Penistone Viaduct Explained

Penistone Viaduct
Os Grid Reference:SE250035
Qid:Q26575357
Carries:Penistone Line
Crosses:River Don
Locale:Penistone, South Yorkshire, England
Num Track:1 (built for 2)
Opened:1850
Collapsed:1916
Rebuilt:1916
Embedded:
Embed:yes
Designation1:Grade II
Designation1 Date:27 April 1988

Penistone Viaduct is a grade II listed railway viaduct that carries the Penistone Line over the River Don in Penistone, South Yorkshire, England. It is immediately north of station and was completed in 1850 to a design by John Hawkshaw. The viaduct was partially rebuilt in 1916 after one of the arches over the River Don collapsed.

History

Penistone Viaduct was completed in 1850, when the line was opened for traffic, though some sources state a newer viaduct was built in 1885.[1] [2] [3] Originally planned and engineered by the Huddersfield and Sheffield Junction Railway, by the time of opening, the line was in the hands of the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway. The viaduct is long and above the bed of the River Don. The outside of the viaduct consisted of rough ashlar blocks which were thick. It also has 29 arches and curved with a radius of, with the inside of the curve facing away from the town.[4] Each pier is thick at the base, tapering to 4feet at the top and is infilled with rubble.[5] [6] The viaduct was built from solid stone blocks, assembled using a method called 'block-in-course', which the engineer described as "requiring great care in its execution."[7] Stone for the first viaduct was sourced from a quarry in Walk Mill, a part of the settlement of Oxspring, just to the east of Penistone.[8]

In 1884, a train was halted on the viaduct on the approach to the station, and one passenger, assuming the train had stopped in the station, stepped out of the compartment and fell to his death in the valley below.[9] Ironically, the train had stopped a little too short of the station as people falling off the viaduct was anticipated when it was built, and a short length of iron fencing was placed upon the eastern parapet on the southern end to prevent such an eventuality as someone stepping off the viaduct.[10]

In February 1916, the viaduct collapsed whilst an engine was stationary upon it. The driver and fireman had noticed that the arch they were on was collapsing slowly, and managed to get away safely before total loss, however the steam engine fell into the void. The arches that collapsed were at the southern end where the viaduct crosses the River Don.[11] Heavy rains had scoured the base of the stone piers, and some days before a crack had appeared in the parapet, but it could not be ascertained why, and the crack was filled in.[12] The Huddersfield Chamber of Commerce held a meeting to complain to the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway about the situation with the collapsed viaduct. Coal supply was affected and passengers would have to travel a circuitous route to London. The company was also asked why trains would stop ten minutes short of Penistone railway station, with no official transport to convey passengers and their luggage onwards to Penistone.[13] The viaduct was repaired quickly, and reopened to traffic on 14 August 1916. The engine was recovered and scrapped, and the chimney was used as a plant pot at station.[14]

The length of the viaduct is,[15] and it consists of 29 arches, though sometimes it is listed as having either 30 or 31 arches.[16] Each pier is at the bottom, and tapers to 4feet at the top.[17] Biddle states the viaduct to be high.[18] Whilst the line was engineered for two tracks throughout and the station at Penistone has two platforms, the lines merge, just to the north of the station, with only the former southbound line in use.[19] The viaduct itself is grade II Listed.

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Notes and References

  1. News: 5 February 1916 . The collapse of the Penistone Viaduct . . 5 . 21684 . 12044147.
  2. News: 5 February 1916 . Alarming mishap at Penistone . . 15 . 21684 . 12044147.
  3. Book: Pevsner, Nikolaus . The buildings of England; Yorkshire, the West Riding . 2003 . Yale University Press . 0-300-09662-3 . Ratcliffe . Enid . 2 . London . 392 . 1959.
  4. News: 6 July 1850 . Opening of the line of railway from Huddersfield to Holmfirth and Penistone . The Huddersfield Chronicle and West Yorkshire Advertiser . 5 . 14 . 1326218001.
  5. Hawkshaw . J. . January 1851 . Description of the Lockwood Viaduct on the Huddersfield and Sheffield Railway . . 10 . 1851 . 299 . 10.1680/imotp.1851.24100.
  6. Book: Slack, Margaret . The bridges of Lancashire and Yorkshire . 1986 . Robert Hale . 0-7090-2814-8 . London . 148.
  7. Book: Marshall, John . The Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway Volume 1 . 1969 . David & Charles . 0-7153-4352-1 . Newton Abbot . 231.
  8. News: 25 November 1854 . Mill and stone quarry . . 4 . 1833 . 751551247.
  9. News: 10 September 1884 . Shocking fatal accident at Penistone . . 4 . 1549.
  10. Book: Marshall, John . The Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway . 1969 . . 0-7153-4352-1 . Newton Abbot . 231.
  11. News: 5 February 1916 . The collapse of the Penistone Viaduct . . 5 . 21,684 . 12044147.
  12. Book: Pike, Jim . Track . 2010 . . 9780752457895 . Stroud . 184.
  13. News: 26 February 1916 . Chamber of Commerce Viaduct Collapse . The Huddersfield Examiner and West Riding Reporter . 7 . 15,056 . 751654221.
  14. News: Stocks . William B. . 20 March 1969 . Diary of a railway enthusiast . . 16 . 33,885 . 0962-1644.
  15. Book: Kelman, Leanne . Railway track diagrams, books 2 - eastern . 2020 . Trackmaps . 978-1-9996271-3-3 . 5 . Frome . 34C.
  16. Book: Body, Geoffrey . Railways of the Eastern Region . 1989 . P. Stephens . 1-85260-072-1 . Wellingborough . 32.
  17. Hawkshaw . J. . January 1851 . Viaducts on the Huddersfield and Sheffield Railway . . 10 . 1851 . 299 . 10.1680/imotp.1851.24100.
  18. Book: Biddle, Gordon . Britain's historic railway buildings: an Oxford gazetteer of structures and sites . 2003 . . 0198662475 . Oxford . 449.
  19. Book: Shannon, Paul . Past and present: Yorkshire, the West Riding, part 2 . 2005 . Past and present . 1-85895-241-7 . Kettering . 88.