Eaton Branch Railway
Eaton Branch Railway | |
---|---|
Overview | |
Owner | British Rail |
Locale | Eaton |
Termini | |
Service | |
Type | Branch line |
Operator(s) | Great Northern Railway |
Technical | |
Line length | 3 miles (4.8 km) |
Track gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) standard gauge |
The Eaton Branch Railway was a standard gauge industrial railway built to serve ironstone quarries around the village of Eaton in Leicestershire. It operate from 1884 until 1965.
History
Iron ore quarrying flourished throughout the East Midlands ore field throughout the 1860s and 1870s. By the early 1880s, a thriving quarrying industry had established itself in northern Leicestershire, working an outcropping of Marlstone that ran north-east from the village of [[Holwell] to the edge of Belvoir Castle[1]. The companies working these ore fields needed better transportation to take their ore to their customers around the United Kingdom. In 1882, the Great Northern Railway (GNR) applied to parliament to build a branch line from their Waltham Branch immediately south of Waltham-on-the-Wolds railway station northwards towards Eaton.[2]
In November 1883, the GNR applied for a second act, extending the Eaton Branch to "...a field belonging to, or reputed to belong to, His Grace the Duke of Rutland... adjoining the road leading from Belvoir to Eastwell, at a point about 220 yards measured in a north-westerly direction from Shelton's Barn."[3]. The branch was under construction in 1883, and opened sometime in 1884.
The branch served a series of quarries along it's short route. The Holwell Iron Company was quarrying the ore fields to the south and west of Eaton village, while the Waltham Iron Ore Company worked fields that stretched to the west and north of the branch's northern terminus.
The branch had no passenger stations and carried no passenger traffic throughout its life: it operated purely as an industrial railway.
The branch became part of the London and North Eastern Railway in the railway grouping of 1923. It then became part of British Railways in 1948. It continued in operation until closure and lifting in 1965.
References
- ^ Template:Cite article
- ^ "Parliament. 1883 session". The Railway News. 25 November 1882.
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