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词条 Aberystwith and Welsh Coast Railway
释义

  1. History

  2. Current operations

  3. Connections to other lines

  4. References

  5. External links

{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2015}}{{Use British English|date=July 2015}}{{refimprove|date=December 2014}}{{Infobox rail line
| locale = Wales
| open = 1 July 1863
| close = 5 August 1866
| continuesas = Cambrian Railways
| gauge = {{RailGauge|uksg}}
| linelength = {{convert|86|mi|km}}
}}{{Aberystwyth and Welsh Coast Railway}}

The Aberystwith and Welsh Coast Railway was a standard gauge railway built in 1863 connecting major towns around Cardigan Bay in Wales.

History

The Aberystwith and Welsh Coast Railway was authorised by a Private Act of Parliament in 1861.[1] The Act permitted the construction of a railway around Cardigan Bay between the towns of Aberystwyth (then spelled Aberystwith), Barmouth, Porthmadog, and Pwllheli. Its northern terminus was to be Porthdinllaen near Nefyn on the north coast of the Lleyn Peninsula. The plan also included a link with the Newtown and Machynlleth Railway by means of a line from Machynlleth to Ynyslas on the southern shore of the Dyfi estuary opposite Aberdyfi, the Dyfi itself to be bridged at this point.

Work began at Machynlleth, and the line was opened through to Aberystwyth in 1864. However, the planned Dyfi bridge at Ynyslas proved impracticable, requiring the divergence between the Aberystwyth and Coast lines to be moved 6 miles east to Dyfi Junction. This added 12 miles to the journey north from Aberystwyth, but the twisting line – just a few feet above high tide level - between Dyfi Junction and Aberdyfi remains one of the most scenic sections of railway in Britain. For a time before completion, southbound passengers detrained at Aberdyfi and were carried over to Ynyslas by ferry, for which a short temporary branch was built for use at low tide.

Very soon after construction began, the proposed terminus at Porthdinllaen was abandoned. The 5-mile surveyed route across the Lleyn Peninsula was never built. The company decided that services would stop at the line's new terminus at {{rws|Pwllheli}}.

Major works on the line included the bridge south of Barmouth and the cliff top line at Friog. This latter location was the site of two almost identical accidents, in 1883 and 1933, in which the locomotive plunged to the foot of the cliff leaving the bulk of the train remaining on the track. The locomotive crews were killed in both instances. The topography at this point is demanding, as the existing coast road at a higher level had to be accommodated, as well as a working mine.

The line was extended from Barmouth to Pwllheli via Porthmadog (then Portmadoc) in 1867, the year after it was absorbed into the Cambrian Railways.[2] The company's correct name - as in the five Private Acts of Parliament it obtained during its life - was spelled "Aberystwith": widespread erroneous use (including even the above cited reference) of the modern "Aberystwyth" spelling stems from mis-transcription in official records, now online. The newer spelling started to come into use in the mid-19th century: Bradshaw's railway timetable commenced using it from {{circa|1868}} but the Cambrian Railways did not adopt the new spelling until April 1892; the older version is still to be found in press references in the early years of the 20th century.

Current operations

The majority of the line is open, except for the line between Morfa Mawddach and Dolgellau, which closed on 18 January 1965.

A ten-mile (16 km) section between Barmouth Junction and Dolgellau is also used as the Llwybr Mawddach (or "Mawddach Trail"), a cycle route and bridleway. Conversion of the trackbed to a path was incidentally assisted in 1976 when heavy floods washed away most of the remaining ballast. This section of the line featured in the BBC's Railway Walks series with Julia Bradbury.[3]

Connections to other lines

  • Carnarvonshire Railway at Afon Wen
  • Bala and Dolgelly Railway at Dolgelly
  • Newtown and Machynlleth Railway at Machynlleth
  • Manchester and Milford Railway at Aberystwyth

References

1. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.legislation.gov.uk/changes/chron-tables/local/50|title=Acts of the Parliaments of the United Kingdom Part 50 (1861)|publisher=www.legislation.gov.uk|accessdate=4 October 2018}}
2. ^Christiansen, Rex & Miller, R.W. The Cambrian Railways, Vol. 1 David & Charles (1967); p 65
3. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.juliabradbury.com/railways.html |title=Archived copy |accessdate=2011-09-13 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20111126233950/http://www.juliabradbury.com/railways.html |archivedate=26 November 2011 |df=dmy }}
  • {{Awdry-RailCo}}
  • {{Jowett-Atlas}}

External links

{{kml}}
  • RAILSCOT on Aberystwith and Welsh Coast Railway
{{Historical Welsh railway companies}}

10 : Cambrian Railways|Railway companies established in 1862|Railway lines opened in 1867|Railway companies disestablished in 1868|Railway lines in Wales|Transport in Aberystwyth|Rail transport in Gwynedd|Standard gauge railways in Wales|1862 establishments in Wales|1868 disestablishments in Wales

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