finished at workshops at Port Penrhyn into bitumen blocks and notably writing slates on which the port had a British near monopoly in the 1930s 15 16 Paying backloads were few but sufficient coal was brought from the port to the quarries to warrant the company buying a fleet of 50 coal wagons The line also carried internal user traffic such as spare parts The intermixing of standard and narrow gauge lines at the port produced some remarkable pointwork 17 18 nbsp Main line locomotive Charles with Lord Penrhyn s saloon at the Penrhyn Castle Railway MuseumLord Penrhyn had his own saloon coach 19 which has survived into preservation 20 An example of the second type of passenger vehicle an Incline Carriage has survived in the Penrhyn Castle Railway Museum It was intended for conveying visitors and guests round the quarry itself having inclined seats for comfort when travelling up and down inclines between levels 21 Workmen s trains were provided 22 along with specials for visitors and dignitaries but the railway never provided a public passenger service 23 The quarrymen s carriages were unsprung and open to the elements having neither roofs nor doors 24 In the frequent event of rain and cold passengers usually covered themselves with sacks to keep out the worst Each carriage could carry 24 quarrymen at a pinch The carriages resembled enlarged versions of many used on garden railways in fine weather 25 16 of these were built in two batches between 1878 and 1908 each bore a single letter in the series A to P The service was withdrawn on 9 February 1951 26 rendering the carriages redundant Seven survived six were given or sold to the Talyllyn Railway where they were modified 27 or cannibalised to such an extent that no Penrhyn bodies survive there The seventh survivor was acquired by the Penrhyn Castle Railway Museum 28 where it remained on view in 2016 Contradicting this to a degree is the Moseley Railway Trust which has carriage O which came into their hands after a long tour of various preservation sites starting with Bressingham Steam and Gardens 29 The trust has also built a replica of carriage H 30 Restoration edit nbsp Heritage event on the restored tracks 2015Penrhyn Quarries Ltd completed the restoration of a section of the original railway at Felin Fawr Bethesda in 2012 and further sections were planned The section of restored railway was approximately one fifth mile 0 3 km in length and ran between Coed y Parc bridge Felin Fawr grid ref SH 615662 and St Anns grid ref SH 614661 31 A second phase of the restoration was planned which would add a further mile of track running in a southerly direction Open weekends with public running were held annually from 2013 onwards From 2016 onwards a series of Steam Galas and regular weekend running with diesel locomotives took place 32 The Penrhyn Quarry Railway Society 33 is no longer involved with the team carrying out the restoration work but continues to record and document the history of the railway The rebuilding of the line overseen by PQR Engineering Ltd and the operating company Penrhyn Rail Ltd 34 was supported by the Penrhyn Railway Supporters formed in 2013 35 To commemorate the 50th anniversary of the closure of the original railway original Penrhyn Quarry Hunslet locomotive George Sholto was operated on the restored section In July 2017 all railway operations ceased at short notice and the rolling stock was removed from the site 4 The track remained in place in August 2017 though the lines leading to the loco shed and crossing the footpath which were removed in September 2017 citation needed Main line locomotives editThese are the locomotives that worked trains between the quarry and the port often known as the main line locomotives No Name Image Builder Type Date built Disposal NotesBronllwyd or Fronllwyd previously named Coctinor 36 Valley Foundry Holyhead 0 4 0VBT 1875 Scrapped 1906 Used in the construction of the railway by contractor Richard Parry3 George Sholto Stephen Lewin or De Winton or Hughes 0 4 2WT or 0 4 0T 36 37 1875 Scrapped 1880 Not to be confused with the 1909 built Hunslet also named George Sholto since preserved 37 38 Edward Sholto De Winton 0 4 0ST 1876 Scrapped 1907 36 Not to be confused with the 1909 built Hunslet also named Edward Sholto since preserved 39 40 Hilda De Winton 0 4 0T 1878 Scrapped 1911 36 Violet De Winton 0 4 0T 1879 Scrapped 1911 or 1902 36 41 Charles nbsp Hunslet 0 4 0ST 1882 Preserved at Penrhyn Castle Railway Museum Bangor Out of regular use since 1955 though did run one trip on 31 May 1963 42 Static display Awaiting restoration 43 Linda nbsp Hunslet 0 4 0ST 1893 Loaned to the Ffestiniog Railway in 1962 and sold to them in December 1963 44 Rebuilt as a 2 4 0ST T In regular service Blanche nbsp Hunslet 0 4 0ST 1893 Loaned to the Ffestiniog Railway in 1962 and sold to them in December 1963 44 Rebuilt as a 2 4 0ST T In regular service 1 Llandegai Baldwin 2 6 2PT 1916 Converted to stationary engine 1929 stored 1931 scrapped 1940 45 ex War Department Light Railways2 Felin Hen Baldwin 2 6 2PT 1916 Sold 1940 to Australia now privately owned in France 46 ex War Department Light Railways3 Tregarth Baldwin 2 6 2PT 1916 Withdrawn April 1928 scrapped 1940 47 ex War Department Light RailwaysSee also editBritish narrow gauge railways Talyllyn Railway which purchased several PQR carriages Lon Las OgwenReferences edit Jones 1985 p 8 Turner 1975 p 63 Rails to the Festiniog in detail via Festipedia a b Crump Eryl 15 July 2017 Sudden closure of one of North Wales oldest railways base Daily Post North Wales a b c d Boyd 1985 a b c d e f Quine 2021 Richards 2001 p 27 Turner 1975 pp 42 3 Quine 2016 Peters 1976 Plates 115 8 Fullersite wagon via Festpedia Lee 1945 p 223 Richards 2001 p 49 Peters 1976 Plate 149 Jones 1985 pp 7 9 Turner 1975 p 43 Messenger 2008 p 13 Peters 1976 Plate 115 Turner 2003 Rear cover Images of Lord Penrhyn s saloon Image of an Incline Carriage via Jaggers Heritage Turner 2003 pp 42 amp 123 Jones 1985 pp 15 17 Hatherill amp Hatherill 2009 p 99 Welbourn 2000 p 107 Turner 2003 p 42 Messenger 2008 p 12 Turner 1975 p 115 Carriage O via Moseley Railway Trust Replica carriage H via Moseley Railway Trust Penrhyn Quarry Railway Website Penrhyn Quarry Railway Timetable Archived from the original on 12 September 2016 Retrieved 4 October 2016 Home Penrhyn Quarry Railway Society Penrhyn Quarry Railway Penrhyn Quarry Railway Retrieved 17 April 2017 Penrhyn Quarry Railway PRS Archived from the original on 28 August 2016 Retrieved 4 October 2016 a b c d e Lee 1945 p 224 a b Turner 1975 p 108 Images of the preserved George Sholto Turner 1975 p 107 Images of the preserved Edward Sholto Turner 1975 p 100 Quine 2016 Images of the preserved Charles a b Johnson 2017 Turner 1975 p 101 Images of the preserved Felin Hen Turner 1975 p 102 Sources edit Boyd James I C 1985 Narrow Gauge Railways in North Caernarvonshire Volume 2 The Penrhyn Quarry Railways Usk The Oakwood Press ISBN 978 0 85361 312 1 OL 8284743M The British Narrow Gauge Railway No 5 Hatherill Gordon Hatherill Ann 2009 Slate Quarry Album Garndolbenmaen RCL Publications ISBN 978 0 9538763 8 9 Johnson Peter 1995 North Wales Celebration of Steam Shepperton Ian Allan Publishing ISBN 978 0 7110 2378 9 Johnson Peter 2017 Festiniog Railway From Slate Railway to Heritage Operation 1921 2014 Barnsley Pen amp Sword ISBN 978 1 47389 625 3 OCLC 1000452534 Jones J K 1985 The Little Penrhyn Railway Caernarfon Cyhoeddiadau Mei ISBN 978 0 905775 21 0 Lee Charles E July 1945 The Penrhyn Railway and its Locomotives 2 The Railway Magazine 91 558 London Tothill Press Limited 223 226 amp 238 ISSN 0033 8923 Messenger Michael 2008 Slate Quarry Railways of Gwynedd Truro Twelveheads Press ISBN 978 0 906294 68 0 Peters Ivo 1976 The Narrow Gauge Charm of Yesterday Oxford Oxford Publishing Co ISBN 978 0 902888 65 4 Quine Dan August 2016 The last 15 years at Penrhyn Narrow Gauge World No 114 Quine Dan June 2021 The development of Port Penrhyn Part one 1760 1879 Archive No 110 Lightmoor Press Richards Alun John 2001 The Slate Railways of Wales Llanrwst Gwasg Carreg Gwalch ISBN 978 0 86381 689 5 Turner Alun 2003 Gwynedd s Lost Railways Catrine Stenlake Publishing ISBN 978 1 84033 259 9 Turner Susan 1975 The Padarn and Penrhyn Railways Newton Abbot David and Charles ISBN 978 0 7153 6547 2 Welbourn Nigel 2000 Lost Lines British Narrow Gauge Shepperton Ian Allan Publishing ISBN 978 0 7110 2742 8 Further reading editLee Charles E May 1945 The Penrhyn Railway and its Locomotives 1 The Railway Magazine 91 557 London Tothill Press Limited 138 142 ISSN 0033 8923 Poulter Michael Tibble Leslie June 2017 A Peek at Penrhyn Railway Bylines 22 7 Clophill Irwell Press ISSN 1360 2098 Richards Alun John 2003 Fragments of Mine and Mill in Wales Llanrwst Gwasg Carreg Gwalch ISBN 978 0 86381 812 7 Richards Alun John 2007 Slate Quarrying in Wales Llanrwst Gwasg Carreg Gwalch ISBN 978 1 84527 026 1 External links editPenrhyn Quarry Railway Society Website Railway items at Penrhyn Castle Railway Museum via Penrhyn Castle Port Penrhyn and the 1800 Horse Tramway via Jaggers Heritage Railways and Quarrying at Bethesda via Jaggers Heritage Felin Fawr workshops via History Points Penrhyn railway in 1963 via Industrial Railway Society The quarry up to modern ownership via Douglas Archives Historical artefacts via The Narrow Gauge Railway Museum Archive cine film of the line1 via YouTube Archive cine film of the line and quarry1 via YouTube Archive cine film of the line and quarry2 via YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Penrhyn Quarry Railway amp oldid 1214605886, 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.