词条 | Glasgow, Bothwell, Hamilton and Coatbridge Railway | |||
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| railroad_name = Glasgow, Bothwell, Hamilton and Coatbridge Railway | logo_filename = | logo_size = | system_map = | map_caption = | marks = | locale = Scotland | start_year = 1877 | end_year = 1879 | predecessor_line = | successor_line = North British Railway | gauge = {{RailGauge|sg}} | length = | hq_city = }} The Glasgow, Bothwell, Hamilton and Coatbridge Railway was a railway company in Scotland, built to serve coal and ironstone pits in the Hamilton and Bothwell areas, and convey the mineral to Glasgow and to ironworks in the Coatbridge area. It was allied to the North British Railway, and it opened in 1877. Passenger services followed. As a late competitor to the dominant Caledonian Railway, it was always secondary in the area, and the passenger service ceased by 1955. The mineral traffic declined sharply and the last goods train ran in 1961. HistoryThe coal railways and the MonklandsThe Monklands district near Airdrie was the source of plentiful coal, which was in demand for residential and industrial purposes in Glasgow and elsewhere, and in 1826 the Monkland and Kirkintilloch Railway was opened to convey the mineral to the Forth and Clyde Canal for onward transport. Discovery of the excellent blackband ironstone in the area, and the development of the hot blast system of smelting iron ore, led to a massive growth of iron industries and mineral extraction in the Coatbridge and Airdrie region. The Monkland and Kirkintilloch Railway found itself perfectly located to serve the new industries. In 1831 the Garnkirk and Glasgow Railway opened, running directly to Glasgow, and as the iron industries grew, other "coal railways" opened. Their technology was primitive and horse traction was dominant in the early years. In 1845 the Caledonian Railway obtained an authorising Act of Parliament to build a main line from Glasgow and Edinburgh to Carlisle. To gain access to Glasgow the Caledonian arranged to take over the Garnkirk and Glasgow line and an associated railway, the Wishaw and Coltness Railway, and the main line was planned to follow the route of those railways. The Caledonian Railway opened in 1848 and gained control of the railways connecting the iron industry to Glasgow; at the time onward conveyance by sea from quays in Glasgow was significant, and the Monkland and Kirkintilloch Railway too retained its share of the traffic, although its routes were not well suited for connecting to Glasgow and the west coast.[1]{{page needed|date=May 2016}} Hamilton and BothwellThe boom in coal and iron in the Monklands was massive, but as years passed, the best seams began to be worked out, and discoveries were made further south; the general area around Hamilton was found to be especially fruitful, and once again the Caledonian Railway found itself well placed to handle the traffic: it already had a line to Hamilton, and branches from that line and from Motherwell gave access to many pits; the smelting and other finishing activities still took place in the Monklands, so that much mineral traffic went to that area from the pits around Hamilton. The Caledonian Railway had a monopoly of this lucrative traffic, but further pits were opening, and the Caledonian had priorities elsewhere. At the same time the pit owners resented the monopoly of the Caledonian over the pits that were connected. A new railway proposedThe North British Railway responded to the situation by trying to obtain Parliamentary authorisation, but this was refused in both the 1872 and 1873 Parliamentary sessions. In the following year the industrialists promoted a line themselves, and the Glasgow, Bothwell, Hamilton and Coatbridge Railway was incorporated on 16 July 1874. It was to build a 12-mile (19 km) line from Shettleston on the North British Railway's Coatbridge line, to Hamilton, and a 3-mile (5 km) branch from Whifflet (actually from the Rosehall branch near Whifflet) to Bothwell Junction on the Hamilton line. The authorised capital was £500,000.[2]{{page needed|date=May 2016}}[3]{{page needed|date=May 2016}}[4]{{page needed|date=May 2016}} The Whifflet section of the line enabled the carriage of iron ore and coal to the ironworks at Coatbridge; the main line to Shettleston led to Glasgow. OpeningThe line opened between Shettleston and Hamilton on 1 November 1877 for goods traffic and passengers on 1 April 1878. There was a spectacular viaduct at Craighead over the River Clyde south of Bothwell, with lattice girders; there were eight spans of 728 feet (222 m) span.[5]{{page needed|date=May 2016}}[6]{{page needed|date=May 2016}} The branch line to Whifflet opened on 1 November 1878 for goods and 1 May 1879 for passengers.{{sfn|Awdry|1990|p=133}}[5]{{page needed|date=May 2016}}[4]{{page needed|date=May 2016}} The company worked the line itself with four 0-6-0 tank locomotives, but the traffic offering overwhelmed its capacity to work it, and in the middle of 1878 the company called in the North British Railway to assist.[3]{{page needed|date=May 2016}}[4]{{page needed|date=May 2016}} Absorbed by the NBR, and afterIn fact the Company was absorbed by the North British Railway on 2 August 1878, by Act of 21 July 1878. The original shareholders received a generous settlement of 5% on the half million of capital, rising to 8% from 1886.[3]{{page needed|date=May 2016}} The North British intended to use the line to launch further into south Lanarkshire, but in the end a territorial exclusivity arrangement was made with the Caledonian, and the plan was dropped.[4]{{page needed|date=May 2016}}[3]{{page needed|date=May 2016}} During World War I the line from Bothwell to Hamilton was closed to passengers except for workmen's trains, from 1 January 1917 to 2 June 1919. In the 1940s local passenger services to Whifflet and Coatbridge were operated by Sentinel railcars; this arrangement ceased in 1948.[6]{{page needed|date=May 2016}} In 1947 Glasgow Zoo was established in the Calderpark area, and became very popular. As the Hamilton line ran nearby, a station, Calderpark Halt, was opened to serve it in 1951. ClosureThe output of the pits in the area declined substantially in the 1930s and after World War II it began to be obvious that the line was underutilised; much of the remaining coal output was also served by the former Caledonian Railway routes, and as the railways were under common ownership, having been nationalised in 1948, there was no value in sustaining competing lines. In 1952 it was determined that the Clyde Viaduct south of Bothwell was in need of substantial expenditure to restore it to a safe condition, and the decision was taken to close that section of the line: on 15 September 1952 the section south of Bothwell was closed completely. The passenger service on the line from Bothwell to Whifflet had already been closed in September 1951, and the Shettleston to Bothwell section closed to passenger traffic in 1955.[6]{{page needed|date=May 2016}} The last passenger train from Bothwell was hauled by a Gresley V1 class locomotive, no 67622.[7] Goods and mineral traffic on the Bothwell to Whifflet section ceased in 1955, and in 1961 the entire line south of Mount Vernon closed in 1961. The short section from Shettleston to Mount Vernon, where this was still an active colliery, continued in use until it too closed in 1965.[6]{{page needed|date=May 2016}}[8]{{page needed|date=May 2016}} The present dayThis line is closed. For some time a short siding at Shettleston was the only piece of track on the alignment of the GBH&CR but it has now been removed. Several earthworks and bridges, and the piers of Craighead Viaduct remain. Topography{{Glasgow, Bothwell, Hamilton and Coatbridge Railway}}Shettleston to Hamilton
Whifflet to Bothwell Junction
GalleryReferences1. ^{{cite book| first=C.J.A.| last=Robertson| title=The Origins of the Scottish Railway System, 1722 - 1844| publisher=John Donald Publishers Ltd| location=Edinburgh| year=1983| isbn=978-0-85976-088-1}} 2. ^{{cite book| first=E.F.| last=Carter| title=An Historical Geography of the Railways of the British Isles| publisher=Cassell| location=London| year=1959}} 3. ^1 2 3 {{cite book| first=David| last=Ross| title=The North British Railway: A History| publisher=Stenlake Publishing Limited| location=Catrine| year=2014| isbn=978-1-84033-647-4}} 4. ^1 2 3 {{cite book| first=John| last=Thomas| title=The North British Railway, volume 1| publisher=David & Charles| location=Newton Abbot| year=1969| isbn=0-7153-4697-0}} 5. ^1 {{cite book| first=John| last=Thomas| others=revised by J.S. Paterson| title=A Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain: Volume 6, Scotland, the Lowlands and the Borders| publisher=David and Charles| location=Newton Abbot| year=1984| isbn=0-946537-12-7}} 6. ^1 2 3 {{cite book| first=Gordon| last=Stansfield| title=Lanarkshire's Lost Railways| publisher=Stenlake Publishing| location=Ochiltree| year=1997| isbn=1-872074-96-0}} 7. ^{{cite web| url=http://img594.imageshack.us/img594/2088/nbrtohamilton.jpg| title=NBR to Hamilton| archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150615235022/http://img594.imageshack.us/img594/2088/nbrtohamilton.jpg| archivedate=15 June 2015}} 8. ^1 {{cite book| first=Col M.H.| last=Cobb| title=The Railways of Great Britain -- A Historical Atlas| publisher=Ian Allan Publishing Limited| location=Shepperton| year=2003| isbn=07110-3003-0}} 9. ^{{cite book| first=M.E.| last=Quick| title=Railway Passenger Stations in England Scotland and Wales—A Chronology| publisher=The Railway and Canal Historical Society| year=2002}} Sources
5 : North British Railway|Mining railways|Pre-grouping British railway companies|Bothwell and Uddingston|Hamilton, South Lanarkshire |
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