fbpx
Wikipedia

Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway

The Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway is a 15 in (381 mm) minimum gauge heritage railway in Cumbria, England. The 7-mile (11.3 km) line runs from Ravenglass to Dalegarth Station near Boot in the valley of Eskdale, in the Lake District. At Ravenglass the line ends at Ravenglass railway station on the Cumbrian Coast Line.

Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway
La'al Ratty
River Irt approaches Miteside Loop, October 2007
TerminusRavenglass
Coordinates54°21′18″N 3°24′29″W / 54.355°N 3.408°W / 54.355; -3.408
ConnectionsCumbrian Coast Line
Commercial operations
Built byWhitehaven Mines Ltd.
Original gauge3 ft (914 mm)
Preserved operations
Owned byRavenglass and Eskdale Railway Co. Ltd
Operated byRavenglass and Eskdale Railway Co. Ltd
Stations9
Length7 miles (11.3 km)
Preserved gauge15 in (381 mm)
Commercial history
Opened24 May 1875
1913Closed
1915Reopened
Closed1960
Preserved eraSteam
Preservation history
1960Saved by the Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway Preservation Society and reopened owned by the R&ER Co. Ltd.
1976Celebrated centenary of passenger services on the line.
1977New Radio Control System unveiled
2010Celebrated fifty years of preservation.
HeadquartersRavenglass
Website
Official website
Ravenglass
Dalegarth for Boot
class=notpageimage|
Stations on the Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway in Copeland, Cumbria
The old building at Dalegarth Station near Boot, with Ravenglass-built diesel loco Lady Wakefield
River Esk, with her driver, Peter van Zeller, on the turntable at Ravenglass station

Intermediate stations and halts are at Muncaster Mill, Miteside, Murthwaite, Irton Road, The Green, Fisherground and Beckfoot. The railway is owned by a private company and supported by a preservation society. The oldest locomotive is River Irt, parts of which date from 1894, while the newest is the diesel-hydraulic Douglas Ferreira, built in 2005.

The line is known locally as La'al Ratty and its 3 ft (914 mm) gauge predecessor as Owd Ratty.[1][2]

Nearby attractions include: the Roman Bath House at Ravenglass; the Hardknott Roman Fort, known to the Romans as Mediobogdum, at the foot of Hardknott Pass; the watermills at Boot and Muncaster; and Muncaster Castle, the home of the Pennington family since 1208.

History Edit

Original railway Edit

The original Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway was a 3 ft (914 mm) line opened on 24 May 1875 to transport hematite iron ore from three mines near and around the village of Boot to the Furness Railway standard gauge line at Ravenglass.[3][4] In the early 1880s, a tramway was built between Beckfoot and another mine at Gill Force.[5] There has previously been a dispute about the gauge the railway was built to. It is shown as 3 feet in records but is quoted as 2 ft 9 in (838 mm) in some books such as the ABC of Narrow Gauge Railways.[6] This figure was believed for many years until the present company discovered a sleeper from before the line closed, with spacings between holes made by track spikes confirming the gauge was the wider one. The confusion probably stems from the fact that the line was built under the condition that it was "of a gauge not less than 2' 9" ".[1]

Following requests from the residents of the valley for a passenger service, the railway was upgraded to meet the minimum standards of the Board of Trade, and the first passenger trains ran in November 1876.[1][3] It was the first public narrow-gauge railway in England.[3] However, the cost of upgrading the line for passengers left the railway company with substantial debts which it was unable to pay off. The company was forced to declare itself bankrupt in 1877, although trains continued to run under the control of a series of receivers.[3] All but one of the iron ore mines closed within 10 years of the railway opening, and there was not enough traffic from other sources (local goods and passengers from the villages and farms of the valley) for the railway to sustain itself. In later years, the railway did become popular with summer tourists, but this was not enough to offset the railway's running costs. The Summer 1898 Furness Railway timetable shows five weekday trains along the line with three on Sundays. [7]

In 1905, a passenger train was derailed at Murthwaite due to a combination of a defective locomotive and defective track.[8] By 1908 the track-work was in such poor condition, it was declared unsafe for passengers by the Board of Trade. The railway closed to passengers that year. Goods trains continued to run whilst attempts were made to raise money to rebuild the railway. These attempts failed, and the railway closed completely in April 1913.[3]

Conversion to 15 in gauge Edit

In 1915, the abandoned railway was taken over by the model maker Wenman Joseph Bassett-Lowke and his business partner Robert Proctor-Mitchel. They began converting the line to the 15 in (381 mm) gauge that it is today. The first train operated over the regauged line on 28 August 1915, running initially to Muncaster Mill.[1] By 1917, the entire line had been converted and trains were running along the whole length to Boot. However, the gradients on the final section of the line proved to be too steep for the smaller locos, and the railway was cut back to Beckfoot in 1918. Initially, services were operated using the Bassett-Lowke-built, 1/4 scale 4-4-2 Sans Pareil. This was later joined by another Bassett-Lowke loco, 'Colossus' (a 4-6-2 version of 'Sans Pareil'), as well as 2 locos and rolling stock from Sir Arthur Heywood's Duffield Bank line, following Sir Arthur's death in 1916. These were the 0-6-0 tank engine 'Ella', and the 0-8-0 tank engine Muriel, whose frames and running gear were later rebuilt as River Irt. Another Heywood loco, an 0-4-0 tank engine called 'Katie', was acquired from the Eaton Hall Railway in Cheshire, whilst another 4-6-2 tender loco, 'Sir Aubrey Brocklebank', was constructed for the railway, and named after the railway's financial backer.

As well as passengers, the line transported goods and mail to and from the valley. In 1922 a granite quarry was opened at Beckfoot, and the railway was used to transport the granite between Beckfoot Quarry and a crushing plant at Murthwaite. From 1929, the track between Murthwaite to Ravenglass was converted to dual gauge, with 4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge track straddling the 15 in (381 mm) gauge rails. A diesel locomotive was obtained in 1929 to work this section and details are in Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway locomotives.

In the mid-1920s, the railway was taken over by Sir Aubrey Brocklebank, a wealthy shipping owner who lived nearby at Irton Hall, and who also owned the quarry at Beckfoot. Under his ownership the line went through a number of changes. By 1926, the line had been extended along the route of the former Gill Force Tramway to its present terminus at Dalegarth Station. Large sections of the line were relaid with surplus rails from World War 1 light railways, and the railway was realigned in several places to remove some of the steepest gradients and sharper curves.

The station at Ravenglass was rebuilt to better handle the increasing number of passengers, and new steam and diesel locomotives were purchased to work the line, including River Esk (built in 1923), whilst the older locos were withdrawn and either rebuilt (in the case of Muriel into River Irt), or used to build new locos (in the case of the first River Mite). Following Sir Aubrey's death in 1929, control of the railway passed into the hands of his business partners, who lacked the local interest that Sir Aubrey had, and no further investment was made, other than what was needed for essential maintenance.

When World War II broke out in 1939, passenger trains were suspended for the duration of the conflict, and the steam locos were mothballed. Granite trains continued to run to support the war effort. In 1946, passenger trains began to run again using one of the diesels, with River Irt returning to service in 1947. River Esk did not return to service until the early 1950s, whilst the first River Mite had been permanently withdrawn and dismantled.

In 1949, the last of Sir Aubrey's business partners died, and the railway was sold to the Keswick Granite Company, who wanted to gain control of the quarrying side of the business. However, due to the lack of investment since the 1920s, much of the equipment in the quarry and crushing plant was worn out and in need of replacement. Rather than make the required investment, Keswick Granite chose to close the quarry in 1953, but kept the passenger trains running in the summer months. From 1958 attempts were made to sell the line as a going concern, but the asking price was too high. Finally in 1960, Keswick Granite announced that the railway would be sold by auction in September of that year.[9][10] It was also announced that if a buyer could not be found for the line as a whole, then the railway would be closed and sold off as 60 separate lots.

Preservation Edit

Locals and railway enthusiasts formed Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway Preservation Society to save the line, with financial backing by Sir Wavell Wakefield, Member of Parliament (MP) for Marylebone and owner of the Ullswater Steamers, and Colin Gilbert, a stockbroker. These efforts were successful, and at the auction in September 1960, the society made the winning bid and saved the railway from closure. Control of the railway passed to a new private company, with the backing of the preservation society, an arrangement that is still in place.[9][10]

When the new owners took control of the railway in 1961, the railway was in poor condition, suffering from the lack of investment since the late 1920s. There were only two steam locomotives, River Esk and River Irt, both of which were well worn and in need of overhauls. To allow for an expanded timetable, the preservation society raised funds to build a third steam locomotive. River Mite (2-8-2) entered service in 1967 and, although owned by the society, has been on permanent loan to the company ever since. The two existing steam locos would be rebuilt with new boilers and tenders in the 1960s and 1970s.

In 1968, the death of Colin Gilbert led to the railway company becoming the property of Sir Wavell Wakefield, who by that stage had become Lord Wakefield of Kendal. In the early 1970s it became apparent that, with passengers rising, another locomotive was required. This time the company constructed the locomotive itself. Northern Rock (2-6-2) was complete in time for centenary celebrations in 1976. A further addition was made in 1980 when the company constructed the B-B diesel locomotive Lady Wakefield.[9][10]

Other significant locomotives include Bonnie Dundee, built in 1900 as a 2 ft (610 mm)-gauge tank locomotive before being donated to the R&ER by a member and converted to 15 in (381 mm)-gauge, later converted again from tank to tender configuration; Synolda, a twin to the original 15 in (381 mm) loco Sans Pareil, built in 1912, saved from Belle Vue Zoo in 1978 and now in the railway museum; Shelagh of Eskdale, a 4-6-4 diesel built in 1969 incorporating parts of the Heywood loco Ella; Perkins, a rebuilt 0-4-4DH locomotive, which started as a quarry shunter before being rebuilt into the steam-outlined Passenger Tractor and then again in 1984 into its current guise; Douglas Ferreira, a B-B diesel loco constructed in 2005 and named after the general manager of the R&ER from 1961 to 1994. The most recent addition to the loco fleet is 'Whillan Beck', a 4-6-2 tender loco built by Krauss in Munich in 1929, and entered service at Ravenglass in 2018.

Since the 1960s, the condition of the railway has been significantly improved and visitors have increased. Most of the work to rebuild the railway was overseen by Douglas Ferreira, who was the general manager between 1961 and 1994. Today, there are 120,000 passengers each year with up to 16 trains daily in summer. Trains run most of the year; the railway is only closed in January.

In October 1998, the railway's engines River Mite, Northern Rock, and Cyril were taken to Germany for a period of excursions on the Dresden Park Railway, a former Pioniereisenbahn in Dresden. Whilst in Dresden, the locomotives ran with two of that lines Krauss & Co. built locomotives dating from 1925. In 2016, the R&ER was able to purchase a sister engine, built by Krauss & Co. in 1929 for the Ibero-American Exposition in Seville, Spain. Since its arrival in Cumbria, this locomotive has been named Whillan Beck.[11][12]

In early 2020, the railway was forced to temporarily suspend all trains due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the subsequent UK-wide lockdown. This was the first time since the Second World War that passenger trains had been forcibly suspended for such a prolonged period. Following the relaxation of lockdown restrictions in July 2020, passenger trains resumed on 30 July.

Gilbert's Cutting Edit

After passing Spout House Farm the line reaches Gilbert's Cutting. Until 1964, trains were forced to follow a sharp curve along a contour in order to avoid steep gradients. Using "opencast gelignite" to blast through the rock, the cutting was constructed to a 300-foot radius ten feet wide at rail level with steep sides exposing Eskdale pink granite on the inside curve. Its construction alleviated the sharp curve at Holling Head of 145 foot radius which caused excessive wear and tear on the locos and track. 3,000 tons of rock and earth was removed and about 700 feet of track was re-laid. By diverting the line through the new cutting the length of the line was reduced by 87+34 feet making the total length 6.91 miles.

On Friday 27 March 1964, the 11:20am train from Ravenglass hauled by River Irt and driven by the Managing Director of the Railway Company Colin Gilbert, stopped at the Western entrance to the cutting. Mr Patrick Satow, the Chairman of the Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway Preservation Society, who was travelling in the cab with Mr Gilbert and Mr Postlethwaite the landowner, cut the ribbon and formally named the cutting "Gilbert's Cutting" in honour of Colin Gilbert.

Present operations Edit

 
A RANDER board, issued to a train's driver and guard by the duty controller.

Today, the railway is a popular visitor attraction in the Lake District, with the majority of its annual passenger numbers coming during the summer months. The entire single journey takes 40 minutes from end-to-end. Passengers can choose between open and covered seating, with some saloon coaches being fitted with heaters for the winter months. Disabled passengers and cycles can also be conveyed by the trains. The locomotives are 13 scale models of mainline locomotives and are air-braked at 50 psi.[13] There are over a hundred regular volunteers that help with the running of the railways, which include guarding the trains, carriage shunting and selling tickets at the major intermediate stations along the route.

Signalling system Edit

 
Signal box, Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway

The railway uses the Radio Control Train Order signalling system. Outside Ravenglass station, the line is single track with passing loops at Miteside, Irton Road and Fisherground. Trains operate by radio communication between drivers and at Ravenglass signal box. At passing loops and the terminus station, drivers contact the controller, using "RANDER" reporting numbers (even numbers for up trains, and odd for down), to indicate that the train is within the loop and is clear of the preceding single track. To leave the loop, the driver contacts control to gain authorisation to enter the next single track section. No semaphore signals are used outside Ravenglass station. Points at passing loops are weighted with direction indicators, meaning that no human intervention is required and the points reset themselves automatically after the passage of a train when entering the points from a trailing direction when the points are set for the other rail line.

Elements of the operation were used by British Rail to cut costs on remote lines. What became known as Radio Electronic Token Block signalling shared features with the Ratty, such as centralised control, automatic points at loops, and on-train equipment rather than fixed equipment at remote locations.

On peak days in the summer months, two trains depart each end of the line per hour. Capacity on the railway allows for a service run at 20-minute intervals.

Ownership Edit

The railway company is in common ownership with the Ullswater 'Steamers', a company that operates lake cruises on Ullswater in the north-eastern part of the Lake District. Both companies form part of the Lake District Estates group, which also owns various tourist oriented properties in the area, and is controlled by Lord Wakefield's descendants.[14]

Stations on the route Edit

Map this section's coordinates using: OpenStreetMap
Ravenglass &
Eskdale Railway
 
 
 
Headshunt
0 mi 0 ch
0 km
 
 
 
 
 
Turntable
 
 
 
 
Workshop
 
 
 
 
Ravenglass  
0 mi 3 ch
0.06 km
 
 
 
 
Ravenglass  
 
 
 
Ravenglass Main Street
 
 
 
 
Engine & carriage sheds
 
 
(1 in 48)
 
Black Bridge
 
1 mi 0 ch
1.61 km
 
 
Muncaster Mill  
1 mi 6 ch
1.73 km
 
Mill Race
 
 
Mill Wood Bank (1 in 43)
 
Miteside Halt
1 mi 49 ch
2.6 km
 
Miteside Loop
1 mi 67 ch
2.96 km
 
2 mi 0 ch
3.22 km
 
Katie Caddy Bridge
 
Wet Cutting
 
Murthwaite Siding
2 mi 43 ch
4.08 km
 
 
Murthwaite Oak Tree (1 in 43)
 
 
Murthwaite Quarry
 
Murthwaite Halt
2 mi 55 ch
4.33 km
 
3 mi 0 ch
4.83 km
 
 
(1 in 40)
 
Walk Mill Summit
 
 
(1 in 51)
 
Black Bridge (derelict)
 
4 mi 0 ch
6.44 km
 
Irton Road  
4 mi 8 ch
6.6 km
 
Mere Beck
 
The Green  
4 mi 59 ch
7.62 km
 
Eskdale Valley Road
 
 
Hollin How Bank (1 in 43)
 
5 mi 0 ch
8.05 km
 
Hollin How Bridge
 
Hollin How Summit
 
 
Fisherground Incline
 
 
(1 in 55)
 
Fisherground Loop
5 mi 28 ch
8.61 km
 
Fisherground
5 mi 35 ch
8.75 km
 
 
Ban Garth Incline
 
 
Spout House Curve (1 in 52)
 
Spout House Bridge
 
Gilbert's Cutting
 
6 mi 0 ch
9.66 km
 
 
Beckfoot Quarry
 
 
(1 in 67)
 
Beckfoot  
6 mi 30 ch
10.26 km
 
 
Beckfoot Bank (1 in 53)
 
 
Ghyll Force Junction
 
 
Boot
 
Beckfoot Summit
 
Dalegarth Cottages
 
Whillan Beck
 
Dalegarth for Boot  
6 mi 68 ch
11.02 km
 
 
Turntable
 

Ravenglass Edit

Ravenglass railway station is the main terminus of the line: the other terminus is Dalegarth for Boot. Ravenglass station is the headquarters of the railway company and houses the railway museum, managerial offices and rolling stock maintenance facilities.

There is a turntable at the western extremity of the station's platforms, which doubles as the datum for mileage markers on the line. Ravenglass houses two locomotive sheds, on the southern side of the track, and a carriage shed on the northern side. There is a carriage & wagon workshop beyond Platform 1, opposite the signalbox. The Turntable Café is situated on Platform 1. The car park has spaces for 100 cars, as well as coaches. There are holiday accommodation facilities for weekly use, which consist of the Pullman camping coaches 135 Elmira and 137 Maid of Kent, and a holiday bungalow, the Hilton Cottage.

Muncaster Mill Edit

Muncaster Mill is 1 mile or 1.6 kilometres from Ravenglass, adjacent to an historic corn mill (no longer open to the public). It is an unmanned station, formerly known simply as Muncaster.

Miteside Halt Edit

Miteside Halt is 1+34 miles (2.8 km) from Ravenglass. It is accessible only from a footpath that passes along Miterdale, at the foot of Muncaster Fell. The station shelter is the wooden hull of an old boat, the third such structure at the Halt.

Murthwaite Halt Edit

Murthwaite Halt is 2+34 miles (4.4 km) from Ravenglass and is also only accessible from a footpath.

Irton Road Edit

Irton Road is 4+14 miles (6.8 km) from Ravenglass, approximately halfway along the line. It was formerly known as Hollowstones, after the adjacent farm. There is a passing loop within the station and, consequently, two platforms. It has three sidings which branch off from the "up" loop – two of which run into a small shed, and the third of which is used for ballast and log traffic. There is a station building, which dates from 1875.

The Green Edit

The Green, also known as Eskdale Green, is 4+34 miles (7.6 km) from Ravenglass. It was formerly known as King of Prussia after a local pub, then Eskdale Green, and since has changed between Eskdale Green and The Green several times. Has recently received a new picnic area.

Fisherground Edit

Fisherground is accessible via a public footpath, adjacent to Fisherground campsite. It is 5+12 miles (8.9 km) from Ravenglass, just east of Fisherground loop.

Beckfoot Edit

Beckfoot is 6+12 miles (10.5 km) from Ravenglass. Setting down is permitted only from trains travelling from Ravenglass, and picking up is permitted only on trains to Ravenglass.

Dalegarth for Boot Edit

Dalegarth for Boot is a few yards short of 7 miles or 11.3 kilometres from Ravenglass and is the eastern terminus of the railway. It was formerly known as Eskdale (Dalegarth). There are two platforms and a turntable. The facilities at this station include Fellbites Café and the Scafell Gift Shop. A water supply to platform 1 allows topping up of the steam locomotive's tenders.

Rolling stock Edit

Locomotives Edit

No. Name Type Wheels Builder Built Arrival Livery Status Railway Series/Thomas & Friends Equivalent
3 River Irt Steam 0-8-2 Sir Arthur Heywood 1894 1917 Mid Green In service Bert
6 Katie Steam 0-4-0T Sir Arthur Heywood 1896 1916, 1982 Green Operational, usually displayed in the museum
7 River Esk Steam 2-8-2 Davey Paxman & Co. 1923 1923 Blackberry Black In service Rex
9 River Mite Steam 2-8-2 Clarkson & Sons 1966 1966 Indian Red In service Mike
10 Northern Rock Steam 2-6-2 R&ER 1976 1976 Muscat Green In service Jock (Railway Series Only)
11 Bonnie Dundee Steam 0-4-2 Kerr Stuart 1900 1976 Bronze Green Undergoing major overhaul for eventual running at CCLR
12 Whillan Beck[15] Steam 4-6-2 Krauss 1929 2016 Caledonian Blue In service
N/A Synolda Steam 4-4-2 Bassett-Lowke 1912 1978 NGR Blue Undergoing 10-year overhaul
N/A The Flower of the Forest Steam 0-2-2 R&ER 1985 1992 NER Green Stored, unserviceable
N/A Greenbat Battery-Electric 4wBE Greenwood & Batley 1957 1982 Green Stored, unserviceable
ICL 1 Bunny Petrol-Mechanical B-2 Francis Theakston 1922 1922 Green On display in the museum
ICL 5 Quarryman Petrol-Mechanical 4wPM Muir-Hill 1927 1927 Green Operational, usually displayed in the museum
ICL 4 Perkins Diesel-Mechanical 4w-4 Muir-Hill 1929 1929 Yellow In service Frank (Railway Series Only)
ICL 7 Shelagh of Eskdale Diesel-Mechanical 4-6-4DM Severn-Lamb 1969 1969 Two-tone Green At Romney, Hythe and Dymchurch Railway Sigrid of Arlesdale (Railway Series Only)
ICL 8 Lady Wakefield Diesel-Mechanical B-B R&ER 1980 1980 BR Green In service
ICL 9 Cyril Diesel-Mechanical 4wDM R.A. Lister 1932 1985 Green Station shunter Blister I & Blister II (Railway Series Only)
ICL 10 Les Diesel-Mechanical 4wDM R.A. Lister 1960 1999 Green Workshop pilot
ICL 11 Douglas Ferreira Diesel-Hydraulic B-B TMA Engineering 2005 2005 Indian Red In traffic

River Mite, Whillan Beck and Douglas Ferreira along with open coach 287 are owned by the Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway Preservation Society and are hired to the railway.

Passenger carriages Edit

The operational passenger stock of the railway currently comprises the following –

  • 7 20-seat heated saloons (102; 110; 111; 113–115; 136)
  • 2 18-seat heated saloons (106; 107)
  • 1 14-seat heated brake saloon (112)
  • 3 20-seat saloons (119; 121; 122)
  • 2 14-seat brake saloons (104; 120)
  • 1 16-seat brake saloon (103)
  • 1 22-seat heated maxi brake saloon (133)
  • 1 20-seat heated maxi special saloon (130)
  • 1 17-seat heated disabled saloon (118)
  • 2 19-seat disabled saloons (123; 137)
  • 7 20-seat semi-opens (101; 108; 109; 116; 117; 124; 125)
  • 3 20-seat disabled semi-opens (127–129)
  • 9 20-seat opens (166; 169–469; 170–370; 387)
  • 4 18-seat brake opens (271; 371; 199; 287)

Other vehicles Edit

 
A utility van for use by engineers.

The permanent way department currently utilises nine four-wheeled flat wagons, eight of which have removable tops for ballast carrying, a four-wheeled railbender wagon, a bogie man-rider wagon, two bogie flat wagons, a utilities van, and a mess saloon coach (105).[16]

The line in fiction Edit

The Arlesdale Railway in The Railway Series by the Rev. Wilbert Awdry is based on the Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway.[17] In Small Railway Engines (1967), Awdry relates part of a holiday he spent visiting the Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway with the Rev. Edwin Boston; the two appear in the book as the Thin Clergyman and the Fat Clergyman, respectively. The Arlesdale Railway was also the focus point in Jock the New Engine, with an incident that was inspired by an accident that happened on the Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway, when Perkins crashed in the back of the shed, and with cameos in other books.[18]

The fictional railway's locomotives are each based on Ravenglass locomotives: Bert, Rex, Mike and Jock are the steam locomotives River Irt, River Esk, River Mite and Northern Rock, while the Sudrian diesels Frank, Sigrid of Arlesdale and Blister 1 & 2 are the Cumbrians Perkins, Shelagh of Eskdale and Cyril.[17] The Arlesdale Railway stations are also visibly based on the Ravenglass ones: Arlesburgh is Ravenglass, Ffarquhar Road is Muncaster Mill, Marthwaite is Irton Road, Arlesdale Green is Eskdale Green and Arlesdale is Dalegarth.[17] Bert, Rex and Mike first appeared in the Thomas & Friends TV Series in the special Sodor's Legend of the Lost Treasure and later appeared in Season 20.

The line features in The Plague Dogs by Richard Adams; the canine protagonists evade the force of paratroopers searching for them by riding from Eskdale to Ravenglass on an empty train.

In the first two instalments in the RollerCoaster Tycoon franchise of theme park simulation series, RollerCoaster Tycoon and RollerCoaster Tycoon 2, the model for the basic "miniature railway" ride is based on the engine No 10 Northern Rock.[19]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d Van Zeller, Peter (December 2008). "100 years since the end of the 'Owd Ratty'". The Railway Magazine. 154 (1, 292): 39–40.
  2. ^ Welbourn 2000, pp. 14–18.
  3. ^ a b c d e Whitehouse, Patrick & Snell, John (1984). Narrow gauge railways of the British Isles. David & Charles. ISBN 0-7153-0196-9.
  4. ^ Davies, W.J.K. (1981) [1968]. "Inception of the Railway". The Ravenglass & Eskdale Railway. David & Charles. pp. 13–22. ISBN 0-7153-9224-7.
  5. ^ "View: Cumberland LXXIX.SW (includes: Eskdale; Irton.) – Ordnance Survey Six-inch England and Wales, 1842–1952". maps.nls.uk.
  6. ^ Ian Allan ABC of Narrow Gauge Railways, c. 1960, pp. 49–50
  7. ^ Davey 1984, pp. 13 & 39.
  8. ^ Earnshaw, Alan (1989). Trains in Trouble: Vol. 5. Penryn: Atlantic Books. p. 5. ISBN 0-906899-35-4.
  9. ^ a b c "History of the Railway". Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway. from the original on 24 June 2016. Retrieved 24 June 2016.
  10. ^ a b c "Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway". British Heritage Railways. 27 June 2016. from the original on 27 June 2016.
  11. ^ [Locomotives from Great Britain as guest in Dresden] (in German and English). Parkeisenbahn Dresden. Archived from the original on 23 December 2020. Retrieved 23 December 2020.
  12. ^ "95 Jahre Martens'sche Liliputlokomotiven – 2020 Leipzig" [95 years of Martens' miniature locomotives – 2020] (in German). Parkeisenbahn Dresden. from the original on 26 October 2020. Retrieved 26 December 2020.
  13. ^ Andersen, Eliot; Jenner, David. The Ratty Album Volume 3. p. 3.
  14. ^ "Visitor Attractions & Events". Lake District Estates. from the original on 24 June 2016. Retrieved 24 June 2016.
  15. ^ "Name and Livery decision". The Train From Spain Appeal. 12 February 2017. Retrieved 12 February 2017.
  16. ^ van Zeller, Peter & Higginson, Martin (2006). Ravenglass & Eskdale Railway Stockbook (4th ed.). Ravenglass & Eskdale Railway Preservation Society.
  17. ^ a b c Awdry, Wilbert and George (1987). The Island of Sodor: Its People, History and Railways. Heinemann. ISBN 0-434-96348-8.
  18. ^ Wilcock, David, respectively. The Rev Wilbert Awdry – Thomas the Tank Engine's Creator – Dies at 85, obituary in Steam Railway dated June 1997 online at pegnsean.net (accessed 13 April 2008)
  19. ^ . rollercoastertycoon.com. Archived from the original on 13 April 2000. Retrieved 11 March 2022.

Sources Edit

External links Edit

  • Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway Company Ltd.
  • Ravenglass & Eskdale Railway Preservation Society
  • Ravenglass Railway Museum
  • Photos of the railway in dedicated flickr group
  • The Cumbria Directory – Ravenglass Railway Museum

ravenglass, eskdale, railway, minimum, gauge, heritage, railway, cumbria, england, mile, line, runs, from, ravenglass, dalegarth, station, near, boot, valley, eskdale, lake, district, ravenglass, line, ends, ravenglass, railway, station, cumbrian, coast, line,. The Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway is a 15 in 381 mm minimum gauge heritage railway in Cumbria England The 7 mile 11 3 km line runs from Ravenglass to Dalegarth Station near Boot in the valley of Eskdale in the Lake District At Ravenglass the line ends at Ravenglass railway station on the Cumbrian Coast Line Ravenglass and Eskdale RailwayLa al RattyRiver Irt approaches Miteside Loop October 2007TerminusRavenglassCoordinates54 21 18 N 3 24 29 W 54 355 N 3 408 W 54 355 3 408ConnectionsCumbrian Coast LineCommercial operationsBuilt byWhitehaven Mines Ltd Original gauge3 ft 914 mm Preserved operationsOwned byRavenglass and Eskdale Railway Co LtdOperated byRavenglass and Eskdale Railway Co LtdStations9Length7 miles 11 3 km Preserved gauge15 in 381 mm Commercial historyOpened24 May 18751913Closed1915ReopenedClosed1960Preserved eraSteamPreservation history1960Saved by the Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway Preservation Society and reopened owned by the R amp ER Co Ltd 1976Celebrated centenary of passenger services on the line 1977New Radio Control System unveiled2010Celebrated fifty years of preservation HeadquartersRavenglassWebsiteOfficial websiteRavenglassDalegarth for Bootclass notpageimage Stations on the Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway in Copeland Cumbria The old building at Dalegarth Station near Boot with Ravenglass built diesel loco Lady WakefieldRiver Esk with her driver Peter van Zeller on the turntable at Ravenglass stationIntermediate stations and halts are at Muncaster Mill Miteside Murthwaite Irton Road The Green Fisherground and Beckfoot The railway is owned by a private company and supported by a preservation society The oldest locomotive is River Irt parts of which date from 1894 while the newest is the diesel hydraulic Douglas Ferreira built in 2005 The line is known locally as La al Ratty and its 3 ft 914 mm gauge predecessor as Owd Ratty 1 2 Nearby attractions include the Roman Bath House at Ravenglass the Hardknott Roman Fort known to the Romans as Mediobogdum at the foot of Hardknott Pass the watermills at Boot and Muncaster and Muncaster Castle the home of the Pennington family since 1208 Contents 1 History 1 1 Original railway 1 2 Conversion to 15 in gauge 1 3 Preservation 1 4 Gilbert s Cutting 2 Present operations 2 1 Signalling system 2 2 Ownership 3 Stations on the route 3 1 Ravenglass 3 2 Muncaster Mill 3 3 Miteside Halt 3 4 Murthwaite Halt 3 5 Irton Road 3 6 The Green 3 7 Fisherground 3 8 Beckfoot 3 9 Dalegarth for Boot 4 Rolling stock 4 1 Locomotives 4 2 Passenger carriages 4 3 Other vehicles 5 The line in fiction 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Sources 8 External linksHistory EditOriginal railway Edit The original Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway was a 3 ft 914 mm line opened on 24 May 1875 to transport hematite iron ore from three mines near and around the village of Boot to the Furness Railway standard gauge line at Ravenglass 3 4 In the early 1880s a tramway was built between Beckfoot and another mine at Gill Force 5 There has previously been a dispute about the gauge the railway was built to It is shown as 3 feet in records but is quoted as 2 ft 9 in 838 mm in some books such as the ABC of Narrow Gauge Railways 6 This figure was believed for many years until the present company discovered a sleeper from before the line closed with spacings between holes made by track spikes confirming the gauge was the wider one The confusion probably stems from the fact that the line was built under the condition that it was of a gauge not less than 2 9 1 Following requests from the residents of the valley for a passenger service the railway was upgraded to meet the minimum standards of the Board of Trade and the first passenger trains ran in November 1876 1 3 It was the first public narrow gauge railway in England 3 However the cost of upgrading the line for passengers left the railway company with substantial debts which it was unable to pay off The company was forced to declare itself bankrupt in 1877 although trains continued to run under the control of a series of receivers 3 All but one of the iron ore mines closed within 10 years of the railway opening and there was not enough traffic from other sources local goods and passengers from the villages and farms of the valley for the railway to sustain itself In later years the railway did become popular with summer tourists but this was not enough to offset the railway s running costs The Summer 1898 Furness Railway timetable shows five weekday trains along the line with three on Sundays 7 In 1905 a passenger train was derailed at Murthwaite due to a combination of a defective locomotive and defective track 8 By 1908 the track work was in such poor condition it was declared unsafe for passengers by the Board of Trade The railway closed to passengers that year Goods trains continued to run whilst attempts were made to raise money to rebuild the railway These attempts failed and the railway closed completely in April 1913 3 Conversion to 15 in gauge Edit In 1915 the abandoned railway was taken over by the model maker Wenman Joseph Bassett Lowke and his business partner Robert Proctor Mitchel They began converting the line to the 15 in 381 mm gauge that it is today The first train operated over the regauged line on 28 August 1915 running initially to Muncaster Mill 1 By 1917 the entire line had been converted and trains were running along the whole length to Boot However the gradients on the final section of the line proved to be too steep for the smaller locos and the railway was cut back to Beckfoot in 1918 Initially services were operated using the Bassett Lowke built 1 4 scale 4 4 2 Sans Pareil This was later joined by another Bassett Lowke loco Colossus a 4 6 2 version of Sans Pareil as well as 2 locos and rolling stock from Sir Arthur Heywood s Duffield Bank line following Sir Arthur s death in 1916 These were the 0 6 0 tank engine Ella and the 0 8 0 tank engine Muriel whose frames and running gear were later rebuilt as River Irt Another Heywood loco an 0 4 0 tank engine called Katie was acquired from the Eaton Hall Railway in Cheshire whilst another 4 6 2 tender loco Sir Aubrey Brocklebank was constructed for the railway and named after the railway s financial backer As well as passengers the line transported goods and mail to and from the valley In 1922 a granite quarry was opened at Beckfoot and the railway was used to transport the granite between Beckfoot Quarry and a crushing plant at Murthwaite From 1929 the track between Murthwaite to Ravenglass was converted to dual gauge with 4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gauge track straddling the 15 in 381 mm gauge rails A diesel locomotive was obtained in 1929 to work this section and details are in Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway locomotives In the mid 1920s the railway was taken over by Sir Aubrey Brocklebank a wealthy shipping owner who lived nearby at Irton Hall and who also owned the quarry at Beckfoot Under his ownership the line went through a number of changes By 1926 the line had been extended along the route of the former Gill Force Tramway to its present terminus at Dalegarth Station Large sections of the line were relaid with surplus rails from World War 1 light railways and the railway was realigned in several places to remove some of the steepest gradients and sharper curves The station at Ravenglass was rebuilt to better handle the increasing number of passengers and new steam and diesel locomotives were purchased to work the line including River Esk built in 1923 whilst the older locos were withdrawn and either rebuilt in the case of Muriel into River Irt or used to build new locos in the case of the first River Mite Following Sir Aubrey s death in 1929 control of the railway passed into the hands of his business partners who lacked the local interest that Sir Aubrey had and no further investment was made other than what was needed for essential maintenance When World War II broke out in 1939 passenger trains were suspended for the duration of the conflict and the steam locos were mothballed Granite trains continued to run to support the war effort In 1946 passenger trains began to run again using one of the diesels with River Irt returning to service in 1947 River Esk did not return to service until the early 1950s whilst the first River Mite had been permanently withdrawn and dismantled In 1949 the last of Sir Aubrey s business partners died and the railway was sold to the Keswick Granite Company who wanted to gain control of the quarrying side of the business However due to the lack of investment since the 1920s much of the equipment in the quarry and crushing plant was worn out and in need of replacement Rather than make the required investment Keswick Granite chose to close the quarry in 1953 but kept the passenger trains running in the summer months From 1958 attempts were made to sell the line as a going concern but the asking price was too high Finally in 1960 Keswick Granite announced that the railway would be sold by auction in September of that year 9 10 It was also announced that if a buyer could not be found for the line as a whole then the railway would be closed and sold off as 60 separate lots Preservation Edit Locals and railway enthusiasts formed Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway Preservation Society to save the line with financial backing by Sir Wavell Wakefield Member of Parliament MP for Marylebone and owner of the Ullswater Steamers and Colin Gilbert a stockbroker These efforts were successful and at the auction in September 1960 the society made the winning bid and saved the railway from closure Control of the railway passed to a new private company with the backing of the preservation society an arrangement that is still in place 9 10 When the new owners took control of the railway in 1961 the railway was in poor condition suffering from the lack of investment since the late 1920s There were only two steam locomotives River Esk and River Irt both of which were well worn and in need of overhauls To allow for an expanded timetable the preservation society raised funds to build a third steam locomotive River Mite 2 8 2 entered service in 1967 and although owned by the society has been on permanent loan to the company ever since The two existing steam locos would be rebuilt with new boilers and tenders in the 1960s and 1970s In 1968 the death of Colin Gilbert led to the railway company becoming the property of Sir Wavell Wakefield who by that stage had become Lord Wakefield of Kendal In the early 1970s it became apparent that with passengers rising another locomotive was required This time the company constructed the locomotive itself Northern Rock 2 6 2 was complete in time for centenary celebrations in 1976 A further addition was made in 1980 when the company constructed the B B diesel locomotive Lady Wakefield 9 10 Other significant locomotives include Bonnie Dundee built in 1900 as a 2 ft 610 mm gauge tank locomotive before being donated to the R amp ER by a member and converted to 15 in 381 mm gauge later converted again from tank to tender configuration Synolda a twin to the original 15 in 381 mm loco Sans Pareil built in 1912 saved from Belle Vue Zoo in 1978 and now in the railway museum Shelagh of Eskdale a 4 6 4 diesel built in 1969 incorporating parts of the Heywood loco Ella Perkins a rebuilt 0 4 4DH locomotive which started as a quarry shunter before being rebuilt into the steam outlined Passenger Tractor and then again in 1984 into its current guise Douglas Ferreira a B B diesel loco constructed in 2005 and named after the general manager of the R amp ER from 1961 to 1994 The most recent addition to the loco fleet is Whillan Beck a 4 6 2 tender loco built by Krauss in Munich in 1929 and entered service at Ravenglass in 2018 Since the 1960s the condition of the railway has been significantly improved and visitors have increased Most of the work to rebuild the railway was overseen by Douglas Ferreira who was the general manager between 1961 and 1994 Today there are 120 000 passengers each year with up to 16 trains daily in summer Trains run most of the year the railway is only closed in January In October 1998 the railway s engines River Mite Northern Rock and Cyril were taken to Germany for a period of excursions on the Dresden Park Railway a former Pioniereisenbahn in Dresden Whilst in Dresden the locomotives ran with two of that lines Krauss amp Co built locomotives dating from 1925 In 2016 the R amp ER was able to purchase a sister engine built by Krauss amp Co in 1929 for the Ibero American Exposition in Seville Spain Since its arrival in Cumbria this locomotive has been named Whillan Beck 11 12 In early 2020 the railway was forced to temporarily suspend all trains due to the COVID 19 pandemic and the subsequent UK wide lockdown This was the first time since the Second World War that passenger trains had been forcibly suspended for such a prolonged period Following the relaxation of lockdown restrictions in July 2020 passenger trains resumed on 30 July Gilbert s Cutting Edit After passing Spout House Farm the line reaches Gilbert s Cutting Until 1964 trains were forced to follow a sharp curve along a contour in order to avoid steep gradients Using opencast gelignite to blast through the rock the cutting was constructed to a 300 foot radius ten feet wide at rail level with steep sides exposing Eskdale pink granite on the inside curve Its construction alleviated the sharp curve at Holling Head of 145 foot radius which caused excessive wear and tear on the locos and track 3 000 tons of rock and earth was removed and about 700 feet of track was re laid By diverting the line through the new cutting the length of the line was reduced by 87 3 4 feet making the total length 6 91 miles On Friday 27 March 1964 the 11 20am train from Ravenglass hauled by River Irt and driven by the Managing Director of the Railway Company Colin Gilbert stopped at the Western entrance to the cutting Mr Patrick Satow the Chairman of the Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway Preservation Society who was travelling in the cab with Mr Gilbert and Mr Postlethwaite the landowner cut the ribbon and formally named the cutting Gilbert s Cutting in honour of Colin Gilbert Present operations Edit nbsp A RANDER board issued to a train s driver and guard by the duty controller Today the railway is a popular visitor attraction in the Lake District with the majority of its annual passenger numbers coming during the summer months The entire single journey takes 40 minutes from end to end Passengers can choose between open and covered seating with some saloon coaches being fitted with heaters for the winter months Disabled passengers and cycles can also be conveyed by the trains The locomotives are 1 3 scale models of mainline locomotives and are air braked at 50 psi 13 There are over a hundred regular volunteers that help with the running of the railways which include guarding the trains carriage shunting and selling tickets at the major intermediate stations along the route Signalling system Edit nbsp Signal box Ravenglass and Eskdale RailwayThe railway uses the Radio Control Train Order signalling system Outside Ravenglass station the line is single track with passing loops at Miteside Irton Road and Fisherground Trains operate by radio communication between drivers and at Ravenglass signal box At passing loops and the terminus station drivers contact the controller using RANDER reporting numbers even numbers for up trains and odd for down to indicate that the train is within the loop and is clear of the preceding single track To leave the loop the driver contacts control to gain authorisation to enter the next single track section No semaphore signals are used outside Ravenglass station Points at passing loops are weighted with direction indicators meaning that no human intervention is required and the points reset themselves automatically after the passage of a train when entering the points from a trailing direction when the points are set for the other rail line Elements of the operation were used by British Rail to cut costs on remote lines What became known as Radio Electronic Token Block signalling shared features with the Ratty such as centralised control automatic points at loops and on train equipment rather than fixed equipment at remote locations On peak days in the summer months two trains depart each end of the line per hour Capacity on the railway allows for a service run at 20 minute intervals Ownership Edit The railway company is in common ownership with the Ullswater Steamers a company that operates lake cruises on Ullswater in the north eastern part of the Lake District Both companies form part of the Lake District Estates group which also owns various tourist oriented properties in the area and is controlled by Lord Wakefield s descendants 14 Stations on the route EditMap this section s coordinates using OpenStreetMapDownload coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates Point Coordinates Links to map resources OS Grid Ref NotesRavenglass R amp ER 54 21 21 N 3 24 30 W 54 3559 N 3 4082 W 54 3559 3 4082 Ravenglass R amp ER Station Muncaster Mill 54 22 01 N 3 23 38 W 54 367 N 3 394 W 54 367 3 394 Muncaster Mill Station SD095977Miteside Halt 54 22 16 N 3 23 02 W 54 371 N 3 384 W 54 371 3 384 Miteside Halt SD 102 983Murthwaite Halt 54 22 43 N 3 22 02 W 54 3785 N 3 3671 W 54 3785 3 3671 Murthwaite Halt Irton Road 54 23 17 N 3 19 48 W 54 3880 N 3 3299 W 54 3880 3 3299 Irton Road Station The Green 54 23 12 N 3 19 03 W 54 3868 N 3 3176 W 54 3868 3 3176 The Green Station SD 145999Fisherground 54 23 32 N 3 18 13 W 54 3923 N 3 3037 W 54 3923 3 3037 Fisherground Station NY 152003Beckfoot 54 23 33 N 3 16 57 W 54 3926 N 3 2824 W 54 3926 3 2824 Beckfoot Station NY 168 004Dalegarth 54 23 43 N 3 16 29 W 54 3954 N 3 2748 W 54 3954 3 2748 Dalegarth Station NY 174 008vteRavenglass amp Eskdale RailwayLegend nbsp Cumbrian Coast lineto Barrow in Furness nbsp nbsp Headshunt 0 mi 0 ch0 km nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Turntable nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Workshop nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Ravenglass nbsp 0 mi 3 ch0 06 km nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Ravenglass nbsp nbsp nbsp Cumbrian Coast lineto Carlisle nbsp Ravenglass Main Street nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Engine amp carriage sheds nbsp nbsp 1 in 48 nbsp Black Bridge nbsp 1 mi 0 ch1 61 km nbsp A595 nbsp Muncaster Mill nbsp 1 mi 6 ch1 73 km nbsp Mill Race nbsp nbsp Mill Wood Bank 1 in 43 nbsp Miteside Halt 1 mi 49 ch2 6 km nbsp Miteside Loop 1 mi 67 ch2 96 km nbsp 2 mi 0 ch3 22 km nbsp Katie Caddy Bridge nbsp Wet Cutting nbsp Murthwaite Siding 2 mi 43 ch4 08 km nbsp nbsp Murthwaite Oak Tree 1 in 43 nbsp nbsp Murthwaite Quarry nbsp Murthwaite Halt 2 mi 55 ch4 33 km nbsp 3 mi 0 ch4 83 km nbsp nbsp 1 in 40 nbsp Walk Mill Summit nbsp nbsp 1 in 51 nbsp Black Bridge derelict nbsp 4 mi 0 ch6 44 km nbsp Irton Road nbsp 4 mi 8 ch6 6 km nbsp Mere Beck nbsp The Green nbsp 4 mi 59 ch7 62 km nbsp Eskdale Valley Road nbsp nbsp Hollin How Bank 1 in 43 nbsp 5 mi 0 ch8 05 km nbsp Hollin How Bridge nbsp Hollin How Summit nbsp nbsp Fisherground Incline nbsp nbsp 1 in 55 nbsp Fisherground Loop 5 mi 28 ch8 61 km nbsp Fisherground 5 mi 35 ch8 75 km nbsp nbsp Ban Garth Incline nbsp nbsp Spout House Curve 1 in 52 nbsp Spout House Bridge nbsp Gilbert s Cutting nbsp 6 mi 0 ch9 66 km nbsp nbsp Beckfoot Quarry nbsp nbsp 1 in 67 nbsp Beckfoot nbsp 6 mi 30 ch10 26 km nbsp nbsp Beckfoot Bank 1 in 53 nbsp nbsp Ghyll Force Junction nbsp nbsp Boot nbsp Beckfoot Summit nbsp Dalegarth Cottages nbsp Whillan Beck nbsp Dalegarth for Boot nbsp 6 mi 68 ch11 02 km nbsp nbsp Turntable nbsp Ghyll Force minesRavenglass Edit Main article Ravenglass railway station R amp ER Ravenglass railway station is the main terminus of the line the other terminus is Dalegarth for Boot Ravenglass station is the headquarters of the railway company and houses the railway museum managerial offices and rolling stock maintenance facilities There is a turntable at the western extremity of the station s platforms which doubles as the datum for mileage markers on the line Ravenglass houses two locomotive sheds on the southern side of the track and a carriage shed on the northern side There is a carriage amp wagon workshop beyond Platform 1 opposite the signalbox The Turntable Cafe is situated on Platform 1 The car park has spaces for 100 cars as well as coaches There are holiday accommodation facilities for weekly use which consist of the Pullman camping coaches 135 Elmira and 137 Maid of Kent and a holiday bungalow the Hilton Cottage Muncaster Mill Edit Main article Muncaster Mill railway station Muncaster Mill is 1 mile or 1 6 kilometres from Ravenglass adjacent to an historic corn mill no longer open to the public It is an unmanned station formerly known simply as Muncaster Miteside Halt Edit Main article Miteside Halt railway station Miteside Halt is 1 3 4 miles 2 8 km from Ravenglass It is accessible only from a footpath that passes along Miterdale at the foot of Muncaster Fell The station shelter is the wooden hull of an old boat the third such structure at the Halt Murthwaite Halt Edit Main article Murthwaite Halt railway station Murthwaite Halt is 2 3 4 miles 4 4 km from Ravenglass and is also only accessible from a footpath Irton Road Edit Main article Irton Road railway station Irton Road is 4 1 4 miles 6 8 km from Ravenglass approximately halfway along the line It was formerly known as Hollowstones after the adjacent farm There is a passing loop within the station and consequently two platforms It has three sidings which branch off from the up loop two of which run into a small shed and the third of which is used for ballast and log traffic There is a station building which dates from 1875 The Green Edit Main article The Green railway station The Green also known as Eskdale Green is 4 3 4 miles 7 6 km from Ravenglass It was formerly known as King of Prussia after a local pub then Eskdale Green and since has changed between Eskdale Green and The Green several times Has recently received a new picnic area Fisherground Edit Main article Fisherground railway station Fisherground is accessible via a public footpath adjacent to Fisherground campsite It is 5 1 2 miles 8 9 km from Ravenglass just east of Fisherground loop Beckfoot Edit Main article Beckfoot railway station Beckfoot is 6 1 2 miles 10 5 km from Ravenglass Setting down is permitted only from trains travelling from Ravenglass and picking up is permitted only on trains to Ravenglass Dalegarth for Boot Edit Main article Dalegarth for Boot railway station Dalegarth for Boot is a few yards short of 7 miles or 11 3 kilometres from Ravenglass and is the eastern terminus of the railway It was formerly known as Eskdale Dalegarth There are two platforms and a turntable The facilities at this station include Fellbites Cafe and the Scafell Gift Shop A water supply to platform 1 allows topping up of the steam locomotive s tenders Rolling stock EditLocomotives Edit Main article Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway locomotives No Name Type Wheels Builder Built Arrival Livery Status Railway Series Thomas amp Friends Equivalent3 River Irt Steam 0 8 2 Sir Arthur Heywood 1894 1917 Mid Green In service Bert6 Katie Steam 0 4 0T Sir Arthur Heywood 1896 1916 1982 Green Operational usually displayed in the museum7 River Esk Steam 2 8 2 Davey Paxman amp Co 1923 1923 Blackberry Black In service Rex9 River Mite Steam 2 8 2 Clarkson amp Sons 1966 1966 Indian Red In service Mike10 Northern Rock Steam 2 6 2 R amp ER 1976 1976 Muscat Green In service Jock Railway Series Only 11 Bonnie Dundee Steam 0 4 2 Kerr Stuart 1900 1976 Bronze Green Undergoing major overhaul for eventual running at CCLR12 Whillan Beck 15 Steam 4 6 2 Krauss 1929 2016 Caledonian Blue In serviceN A Synolda Steam 4 4 2 Bassett Lowke 1912 1978 NGR Blue Undergoing 10 year overhaulN A The Flower of the Forest Steam 0 2 2 R amp ER 1985 1992 NER Green Stored unserviceableN A Greenbat Battery Electric 4wBE Greenwood amp Batley 1957 1982 Green Stored unserviceableICL 1 Bunny Petrol Mechanical B 2 Francis Theakston 1922 1922 Green On display in the museumICL 5 Quarryman Petrol Mechanical 4wPM Muir Hill 1927 1927 Green Operational usually displayed in the museumICL 4 Perkins Diesel Mechanical 4w 4 Muir Hill 1929 1929 Yellow In service Frank Railway Series Only ICL 7 Shelagh of Eskdale Diesel Mechanical 4 6 4DM Severn Lamb 1969 1969 Two tone Green At Romney Hythe and Dymchurch Railway Sigrid of Arlesdale Railway Series Only ICL 8 Lady Wakefield Diesel Mechanical B B R amp ER 1980 1980 BR Green In serviceICL 9 Cyril Diesel Mechanical 4wDM R A Lister 1932 1985 Green Station shunter Blister I amp Blister II Railway Series Only ICL 10 Les Diesel Mechanical 4wDM R A Lister 1960 1999 Green Workshop pilotICL 11 Douglas Ferreira Diesel Hydraulic B B TMA Engineering 2005 2005 Indian Red In trafficRiver Mite Whillan Beck and Douglas Ferreira along with open coach 287 are owned by the Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway Preservation Society and are hired to the railway Passenger carriages Edit The operational passenger stock of the railway currently comprises the following 7 20 seat heated saloons 102 110 111 113 115 136 2 18 seat heated saloons 106 107 1 14 seat heated brake saloon 112 3 20 seat saloons 119 121 122 2 14 seat brake saloons 104 120 1 16 seat brake saloon 103 1 22 seat heated maxi brake saloon 133 1 20 seat heated maxi special saloon 130 1 17 seat heated disabled saloon 118 2 19 seat disabled saloons 123 137 7 20 seat semi opens 101 108 109 116 117 124 125 3 20 seat disabled semi opens 127 129 9 20 seat opens 166 169 469 170 370 387 4 18 seat brake opens 271 371 199 287 Other vehicles Edit nbsp A utility van for use by engineers The permanent way department currently utilises nine four wheeled flat wagons eight of which have removable tops for ballast carrying a four wheeled railbender wagon a bogie man rider wagon two bogie flat wagons a utilities van and a mess saloon coach 105 16 The line in fiction EditThe Arlesdale Railway in The Railway Series by the Rev Wilbert Awdry is based on the Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway 17 In Small Railway Engines 1967 Awdry relates part of a holiday he spent visiting the Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway with the Rev Edwin Boston the two appear in the book as the Thin Clergyman and the Fat Clergyman respectively The Arlesdale Railway was also the focus point in Jock the New Engine with an incident that was inspired by an accident that happened on the Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway when Perkins crashed in the back of the shed and with cameos in other books 18 The fictional railway s locomotives are each based on Ravenglass locomotives Bert Rex Mike and Jock are the steam locomotives River Irt River Esk River Mite and Northern Rock while the Sudrian diesels Frank Sigrid of Arlesdale and Blister 1 amp 2 are the Cumbrians Perkins Shelagh of Eskdale and Cyril 17 The Arlesdale Railway stations are also visibly based on the Ravenglass ones Arlesburgh is Ravenglass Ffarquhar Road is Muncaster Mill Marthwaite is Irton Road Arlesdale Green is Eskdale Green and Arlesdale is Dalegarth 17 Bert Rex and Mike first appeared in the Thomas amp Friends TV Series in the special Sodor s Legend of the Lost Treasure and later appeared in Season 20 The line features in The Plague Dogs by Richard Adams the canine protagonists evade the force of paratroopers searching for them by riding from Eskdale to Ravenglass on an empty train In the first two instalments in the RollerCoaster Tycoon franchise of theme park simulation series RollerCoaster Tycoon and RollerCoaster Tycoon 2 the model for the basic miniature railway ride is based on the engine No 10 Northern Rock 19 See also EditDuffield Bank Railway Eaton Hall Railway Romney Hythe and Dymchurch Railway Sand Hutton Miniature Railway Shuzenji Romney Railway in Japan Bush Mill RailwayReferences Edit a b c d Van Zeller Peter December 2008 100 years since the end of the Owd Ratty The Railway Magazine 154 1 292 39 40 Welbourn 2000 pp 14 18 a b c d e Whitehouse Patrick amp Snell John 1984 Narrow gauge railways of the British Isles David amp Charles ISBN 0 7153 0196 9 Davies W J K 1981 1968 Inception of the Railway The Ravenglass amp Eskdale Railway David amp Charles pp 13 22 ISBN 0 7153 9224 7 View Cumberland LXXIX SW includes Eskdale Irton Ordnance Survey Six inch England and Wales 1842 1952 maps nls uk Ian Allan ABC of Narrow Gauge Railways c 1960 pp 49 50 Davey 1984 pp 13 amp 39 Earnshaw Alan 1989 Trains in Trouble Vol 5 Penryn Atlantic Books p 5 ISBN 0 906899 35 4 a b c History of the Railway Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway Archived from the original on 24 June 2016 Retrieved 24 June 2016 a b c Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway British Heritage Railways 27 June 2016 Archived from the original on 27 June 2016 Lokomotiven aus Grossbritannien zu Gast in Dresden Locomotives from Great Britain as guest in Dresden in German and English Parkeisenbahn Dresden Archived from the original on 23 December 2020 Retrieved 23 December 2020 95 Jahre Martens sche Liliputlokomotiven 2020 Leipzig 95 years of Martens miniature locomotives 2020 in German Parkeisenbahn Dresden Archived from the original on 26 October 2020 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Andersen Eliot Jenner David The Ratty Album Volume 3 p 3 Visitor Attractions amp Events Lake District Estates Archived from the original on 24 June 2016 Retrieved 24 June 2016 Name and Livery decision The Train From Spain Appeal 12 February 2017 Retrieved 12 February 2017 van Zeller Peter amp Higginson Martin 2006 Ravenglass amp Eskdale Railway Stockbook 4th ed Ravenglass amp Eskdale Railway Preservation Society a b c Awdry Wilbert and George 1987 The Island of Sodor Its People History and Railways Heinemann ISBN 0 434 96348 8 Wilcock David respectively The Rev Wilbert Awdry Thomas the Tank Engine s Creator Dies at 85 obituary in Steam Railway dated June 1997 online at pegnsean net accessed 13 April 2008 Game Info The Evolution of RollerCoaster Tycoon Part 2 rollercoastertycoon com Archived from the original on 13 April 2000 Retrieved 11 March 2022 Sources Edit Davey C R 1984 Reflections of the Furness Railway Barrow in Furness Lakeland Heritage Books ISBN 978 0 9509926 0 0 Welbourn Nigel 2000 Lost Lines British Narrow Gauge Shepperton Ian Allan Publishing ISBN 978 0 7110 2742 8 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway Company Ltd Ravenglass amp Eskdale Railway Preservation Society Ravenglass Railway Museum Photos of the railway in dedicated flickr group The Cumbria Directory Ravenglass Railway Museum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway amp oldid 1170364494, 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.