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Transport in Cornwall

The evolution of transport in Cornwall has been shaped by the county's strong maritime, mining and industrial traditions and much of the transport infrastructure reflects this heritage.

Road, railway and canal side by side at Par harbour.

However, with the decline in mining and industry over the last century and more, transport provision in Cornwall has increasingly focused on the needs of tourism and holiday-makers. An example of this is the improvement of the A30 trunk road; the substantial dual carriageway sections have greatly relieved summer traffic congestion but are very under-used in winter.

In the case of the railway system, although Cornwall has lost some of its rail network since nationalisation in 1948, it has fared better than many other rural areas of England. In part, this is because many Cornish lines serve holiday destinations and are visitor attractions in their own right.

General situation edit

 
The Tamar Bridge (background) and Royal Albert Bridge (foreground) carry road and rail links into Cornwall

The inland transport network consists of longitudinal spines (the A30, A38 and A39 trunk roads (though the A39 is no longer designated as such) and the former Great Western Railway main line through Cornwall) from which secondary roads and railway branch lines radiate to ports and resorts on the coast.

As a maritime county, ports and sea transport were once vital to Cornwall's prosperity: however, they are less important now. Fishing, too, has traditionally been a core industry and Newlyn remains one of the largest fishing ports in southern Britain and a major centre for distribution of fish and shell-fish to continental Europe. Fish from the ports was an important component of the freight traffic for Cornish railways although now the fish is conveyed by road.

As well as Newlyn, several other ports (notably Padstow) and also Newquay cater for commercial fishing on a smaller scale. Many more small harbours cater to sport angling, again reflecting the county's reliance on tourism and leisure.

The coastline of Cornwall is deeply indented (particularly in the south) by estuaries and rias (flooded river valleys) so Cornwall's ferry crossings are an important part of today's transport mix. The Isles of Scilly are accessible by sea from Penzance.

Road transport in Cornwall edit

 
Trunk roads in Cornwall; click to enlarge
 
Carland Cross roundabout
 
The A30, the main east-west route through Cornwall
 
Mylor Bridge sign provided by the Automobile Association

Cornwall is one of the few English counties with no motorways. However, trunk road access to and from the rest of the UK is at the heart of Cornwall's transport infrastructure and it is now possible to drive on uninterrupted dual carriageway from Glasgow to Bodmin Moor.

The principal road routes into Cornwall for both freight and passenger vehicles are the A30 from Exeter and the A38 from Plymouth and south Devon.

A30: The A30 between Exeter and Penzance is part of the Trans-European Road Network and is regarded by the Highways Agency as a strategic route corridor to the south west.[1] The route has been greatly improved and upgraded in the past thirty years. There were only two short sections of dual carriageway on the 111 miles (179 km) of the A30 between Exeter and Penzance before 1976, but today only 20 miles (32 km) of single carriageway remain (one short stretch on Bodmin Moor and the rest in west Cornwall).
A38: A38 traffic into south-east Cornwall used to face severe delays at the Torpoint ferry (see below) across the River Tamar but this was relieved by the opening of the Tamar Bridge (a toll suspension bridge) in 1961. According to the Highways Agency, ...it is not envisaged that the A38 has, or will have, a strategic role to rival that of the A30; rather it has a sub-regional role to provide access between Cornwall and Plymouth and other parts of South Devon.[2] Nonetheless, the A38 provides an alternative route for traffic from Exeter and the M5 motorway heading to south-east Cornwall. The increase in traffic warranted two extra lanes being added to the Tamar Bridge in 2001 (the first suspension bridge in the world to be widened while remaining open to traffic).

Other routes into Cornwall include the A39 from Barnstaple and Bideford to Bude and on to Wadebridge and south-west Cornwall; the A3072 from Hatherleigh and central Devon to Bude; and the A390 from Tavistock to Callington and Liskeard.

Early routes edit

 
Polson (Polston) Bridge

In prehistoric times there were trackways across mid-Cornwall, trade routes between Ireland and Brittany. These arose because of the need to avoid the sea passage round Land's End. From Hayle on the north coast the track crossed to Mount's Bay; from the Camel estuary there were several routes. These went to Fowey, somewhere near Pentewan and to the River Fal. The east-west route was diverted northwards because of the obstacle of Bodmin Moor. From Mount's Bay it crossed the Carnmenellis and Hensbarrow moorlands and probably passed to the northwest of Bodmin Moor to connect with a route into the rest of Britain near Kilkhampton. It is likely that primitive main roads were in existence by the beginning of the 14th century. In medieval times a road known as the Royal Cornish Way began with a crossing of the River Tamar by Polston Bridge near Launceston. This bridge was probably built soon after the Norman conquerors had established a castle at Launceston. The medieval road then went by Downhead and Davidstow through Camelford (established as a borough in 1259) to the ford across the River Camel at Wade (Wadebridge) where a weekly market and two annual fairs were established in 1312. It then continued through St Columb Major and Mitchell to Truro. Another medieval way into Cornwall was by the Cremyll ferry from Plymouth and then by Millbrook and Crafthole to Looe where Looe bridge had been built in 1411-36.[3]

Traffic flows and improvements edit

Data collected on the A30 Launceston bypass shows that annual average daily traffic rose from 14,318 in 1995 to 20,842 in 2005.[4] As well as increased traffic from outside the county, Cornwall's resident population has grown more rapidly than average. The number of people living in Cornwall increased by 32 per cent between 1971 and 2001, compared to an average increase of 6.5 per cent in England as a whole.[5]

Despite the very substantial increase in resident and visiting traffic, road improvements have reduced congestion on the major routes.

In particular, dualling of the A30 has relieved most of the congestion as towns along the route which were formally bottlenecks have been bypassed. Notable schemes include: Launceston bypass (1975); Bodmin bypass (1977); and the Fraddon and Indian Queens bypass and associated A39 spur(1995).

The most recent scheme is 7 miles of new dual carriageway to the north of Goss Moor. Opened in July 2007, the new road relieved a notoriously congested single carriageway stretch which included a bottleneck at the bridge carrying the Par-Newquay railway over the road. This scheme has reduced congestion, shortened journey times and reduced traffic volumes on the A39 and the A390. More than 30,000 vehicles a day use the new road on weekdays and up to 43,000 on Saturdays in August.[6]

As well as dualling, villages have been bypassed on sections that remain single carriageway; for example, the mile of bypass opened in 1991 at Zelah on the Carland Cross to Chiverton Cross section.

Bus services edit

 
First Kernow buses at Penzance in 2017

First Kernow, Plymouth Citybus and Go Cornwall Bus, Stagecoach South West, Hopley's Coaches and Summercourt Travel also operate services around the county including services to Devon.

Since Cornwall Council gained devolved transport responsibilities they have launched the Transport for Cornwall brand and have introduced an integrated ticketing system across operators and secured increased funding for new buses in Cornwall.

A park and ride express bus service operates in Truro, transporting passengers from Threemilestone to Truro city centre.

Rail transport in Cornwall edit

 
The extent of the former railway network in Cornwall
 
Railways and stations in Cornwall as of 2009

History edit

 
The Cornish Riviera; an advertisement produced by the Great Western Railway, circa 1906

Railways remain a core part of the county's transport infrastructure, with 37 stations within it.

Cornish engineer Richard Trevithick (who was developing high pressure stationary steam engines for Cornwall's industries) produced the world's first locomotive in 1802 by mounting an engine on wheels to run on rails.[7] A horse-worked tramway was opened from Poldice mine to the harbour at Portreath in 1809 and many similar lines were then built linking mines with ports.[8] The first steam-powered railway in Cornwall, the Bodmin and Wadebridge Railway, opened on 30 September 1834 less than ten years after the world's earliest steam railway, the Stockton and Darlington.[9]

At its height, the railway system in Cornwall resembled the road network – central spines with branches to the coast. The Great Western Railway's main line from Plymouth to Penzance loosely followed the route of the A38 from Plymouth to the south of Bodmin then that of the A30 to Truro, Redruth and Penzance from 1859; the London & South Western Railway (LSWR)'s system in north Cornwall resembled that of the A39 beyond Camelford from 1895 (see maps).

The Cornish rail network suffered a substantial reduction during the 1960s due to the Beeching cuts. North Cornwall was hardest hit – the entire former North Cornwall Railway system which served Bude, Camelford, Wadebridge and Padstow was closed on 3 October 1966 (although the Wadebridge-Padstow section was retained for a further three months).[10]

Further west, the line from Chacewater to St Agnes and Newquay closed on 4 February 1963 after just 60 years of existence.[11] The Helston branch (which left the main line at Gwinear Road) closed to passengers on 3 October 1962 and to goods traffic two years later.[12]

Today, the former Great Western Railway Penzance-Plymouth main line remains open and four ex-GWR branch lines (together with the ex-LSWR Callington branch as far as Gunnislake) survived the Beeching cuts, although Beeching had proposed the closure of the branches to Looe and St Ives. This network provides long distance rail services from stations on the main line directly to London and to many other parts of England and Wales. These services are fed by the branch lines. Exceptionally, the Newquay branch continues to provide intercity services between May and September. As well as long distance and holiday services, commuter and 'shopper' trains from Cornwall serve Plymouth, Devon.[13]

Lines edit

 
An InterCity 125 crossing Moorswater viaduct on the Cornish Main Line

The Cornish Main Line runs for 75¼ miles through the centre of Cornwall from Penzance to Saltash, where it continues on the Royal Albert Bridge across the River Tamar to Plymouth in Devon. It is the most westerly section of the route to Penzance from London Paddington.[14]

As noted above, five branch lines serve Cornwall. Four have been designated as Community rail lines and are promoted by the Devon and Cornwall Rail Partnership. The fifth, to Newquay, carries local Community Rail trains but the line itself cannot be designated because of the presence of intercity and freight trains. They are:

See full list of stations in Appendix One below.

Services edit

 
A Great Western Railway local service near Bodmin Parkway
 
A train carrying china clay through Golant for export from Fowey

Most services are operated by Great Western Railway including several through trains to London such as the Cornish Riviera Express that starts its journey mid-morning, and the Night Riviera sleeping car service. There are three services each day operated by CrossCountry to destinations as far afield as Aberdeen.

Typical journey times from Truro are: Redruth 13 min.; St Austell 17 min.; Falmouth 23 min.; Penzance 50 min.; St Ives 1 hr.; Plymouth 1¼ hr. Longer distance direct trains take around 2 hr. to Exeter St Davids; Bristol 3 hr. 20 min.; London Paddington 4¾ hr.; Birmingham 4 hr. 50 min.;[14] Edinburgh 10 ¼ hr.[20]

The Atlantic Coast Line to Newquay carries intercity services during the summer. Most of these run on Saturdays and Sundays but there is also a daily return service from London Paddington in July and August.

A number of special discounts and promotions are available to encourage travel on off-peak services, including a special "Devon and Cornwall Railcard" which offers discounts to local residents. The "Plus Bus" scheme allows through ticketing between trains and buses in many towns. Attractions and towns not on the current rail network are served by buses from stations such as Bodmin Parkway, St Austell, Redruth, St Ives and Penzance.

Rail freight edit

The carriage of rail freight has diminished since the 1950s. Today, the principal remaining traffic in Cornwall is china clay from the St Austell area and Goonbarrow on the Newquay line; this traffic is centred on St Blazey depot (which is on the Newquay branch, close to Par) and the freight-only line from Lostwithiel to Fowey docks where the china clay is loaded on to ships. A small amount of cement is carried to Moorswater north of Liskeard for road distribution. The docks at Falmouth are also rail connected but see no regular traffic.

Air edit

Airports edit

 
Newquay Airport

Newquay Airport offers or will soon offer flights up-country to Bristol, Leeds, London (Gatwick/Stansted), Manchester, Newcastle, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Plymouth, Southampton, Cardiff and the Isle of Man, and to destinations abroad including Chambéry, Dublin, Geneva, Reus, St. Brieuc, Düsseldorf, Girona, Alicante, and a summer service to Zürich.

Land's End Airport (IATA: LEQ, ICAO: EGHC), situated near St Just in Penwith, 5 NM (9.3 km; 5.8 mi) west of Penzance, is the most south westerly airport of mainland Britain.[citation needed] It is owned by the Isles of Scilly Steamship Company (ISSC).[21] ISSC's subsidiary Land's End Airport Limited operates the airport, and another subsidiary, Isles of Scilly Skybus, operates a regular passenger service to St Mary's in the Isles of Scilly as well as scenic flights around west Penwith.

Airfields edit

Airfield Cornish Name ICAO Operator Usage Runway (ft) Surface
Bodmin Airfield Ayrgwel Bosvena EGLA Cornwall Flying Club Ltd Private 1,575 (03/21) & 2,001 (13/31) Grass
Perranporth Airfield Ayrgwel Porthperan EGTP Perranporth Airfield Ltd Public 3,028 (05/23), 2,431 (09/27) & 2,133 (01/19) Asphalt
Truro Airfield Ayrgwel Truru EGHY Truro Aerodrome Ltd Private 1739 (14/32) Grass

River and sea transport edit

Major ferries edit

 
The King Harry Ferry
 
Scillonian III steaming between St Mary's, Isles of Scilly, and Penzance
 
The Black Tor ferry leaving Padstow

The two major ferry services in Cornwall are the Torpoint Ferry which links Cornwall and Devon and the Isles of Scilly Steamship Company service linking the Isles of Scilly to the mainland.

The Torpoint Ferry is a chain ferry which carries cars and pedestrians across the Hamoaze at the mouth of the River Tamar connecting Torpoint in Cornwall with Devonport in Plymouth, Devon.

The Isles of Scilly ferry service operates seasonally (March–November) from Penzance to Isles of Scilly. The operating company is based in Penzance and also operates a year-round cargo service. The company's ferry vessel is named Scillonian III and its cargo vessel is named Gry Maritha.

Other ferries edit

The King Harry Ferry is a chain ferry which carries cars and pedestrians across Carrick Roads in the estuary of the River Fal. The crossing has been voted one of the ten most scenic ferry trips in the world by The Independent, alongside the Staten Island Ferry in New York City and the Star Ferry in Hong Kong.[22]

Further down the Fal estuary, the St Mawes Ferry connects St Mawes with Falmouth and provides a year-round service to pedestrians and cyclists.

Fal River Links is a consolidation of ferry and boat services connecting Truro and Falmouth, and stopping at a few coastal villages in between.

The Black Tor Ferry crosses the tidal River Camel between Padstow and Rock. The ferry carries pedestrians and cyclists only (not vehicles).

A number of other ferry services operate in Cornwall and full details of these are listed on the Cornwall Council website.[23]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Highways Agency, A30 Penzance to Exeter Route Management Strategy, Final Report
  2. ^ Highways Agency, A38 Bodmin to Exeter Route Management Strategy Summary, Summer 2004
  3. ^ Balchin, W. G. V. (1954) Cornwall: an illustrated essay on the history of the landscape. London: Hodder and Stoughton; pp. 112-16
  4. ^ Highways Agency (2005)
  5. ^ Cornish Social and Economic Research Group
  6. ^ Highways Agency, A30 Bodmin to Indian Queens Improvement, Impact Survey
  7. ^ Rolt, L. T. C. (1970) Victorian Engineering, London: Allen Lane The Penguin Press, ISBN 0-7139-0104-7
  8. ^ Clinker, C. R. (1963). The Railways of Cornwall 1809 – 1963. Dawlish: David and Charles.
  9. ^ Whetmath, C. F. D. The Bodmin & Wenford Railway, Forge Books ISBN 0-904662-20-9
  10. ^ Welbourn, Nigel. Lost Lines: Southern, Ian Allan Publishing, ISBN 0-7110-2458-8
  11. ^ Reade, Lewis. Branch Line Memories; 1: Great Western, Redruth: Atlantic Transport & Historical Publishers, ISBN 0-906899-06-0
  12. ^ Reade, Lewis. The Branch Lines of Cornwall, Truro : Atlantic Transport Publishers ISBN 0-906899-13-3
  13. ^ Plymouth City Council, Local Transport Plan 2001 to 2006; Chapter 4.1: Corridor Strategies
  14. ^ a b (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 February 2008. Retrieved 28 January 2008.
  15. ^ "National Rail Timetable 144 (Winter 2007)" (PDF).
  16. ^ "National Rail Timetable 143 (Winter 2007)" (PDF).
  17. ^ "National Rail Timetable 142 (Winter 2007)" (PDF).
  18. ^ "National Rail Timetable 140 (Winter 2007)" (PDF).
  19. ^ "National Rail Timetable 139 (Winter 2007)" (PDF).
  20. ^ "National Rail Timetable 51 (Winter 2007)" (PDF).
  21. ^ "Hard runway at Land's End Airport 'vital'". BBC News. 20 June 2013. Retrieved 25 March 2014.
  22. ^ The Independent – How to get from A to B the scenic way[dead link]
  23. ^ "Ferry services - Cornwall Council". www.cornwall.gov.uk. Retrieved 27 December 2019.

Further reading edit

  • Fairclough, A. (1970) The Story of Cornwall's Railways. Truro: Tor Mark Press

transport, cornwall, evolution, transport, cornwall, been, shaped, county, strong, maritime, mining, industrial, traditions, much, transport, infrastructure, reflects, this, heritage, road, railway, canal, side, side, harbour, however, with, decline, mining, i. The evolution of transport in Cornwall has been shaped by the county s strong maritime mining and industrial traditions and much of the transport infrastructure reflects this heritage Road railway and canal side by side at Par harbour However with the decline in mining and industry over the last century and more transport provision in Cornwall has increasingly focused on the needs of tourism and holiday makers An example of this is the improvement of the A30 trunk road the substantial dual carriageway sections have greatly relieved summer traffic congestion but are very under used in winter In the case of the railway system although Cornwall has lost some of its rail network since nationalisation in 1948 it has fared better than many other rural areas of England In part this is because many Cornish lines serve holiday destinations and are visitor attractions in their own right Contents 1 General situation 2 Road transport in Cornwall 2 1 Early routes 2 2 Traffic flows and improvements 2 3 Bus services 3 Rail transport in Cornwall 3 1 History 3 2 Lines 3 3 Services 3 4 Rail freight 4 Air 4 1 Airports 4 2 Airfields 5 River and sea transport 5 1 Major ferries 5 2 Other ferries 6 See also 7 References 8 Further readingGeneral situation edit nbsp The Tamar Bridge background and Royal Albert Bridge foreground carry road and rail links into CornwallThe inland transport network consists of longitudinal spines the A30 A38 and A39 trunk roads though the A39 is no longer designated as such and the former Great Western Railway main line through Cornwall from which secondary roads and railway branch lines radiate to ports and resorts on the coast As a maritime county ports and sea transport were once vital to Cornwall s prosperity however they are less important now Fishing too has traditionally been a core industry and Newlyn remains one of the largest fishing ports in southern Britain and a major centre for distribution of fish and shell fish to continental Europe Fish from the ports was an important component of the freight traffic for Cornish railways although now the fish is conveyed by road As well as Newlyn several other ports notably Padstow and also Newquay cater for commercial fishing on a smaller scale Many more small harbours cater to sport angling again reflecting the county s reliance on tourism and leisure The coastline of Cornwall is deeply indented particularly in the south by estuaries and rias flooded river valleys so Cornwall s ferry crossings are an important part of today s transport mix The Isles of Scilly are accessible by sea from Penzance Road transport in Cornwall edit nbsp Trunk roads in Cornwall click to enlarge nbsp Carland Cross roundabout nbsp The A30 the main east west route through Cornwall nbsp Mylor Bridge sign provided by the Automobile AssociationCornwall is one of the few English counties with no motorways However trunk road access to and from the rest of the UK is at the heart of Cornwall s transport infrastructure and it is now possible to drive on uninterrupted dual carriageway from Glasgow to Bodmin Moor The principal road routes into Cornwall for both freight and passenger vehicles are the A30 from Exeter and the A38 from Plymouth and south Devon A30 The A30 between Exeter and Penzance is part of the Trans European Road Network and is regarded by the Highways Agency as a strategic route corridor to the south west 1 The route has been greatly improved and upgraded in the past thirty years There were only two short sections of dual carriageway on the 111 miles 179 km of the A30 between Exeter and Penzance before 1976 but today only 20 miles 32 km of single carriageway remain one short stretch on Bodmin Moor and the rest in west Cornwall A38 A38 traffic into south east Cornwall used to face severe delays at the Torpoint ferry see below across the River Tamar but this was relieved by the opening of the Tamar Bridge a toll suspension bridge in 1961 According to the Highways Agency it is not envisaged that the A38 has or will have a strategic role to rival that of the A30 rather it has a sub regional role to provide access between Cornwall and Plymouth and other parts of South Devon 2 Nonetheless the A38 provides an alternative route for traffic from Exeter and the M5 motorway heading to south east Cornwall The increase in traffic warranted two extra lanes being added to the Tamar Bridge in 2001 the first suspension bridge in the world to be widened while remaining open to traffic Other routes into Cornwall include the A39 from Barnstaple and Bideford to Bude and on to Wadebridge and south west Cornwall the A3072 from Hatherleigh and central Devon to Bude and the A390 from Tavistock to Callington and Liskeard Early routes edit nbsp Polson Polston BridgeIn prehistoric times there were trackways across mid Cornwall trade routes between Ireland and Brittany These arose because of the need to avoid the sea passage round Land s End From Hayle on the north coast the track crossed to Mount s Bay from the Camel estuary there were several routes These went to Fowey somewhere near Pentewan and to the River Fal The east west route was diverted northwards because of the obstacle of Bodmin Moor From Mount s Bay it crossed the Carnmenellis and Hensbarrow moorlands and probably passed to the northwest of Bodmin Moor to connect with a route into the rest of Britain near Kilkhampton It is likely that primitive main roads were in existence by the beginning of the 14th century In medieval times a road known as the Royal Cornish Way began with a crossing of the River Tamar by Polston Bridge near Launceston This bridge was probably built soon after the Norman conquerors had established a castle at Launceston The medieval road then went by Downhead and Davidstow through Camelford established as a borough in 1259 to the ford across the River Camel at Wade Wadebridge where a weekly market and two annual fairs were established in 1312 It then continued through St Columb Major and Mitchell to Truro Another medieval way into Cornwall was by the Cremyll ferry from Plymouth and then by Millbrook and Crafthole to Looe where Looe bridge had been built in 1411 36 3 Traffic flows and improvements edit Data collected on the A30 Launceston bypass shows that annual average daily traffic rose from 14 318 in 1995 to 20 842 in 2005 4 As well as increased traffic from outside the county Cornwall s resident population has grown more rapidly than average The number of people living in Cornwall increased by 32 per cent between 1971 and 2001 compared to an average increase of 6 5 per cent in England as a whole 5 Despite the very substantial increase in resident and visiting traffic road improvements have reduced congestion on the major routes In particular dualling of the A30 has relieved most of the congestion as towns along the route which were formally bottlenecks have been bypassed Notable schemes include Launceston bypass 1975 Bodmin bypass 1977 and the Fraddon and Indian Queens bypass and associated A39 spur 1995 The most recent scheme is 7 miles of new dual carriageway to the north of Goss Moor Opened in July 2007 the new road relieved a notoriously congested single carriageway stretch which included a bottleneck at the bridge carrying the Par Newquay railway over the road This scheme has reduced congestion shortened journey times and reduced traffic volumes on the A39 and the A390 More than 30 000 vehicles a day use the new road on weekdays and up to 43 000 on Saturdays in August 6 As well as dualling villages have been bypassed on sections that remain single carriageway for example the mile of bypass opened in 1991 at Zelah on the Carland Cross to Chiverton Cross section Bus services edit nbsp First Kernow buses at Penzance in 2017First Kernow Plymouth Citybus and Go Cornwall Bus Stagecoach South West Hopley s Coaches and Summercourt Travel also operate services around the county including services to Devon Since Cornwall Council gained devolved transport responsibilities they have launched the Transport for Cornwall brand and have introduced an integrated ticketing system across operators and secured increased funding for new buses in Cornwall A park and ride express bus service operates in Truro transporting passengers from Threemilestone to Truro city centre Rail transport in Cornwall edit nbsp The extent of the former railway network in Cornwall nbsp Railways and stations in Cornwall as of 2009 History edit nbsp The Cornish Riviera an advertisement produced by the Great Western Railway circa 1906Railways remain a core part of the county s transport infrastructure with 37 stations within it Cornish engineer Richard Trevithick who was developing high pressure stationary steam engines for Cornwall s industries produced the world s first locomotive in 1802 by mounting an engine on wheels to run on rails 7 A horse worked tramway was opened from Poldice mine to the harbour at Portreath in 1809 and many similar lines were then built linking mines with ports 8 The first steam powered railway in Cornwall the Bodmin and Wadebridge Railway opened on 30 September 1834 less than ten years after the world s earliest steam railway the Stockton and Darlington 9 At its height the railway system in Cornwall resembled the road network central spines with branches to the coast The Great Western Railway s main line from Plymouth to Penzance loosely followed the route of the A38 from Plymouth to the south of Bodmin then that of the A30 to Truro Redruth and Penzance from 1859 the London amp South Western Railway LSWR s system in north Cornwall resembled that of the A39 beyond Camelford from 1895 see maps The Cornish rail network suffered a substantial reduction during the 1960s due to the Beeching cuts North Cornwall was hardest hit the entire former North Cornwall Railway system which served Bude Camelford Wadebridge and Padstow was closed on 3 October 1966 although the Wadebridge Padstow section was retained for a further three months 10 Further west the line from Chacewater to St Agnes and Newquay closed on 4 February 1963 after just 60 years of existence 11 The Helston branch which left the main line at Gwinear Road closed to passengers on 3 October 1962 and to goods traffic two years later 12 Today the former Great Western Railway Penzance Plymouth main line remains open and four ex GWR branch lines together with the ex LSWR Callington branch as far as Gunnislake survived the Beeching cuts although Beeching had proposed the closure of the branches to Looe and St Ives This network provides long distance rail services from stations on the main line directly to London and to many other parts of England and Wales These services are fed by the branch lines Exceptionally the Newquay branch continues to provide intercity services between May and September As well as long distance and holiday services commuter and shopper trains from Cornwall serve Plymouth Devon 13 Lines edit nbsp An InterCity 125 crossing Moorswater viaduct on the Cornish Main LineThe Cornish Main Line runs for 75 miles through the centre of Cornwall from Penzance to Saltash where it continues on the Royal Albert Bridge across the River Tamar to Plymouth in Devon It is the most westerly section of the route to Penzance from London Paddington 14 As noted above five branch lines serve Cornwall Four have been designated as Community rail lines and are promoted by the Devon and Cornwall Rail Partnership The fifth to Newquay carries local Community Rail trains but the line itself cannot be designated because of the presence of intercity and freight trains They are St Ives Bay Line St Erth to St Ives 4 miles 15 Maritime Line Truro to Falmouth 12 miles 16 Atlantic Coast Line local passenger trains only Par to Newquay 20 miles 17 Looe Valley Line Liskeard to Looe 8 miles 18 Tamar Valley Line Plymouth to Gunnislake 15 miles 19 See full list of stations in Appendix One below Services edit nbsp A Great Western Railway local service near Bodmin Parkway nbsp A train carrying china clay through Golant for export from FoweyMost services are operated by Great Western Railway including several through trains to London such as the Cornish Riviera Express that starts its journey mid morning and the Night Riviera sleeping car service There are three services each day operated by CrossCountry to destinations as far afield as Aberdeen Typical journey times from Truro are Redruth 13 min St Austell 17 min Falmouth 23 min Penzance 50 min St Ives 1 hr Plymouth 1 hr Longer distance direct trains take around 2 hr to Exeter St Davids Bristol 3 hr 20 min London Paddington 4 hr Birmingham 4 hr 50 min 14 Edinburgh 10 hr 20 The Atlantic Coast Line to Newquay carries intercity services during the summer Most of these run on Saturdays and Sundays but there is also a daily return service from London Paddington in July and August A number of special discounts and promotions are available to encourage travel on off peak services including a special Devon and Cornwall Railcard which offers discounts to local residents The Plus Bus scheme allows through ticketing between trains and buses in many towns Attractions and towns not on the current rail network are served by buses from stations such as Bodmin Parkway St Austell Redruth St Ives and Penzance Rail freight edit The carriage of rail freight has diminished since the 1950s Today the principal remaining traffic in Cornwall is china clay from the St Austell area and Goonbarrow on the Newquay line this traffic is centred on St Blazey depot which is on the Newquay branch close to Par and the freight only line from Lostwithiel to Fowey docks where the china clay is loaded on to ships A small amount of cement is carried to Moorswater north of Liskeard for road distribution The docks at Falmouth are also rail connected but see no regular traffic See also Category Rail transport in CornwallAir editAirports edit nbsp Newquay AirportNewquay Airport offers or will soon offer flights up country to Bristol Leeds London Gatwick Stansted Manchester Newcastle Glasgow Edinburgh Plymouth Southampton Cardiff and the Isle of Man and to destinations abroad including Chambery Dublin Geneva Reus St Brieuc Dusseldorf Girona Alicante and a summer service to Zurich Land s End Airport IATA LEQ ICAO EGHC situated near St Just in Penwith 5 NM 9 3 km 5 8 mi west of Penzance is the most south westerly airport of mainland Britain citation needed It is owned by the Isles of Scilly Steamship Company ISSC 21 ISSC s subsidiary Land s End Airport Limited operates the airport and another subsidiary Isles of Scilly Skybus operates a regular passenger service to St Mary s in the Isles of Scilly as well as scenic flights around west Penwith Airfields edit Airfield Cornish Name ICAO Operator Usage Runway ft SurfaceBodmin Airfield Ayrgwel Bosvena EGLA Cornwall Flying Club Ltd Private 1 575 03 21 amp 2 001 13 31 GrassPerranporth Airfield Ayrgwel Porthperan EGTP Perranporth Airfield Ltd Public 3 028 05 23 2 431 09 27 amp 2 133 01 19 AsphaltTruro Airfield Ayrgwel Truru EGHY Truro Aerodrome Ltd Private 1739 14 32 GrassRiver and sea transport editMajor ferries edit nbsp The King Harry Ferry nbsp Scillonian III steaming between St Mary s Isles of Scilly and Penzance nbsp The Black Tor ferry leaving PadstowThe two major ferry services in Cornwall are the Torpoint Ferry which links Cornwall and Devon and the Isles of Scilly Steamship Company service linking the Isles of Scilly to the mainland The Torpoint Ferry is a chain ferry which carries cars and pedestrians across the Hamoaze at the mouth of the River Tamar connecting Torpoint in Cornwall with Devonport in Plymouth Devon The Isles of Scilly ferry service operates seasonally March November from Penzance to Isles of Scilly The operating company is based in Penzance and also operates a year round cargo service The company s ferry vessel is named Scillonian III and its cargo vessel is named Gry Maritha Other ferries edit The King Harry Ferry is a chain ferry which carries cars and pedestrians across Carrick Roads in the estuary of the River Fal The crossing has been voted one of the ten most scenic ferry trips in the world by The Independent alongside the Staten Island Ferry in New York City and the Star Ferry in Hong Kong 22 Further down the Fal estuary the St Mawes Ferry connects St Mawes with Falmouth and provides a year round service to pedestrians and cyclists Fal River Links is a consolidation of ferry and boat services connecting Truro and Falmouth and stopping at a few coastal villages in between The Black Tor Ferry crosses the tidal River Camel between Padstow and Rock The ferry carries pedestrians and cyclists only not vehicles A number of other ferry services operate in Cornwall and full details of these are listed on the Cornwall Council website 23 See also editCornish Way West Country KetchReferences edit Highways Agency A30 Penzance to Exeter Route Management Strategy Final Report Highways Agency A38 Bodmin to Exeter Route Management Strategy Summary Summer 2004 Balchin W G V 1954 Cornwall an illustrated essay on the history of the landscape London Hodder and Stoughton pp 112 16 Highways Agency 2005 Cornish Social and Economic Research Group Highways Agency A30 Bodmin to Indian Queens Improvement Impact Survey Rolt L T C 1970 Victorian Engineering London Allen Lane The Penguin Press ISBN 0 7139 0104 7 Clinker C R 1963 The Railways of Cornwall 1809 1963 Dawlish David and Charles Whetmath C F D The Bodmin amp Wenford Railway Forge Books ISBN 0 904662 20 9 Welbourn Nigel Lost Lines Southern Ian Allan Publishing ISBN 0 7110 2458 8 Reade Lewis Branch Line Memories 1 Great Western Redruth Atlantic Transport amp Historical Publishers ISBN 0 906899 06 0 Reade Lewis The Branch Lines of Cornwall Truro Atlantic Transport Publishers ISBN 0 906899 13 3 Plymouth City Council Local Transport Plan 2001 to 2006 Chapter 4 1 Corridor Strategies a b National Rail Timetable 135 Winter 2007 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 27 February 2008 Retrieved 28 January 2008 National Rail Timetable 144 Winter 2007 PDF National Rail Timetable 143 Winter 2007 PDF National Rail Timetable 142 Winter 2007 PDF National Rail Timetable 140 Winter 2007 PDF National Rail Timetable 139 Winter 2007 PDF National Rail Timetable 51 Winter 2007 PDF Hard runway at Land s End Airport vital BBC News 20 June 2013 Retrieved 25 March 2014 The Independent How to get from A to B the scenic way dead link Ferry services Cornwall Council www cornwall gov uk Retrieved 27 December 2019 Further reading editFairclough A 1970 The Story of Cornwall s Railways Truro Tor Mark Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Transport in Cornwall amp oldid 1190386294, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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