North Wales Narrow Gauge Railways Explained

Railroad Name:North Wales Narrow Gauge Railways
System Map:NWNGR Map.png
Map Size:300px
Start Year:1877
End Year:1916
Length:NaNmiles
Locale:Wales
Successor Line:Welsh Highland Railway

The North Wales Narrow Gauge Railways (NWNGR) was a railway company that planned to build a number of inter-connected narrow-gauge railways across North Wales. The first two of these lines - jointly known as the "Moel Tryfan Undertaking" - were authorised by Act of Parliament 1872 and were built and opened in the 1870s. The original main line ran from Dinas Junction to Bryngwyn and opened in 1877. The second line was a branch from Tryfan Junction to South Snowdon, though shortly after opening, the company designated the Tryfan Junction to Bryngwyn section as the branch, and the Dinas Junction to South Snowdon section as the main line.

Routes built

The company completed construction of two lines, The first, opened in 1877, was approximately 3miles long, running south-east from a junction with the London and North Western Railway's Caernarfon to Afon Wen branch at, to . There were intermediate stations at and . From Bryngwyn, a shallow incline climbed the northern flank of Moel Tryfan. From the top of the incline a number of quarry tramways connected to the Alexandra quarry, Moel Tryfan quarry, Fron quarry, Braich quarry and Cilgwyn quarry.

The second line was opened in stages, and completed in 1881. It connected to, a distance of about 5miles. There were intermediate stations at, and . The line from Dinas Junction to South Snowdon was considered the main line from about 1878, with the Tryfan Junction to Bryngwyn section as the branch. South Snowdon station was later renamed Rhyd Ddu.

Routes planned

The line from Dinas Junction to Rhyd Ddu was built, with a short branch from Tryfan Junction to Bryngwyn, and operated, but this was just a small part of the grand scheme for a network of narrow-gauge railways spanning much of northern Wales. The North Wales Narrow Gauge Railway was intended to run from Caernarvon via Beddgelert to Portmadoc (where it would link with the Festiniog), with a second and very long line from Beddgelert to Bettws-y-Coed and across a long stretch of open country to Corwen, totaling some 60 miles had these lines been built. All lines were specified to be of a gauge between 2 ft. and 2 ft. 9 in., though the railways proposed were not all connected. The master plan to link almost all the larger places in north-west Wales by narrow-gauge railway included the following proposed lines:

1. To extend from a Junction with the Portmadoc, Croesor & Beddgelert Tram Railway Company's proposed line to Beddgelert, thence to Pen-y-gwryd via Nant Gwynant involving reversing spirals of 2 chains radius. Thence to Capel Curig and Bettws-y-Coed.

2. From Bettws-y-Coed, following alongside the route of Holyhead-London road to a point three miles west of Corwen.

3. From end of Railway No. 2 into Corwen, terminating behind the standard gauge railway station of the Great Western Railway.

Short Title:North Wales Narrow Gauge Railways (Extensions, &c.) Act 1885
Type:Act
Parliament:Parliament of the United Kingdom
Year:1885
Citation:48 & 49 Vict. c. cxxxiv
Original Text:https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukla/Vict/48-49/134/pdfs/ukla_18850134_en.pdf
Collapsed:yes

An act of Parliament, the North Wales Narrow Gauge Railways (Extensions, &c.) Act 1885 (48 & 49 Vict. c. cxxxiv) authorised an extension northwards to Caernarfon and a Light Railway Order of 1900 authorised an extension southwards to Beddgelert.

A further part of the scheme was the North Wales Narrow Gauge Railways (General Undertaking) which planned a route from Porthmadog to Beddgelert, where it would meet the Rhyd Ddu-Beddgelert extension. From there the line would travel via Capel Curig to Betws-y-Coed. A further branch would have extended the line from Betws-y-Coed to Corwen via Cerrig-y-Drudion where the railway would meet the planned Ruthin and Cerrig-y-Drudion Railway.

A short, separate line from Pwllheli (adjacent to the Cambrian Railways' terminus of that period) to Porthdinllaen was also proposed.

The General Undertaking was authorised by Act of Parliament in 1872 but officially abandoned in 1876. The section from Porthmadog to Beddgelert was eventually completed by the Welsh Highland Railway as part of its construction, and utilised parts of the Croesor Tramway and the aborted Portmadoc, Beddgelert and South Snowdon Railway (PBSSR) works.

South Snowdon

There are two locations which have been called South Snowdon. One is Rhyd Ddu and the other is the South Snowdon Quarry in the Nant Gwynant Pass and this was the original intended destination of the Portmadoc, Beddgelert and South Snowdon Railway. That company later applied for and received a light railway order to build from Beddgelert to Rhyd Ddu and commenced construction on that section around 1906. All the known photographs of the station at Rhyd Ddu taken prior to 1914 show a station nameboard SNOWDON.

History

The company was formed in 1871, and authorised by the North Wales Narrow Gauge Railways Act 1872, to build "certain railways in the counties of Carnarvon and Merioneth" and to raise £216,000 in capital. In 1871, the company appointed Charles Easton Spooner, as their chief engineer.[1] Spooner was then the manager of the Festiniog Railway and had been instrumental in the design of their steam locomotives in the 1860s.

By 1876, £66,000 had been raised in capital, the whole amount authorised to pay for the "Moeltryfan Undertaking", but the company needed further capital and applied to Parliament for a second act in April that year. This second Act allowed the company to abandon its "General Undertaking", which would have extended the line to Bettws-y-Coed and beyond.[2] By December of that year, Spooner reported that all but 3miles of the line had been built and was "nearly ready to open to traffic" and that mineral traffic would commence immediately.[3]

The line from Dinas Junction to Tryfan Junction and on to Bryngwyn was opened in 1877. In 1878, a branch was built from Tryfan Junction to Snowdon Ranger and this was extended to South Snowdon (later renamed Rhyd Ddu) in 1881. In 1884, the company began the process of relaying the track, upgrading from iron rails weighing 35 lbs per yard, to steel rails weighing 41.5 lbs per yard. At the October 1887 board meeting of the company, a proposal to extend the line from Dinas Junction to Carnarvon was passed unanimously.[4] This extension was never built.

In 1900, the railway company was granted permission for an extension of the main line from South Snowdon to Beddgelert. This was the North Wales Narrow Gauge Railways (Beddgelert Light Railway Extension) Order, which allowed the extension to be built under the Light Railways Act 1896. This extension was not built.

In 1905, the Board of Trade granted permission for the whole railway to convert to a Light Railway under the 1896 Act.[5] In 1906, Sir James Szlumper joined the board of directors, and by 1910 he had been elected chairman of the board. The 1910 report showed that 6-month net revenues had fallen to £200 amidst a general depression in the country.[6] The difficult financial situation caused the company caused to attempt to find a buyer. In 1910, they approached the London and North Western Railway - who owned the Carnarvon to Afon Wen branch - and negotiations proceeded far enough that the acquisition was announced, but it was not completed.[7]

In 1914, a combined committee of several local authorities applied for a Light Railway Order to combine the NWNGRs with the Portmadoc, Beddgelert & South Snowdon Railway which owned the Croesor Tramway. The accelerating conflict of the First World War stopped this effort. The NWNGRs shut down their passenger services in 1916, and from then on ran a shoestring goods service. In 1918, the application was revived by the owners of the Aluminium Corporation of Dolgarrog which had acquired the Portmadoc, Beddgelert & South Snowdon Railway and was seeking to acquire the NWNGRs. This effort eventually led to the acquisition of the NWNGRs by the Aluminium Corporation and its incorporation into the Welsh Highland Railway in 1922.[8]

Locomotives

NameBuilderTypeDateWorks numberNotes
Snowdon RangerVulcan Foundry1875739Single Fairlie locomotive. Scrapped by 1919; major components used to repair Moel Tryfan[9]
Moel TryfanVulcan Foundry1875738Single Fairlie locomotive. Transferred to the Welsh Highland Railway in 1922; scrapped by the Ffestiniog Railway in 1954.
BeddgelertHunslet1878206Mainly worked the Bryngwyn branch. Scrapped 1906.
RussellHunslet1906901 Ordered by the Portmadoc, Beddgelert and South Snowdon Railway, paid for by the North Wales Power & Traction Co Ltd, for the NWNGR and later became part of the Welsh Highland Railway stock.
GowrieHunslet1908979Single Fairlie locomotive; sold in 1918 to the Government,[10] most likely the Ministry of Munitions.[11] Sold later in 1918 to railway contractor J.F. Wake, where Gowrie was rebuilt. Supplied with spare parts in 1924, and scrapped after 1928.
PalmerstonGeorge England1867unknownLoaned by the Ffestiniog Railway between May 1876 and July 1877 to assist in the construction of the NWNGR.

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: North Wales Chronicle . The North Wales Narrow Gauge Railways . 11 November 1871.
  2. News: North Wales Narrow Gauge Railways . North Wales Chronicle . 15 April 1876.
  3. News: North Wales Chronicle . North Wales Narrow Gauge Railways . 16 December 1876.
  4. News: North Wales Chronicle . 1 October 1887 . North Wales Narrow Gauge Railways.
  5. News: Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser . General News . 19 June 1905.
  6. News: Cambrian News . North Wales Narrow Gauge Railways . 25 March 1910.
  7. News: Sevenoaks Chronicle and Kentish Advertiser . 29 April 1910 . General News.
  8. Book: Johnson, Peter . Festiniog Railway: The Spooner Era and After 1830 - 1920 . Peter Johnson (railway historian) . Pen & Sword Books Limited . 2017.
  9. Two into One will go . John Keylock . Michael Bishop . Welsh Highland Heritage . 46 . December 2009.
  10. News: Locomotive News and Railway Notes . North Wales Narrow Gauge Railway . 24 May 1919.
  11. The life of "Gowrie" . December 2007 . Welsh Highland Heritage Journal . 38.