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South Wales Railway

 
Wikipedia: South Wales Railway
 v  d  e South Wales Railway
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Cross Country Route to Birmingham and Bristol
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Junction to docks and GRC&W Works
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Gloucester Locomotive Depot
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Gloucester Eastgate
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Gloucester - GWR
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River Severn
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Oakle Street
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Grange Court
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Hereford, Ross and Gloucester Railway
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Newnham-on-Severn Halt
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Bullo Pill
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Awre Junction
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Forest of Dean Central Railway
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Woolaston
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Chepstow East
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Chepstow Bridge over the River Wye
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Chepstow
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Portskewett
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South Wales Main Line
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Caerwent training area
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Severn Tunnel
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Caldicot
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Severn Tunnel Junction
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Undy Halt
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Magor
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Llanwern Steelworks
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Llanwern
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LNWR to Abergavenny
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River Usk
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Newport
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Brecon and Merthyr Railway to Ebbw Vale
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Alexandra Dock
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Brecon and Merthyr Railway to Machen and Merthyr Tydfil
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Template:Marshfield
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Rhymney Railway to Caerphilly
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Cardiff Queen Street
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Taff Vale Railway to Pontypridd
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Cardiff
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Bute Street
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Queen Alexandra Dock
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P and A Campbell with services across the River Severn
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Barry Junction Railway to Barry, Penarth and Vale of Glamorgan
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Cardiff Canton Locomotive Depot
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Ninian Park
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Penarth Harbour and Dock Railway to Taffs Well
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Ely
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Peterstone
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Llantristant
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Pontyclun
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Llanharan
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Pencoed
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Barry Junction Railway to Vale of Glamorgan
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Bridgend
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Pyle
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Port Talbot
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Baglan
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Rhondda and Swansea Bay Railway to Treherbert
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Briton Ferry
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Neath
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River Neath
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Skewen
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Junction to Swansea docks
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Llansamlet
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Landore
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Swansea High Street
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Cockett
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Gowerton
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Trostre Tinplate Works
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Llanelli change for Heart of Wales Line
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Pembrey and Burry Port
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Carmarthen for the Aberystwyth line via Lampeter
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Sarnau
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St Clears
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Whitland
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Former line to Cardigan
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West Wales Line to Pembroke Dock
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Clunderwen Req
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branch via Castlebythe [route closed]
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Clarbeston Road Req
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branch via Wolf's Castle
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Haverfordwest
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Fishguard Harbour for Rosslare Europort via Ferry
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Johnston Req
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Neyland Req
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Milford Haven

The South Wales Railway was a 7 ft 0+14 in (2,140 mm) broad gauge railway that linked the Gloucester and Dean Forest Railway with Neyland in Wales.

Contents

History

The need for the railway was created by the need to ship coal from the South Wales Valleys to London, and secondly to complete Brunel's vision of linking London with New York, and more financially-rewarding immediately to the South Wales coal and ferries to Ireland.

A prospectus was issued in 1844 to build a railway through South Wales from a junction with the Great Western Railway at Standish in Gloucestershire. The proposed route would cross the River Severn west of Gloucester, and run through South Wales to Fishguard, there by connecting to both southern Ireland and New York. The Great Western Railway agreed to subscribe £600,000 of the £2,400,000 required to build the railway[1].

However, local objections were raised over the proposed long bridge over the River Severn. The objections were overcome by linking with the Gloucester and Dean Forest Railway at Grange Court[2], and linking with the rest of the existing 7 ft 0+14 in (2,140 mm) broad gauge system at Gloucester. This diversion added an extra 18 miles (29 km) to the journey between South Wales and London[1].

The initial part of the line between Chepstow and Swansea was opened on 18 June 1850, with trains operated by the Great Western Railway under a lease agreement.[3] At the eastern end of the line the connection to Gloucester and London was completed in July 1852 when the bridge at Chepstow was finished. Construction of the line west of Swansea was delayed, due to the financial problems of the late 1840s, and the abandoning of construction of the Irish railways that would connect with the Fishguard ferries at Waterford. The western terminus of the line was changed from Fishguard to New Milford (Neyland) and the line west of Swansea was built in stages, reaching New Milford in April 1856.

As coal traffic from the South Wales Valleys increased, the tensions between the South Wales Railway and the Great Western increased due a lack of wagons. These were eventually resolved when in January 1862, when the two companies merged.

In 1886, the direct route to South Wales was implemented with the opening of the Severn Tunnel between Bristol and Severn Tunnel Junction.

Chronology

Vale of Neath Railway opened from Neath
Railway opened from Landore to Carmarthen
Branch to Swansea Docks opened for goods traffic only
New Act of Parliament authorises the western terminus to be changed from Fishguard to Neyland

Stations

Includes stations opened by the Great Western Railway and subsequent operators


References

  1. ^ a b La Luciole - Britain's 7 ft 0+14 in (2,140 mm) gauge railways
  2. ^ Grange Court
  3. ^ MacDermot, E T (1927). History of the Great Western Railway, volume I 1833-1863. London: Great Western Railway. 

External links


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "South Wales Railway" Read more