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Friday 29 July 2016


Locomotive Roster for Weekend 30th & 31st July and all next week to Friday 5th August 2016

by news@kwvr
This weekend is the 5th of our series of Vintage Train Sundays when our more venerable locomotives and rolling stock are allowed to stretch their legs on the main line.
TVR 0-6-2T no. 85 will head the ‘main’ Vintage Set which will be formed of four coaches, comprising coaches from the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Trust andVintage Carriages Trust:
Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Club Car, no. 47
Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway 6-wheel 3rd Class coach, no. 1507
Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Brake 3rd, no. 1474
Metropolitan Railway Brake 3rd, no. 427
85-160703'4-SAR
The ‘shuttle’ Vintage Set hauled by LNWR 0-6-2T 'Coal Tank' will once again consist of two carriages from the Vintage Carriages Trust fleet:
Great Northern Railway 6-wheel Brake, no. 589
Southern Railway 'Chatham' Brake, no. 3554
75078 has been in operation throughout the week but gives way to MR 4F 0-6-0 43924 to head the main timetable services throughout the weekend, with WD 2-8-0 joining in on Sunday and continuing on the weekday service.
As it is the last Saturday of the month, we will be operating a two train service all day with the relief train in the hands of one of our 'big' diesels. This Saturday English Electric Class 37 no. 37 075 will take a 4 coach set throughout the day. The Class 101 DMU will operate the Sunday morning diesel service.
For the timetables in operation this weekend, please click HERE to visit the timetable page.
Whilst every effort will made to ensure that the advised motive power and coaching stock are available, the Keighley & Worth Valley Railway reserve the right to change this when operational circumstances so dictate.

Monday 25 July 2016

Williton West Somerset Railway

Plenty of nostalgia


A traditional Great Western station


Look at that miniature maze


Always a welcome and a good pot of tea and 
slice of cake


The season is only just underway 

Williton Station on the West Somerset Railway

One of the best kept stations I visit


Mind you all the stations on the WSR are superb


It is the home of the Diesel workshops and base


Western Hydraulics


A multitde of other diesel types


Good photo opportunity


Go along and see for yourself, remember to spend summat 
as the stations rely on that income


Always plenty to see


Friday 22 July 2016

Kinlet Hall GWR Hall class locomotive

A better view seen here at Washford Station


GWR Kinlet Hall

Kinlet Hall backs onto the first train of the day


Needless to say its the Butlins Express

Minehead Station West Somerset Railway

All the stations along the line are the responsibility
of their local staffs an great credit to them


Always a fine show 


Of course the track and signals are the CE's team


AS\said before Minehead boasts the longest platform 
in preserved railways and of course in its heyday it 
was no stranger to fifteen and sixteen coach trains 
for the Butlins holiday camp. If I remember rightly
the platform is very nearly one quarter of a mile long.  

First opened in 1874 as the terminus and headquarters of the Minehead Railway, it was closed by British Rail early in 1971. It reopened in 1976 and is now the terminus and headquarters of the West Somerset Railway.
The station was originally built with just one platform. The station offices were on the platform and a goods shed was opposite, while an engine shed was provided behind the platform. In 1905 a second track was added on the opposite side of the platform and a new signal box was brought into use. An iron hut was added to provide more accommodation but was removed in the 1920s when the main building was extended towards the town. The next major alterations came in 1934 when the original single track line was replaced by a double line to cope with the heavy holiday traffic, and a new signal box built. The platforms were extended at the same time. They were now 1,250 feet (380 m) long and a 200 feet (61 m) canopy was provided to give extra shelter at the town end.[2]
The engine shed was closed in 1956, goods traffic ceased in 1964, and the signal box became redundant on 27 March 1966. The railway was closed on 4 January 1971.
The station reopened on 28 March 1976 as a heritage railway by a new West Somerset Railway. The goods shed was converted into an engine shed and extended in 1999. Meanwhile, the station building was altered to be used as offices, and a new ticket office provided. A new level crossing has been laid across the line a little beyond the platform end to carry a new relief road to the sea front, and the former Dunster signal box was moved to control trains at Minehead. A new carriage workshop was opened in 1991 near the Dunster end of the station,[2]
The original turntable was removed form the station in 1967, after steam trains andGWR Autocoach services were completely replaced by Diesel Multiple Units. The WSR acquired both the 55 feet (17 m) turntable and water tower from Pwllheli railway station in anticipation of reinstalling a facility at the station, but later sold the water tower to the Welshpool and Llanfair Railway in 1999. In 2007, the company agreed plans for a £6M development with Somerset Council, to provide a new site for the turntable, together with a viewing area, extended car parking and some ancillary buildings.[3] The turntable was extended using genuine-GWR engineering pattern drawings to 65 feet (20 m),[4] and then installed at its new location, brought into use in May 2008.

Many thanks to Wikipedia for the above information

West Somerset Railway some rolling stock

For the modelers among you


There is usually plenty to photograph around 
Minehead station


The stock is always well looked after


Thursday 21 July 2016

Minehead and the Somerset and Dorset 2-8-0 53808

Just out of a major overhaul the Derby designed 
2-8-0 for the Somerset and Dorset Railway should
 be a regular feature on the line again. 63808 has
no difficulty with the 1 in 67 pull out of Bishops
Lydeard up to Cowcombe Heathfield


Minehead station boasts the longest platform in 
preservation and it is long


Always lots to see.

Minehead station West Somerset Railway

The station is right on the centre of the promenade 
and certainly reminds us of those trips and holidays
away to the seaside


It is also the main base of engineering operations
so plenty to see 

The West Somerset Railway

Still my favorite preserved line


25 miles of superb scenery and of course 
the beauty and pleasurable memories of
seaside holidays


Minehead was our base last week for three days as
we toured the line 

Evening sunshine Minehead on the West Somerset Railway GWR Kinlet Hall

Kinlet hall rests after a busy day on the West Somerset.


Thank you for a great three days WSR



0-6-0 Drewery Shunter at Minehead

How many of us have built the Airfix version of this
little engine


Resting in the evening sunshine at Minehead last week

Wednesday 20 July 2016

Rebuilt Battle of Britain Pacific Sir Kieth Park

This years tours of the railways continued with a
visit to the Severn Valley Railway


Rebuilt Battle of Britain Pacific Sir Kieth Park


Here at Bridgenorth

Wheldale appeal on the Embsay Bolton Abbey Railway

Significant monies have now been raised to move
the restoration of Wheldale forwards

As can be seen the next item is the
firebox faceplate


Without the work of these dedicated
few we would not have our preserved
railways so please help if you can.

Details can be found at
http://www.embsayboltonabbeyrailway.org.uk/

KWVR MARKS 60 YEARS SINCE CLOSURE OF THE GN LINE.




There has been much interest on the blog in regards to the GNR Queensbury lines which I well remember as a child born in Thornton with Family in Ovenden

It is 60 years since British Railways closed the Great Northern Route from Keighley to Bradford and Halifax to passengers and to mark this significant event in the story of our railway, an exhibition will be held in the Museum of Rail Travel at Ingrow telling the story of this “remarkable railway’.

In a year of anniversaries, there is one that precedes the current preservation movement by 10 years – the closure to passengers of the Great Northern route to Bradford and Halifax via Queensbury 60 years ago.
Editor of the Facebook Page, The Queensbury Lines, Mark Neale, is the organiser of an exhibition to mark this significant event and sends this contribution to the KWVR website.
In one of the very first issues of the Worth Valley Railway magazine  `Push & Pull` the late Bob Cryer described the former GN line from Keighley to Bradford and Halifax via Queensbury as a “remarkable railway”.
Ingrow East
Ingrow East looking towards Queensbury
In May 2015 it is 60 years since this “remarkable railway” carried its last regular passenger and this is going to be marked in several significant ways in the locality. In the 1980s I was part of a small group who together with Bob investigated the possibility of buying Thornton viaduct for £1, but we realised that purchasing it was only a small part of the story, as any liabilities for its maintenance etc would have come with the sale.
Slowly over the years the GN line has reverted back to nature, with trees and undergrowth taking over much of the route, and in the inner city Bradford district much of it has been built on. However it has never really been forgotten and has gained an almost ‘cult’ appeal to some enthusiasts.
GN-Junction
Great Northern Junction with a Worth Valley Push & Pull set heading for Keighley
The Facebook page has attracted a lot of interest much of it from outside the Bradford area and even overseas. It has attracted 500 ‘Likes’ and is regularly accessed by people from the Bradford, Keighley, and Halifax area, but also from people in Italy, USA, and even Thailand. It is designed so that people can contribute long forgotten images or stories about the line so that they are not lost forever.
There has been a few small exhibitions in Clayton and Queensbury libraries some years ago which prompted local people to bring forward some valuable material, but as 2015 is 60 years since the last passenger train ran, I decided to try and mark the anniversary with a bigger event.


Ingrow East station staff c.1948
Ingrow East station staff c.1948
The line was built by Benton & Woodiwiss, a major railway contractor in the Victorian heyday of railway construction, and the company moved into this area when their contract on the Settle-Carlisle line finished. Two descendants of Woodiwiss are going to be at the formal launch of the exhibition having travelled up from Devon and London for the event. They have never met before!!
The exhibition hosted by the Vintage Carriage Trust will feature many artifacts from the line including a marked chain stamped with Benton & Woodiwiss used to survey the line during construction. In addition the two GN coaches from the VCT collection will be near to the exhibition within the museum showing typical examples of the kind of rolling stock used on the line during its early days. They may have even travelled over the route.
To further mark the anniversary, Worth Valley trains will carry a replica headboard `The Economist` as carried by the GN trains on the final day, 23rd May 1955. This was made by the station master at Thornton, Bernard Whittaker who at the time was the youngest station master in the country. This was a reference to the supposed £40k per annum that the line was said to be losing and one of the reasons given for its closure to passengers.
Nowadays part of the route (Cullingworth to Wilsden and Queensbury to Thornton, both including the viaducts at Thornton and Hewenden) are part of the expanding Sustrans managed cycleway and footpath. The Great Northern Railway Trail has become a valuable resource in the area. There are even proposals to extend the  route through the lengthy Queensbury tunnel.
In the Ingrow area, Ingrow East station is unrecognisable as a builders yard, adjacent to the KWVR Ingrow West station whilst at GN Junction the base of the signal box is still discernible from the train.

Filed under: EventsIngrowKWVRKWVR News Tagged:Keighley & Worth Valley RailwayKWVRWorth Valley Railway

Many thanks to Mark for his researches on this line

Locomotive Roster for Weekend 23rd & 24th July and to Friday 29th July 2016


Locomotive Roster for Weekend 23rd & 24th July and all next week to Friday 29th July 2016

by news@kwvr
LMS Class 5MT 4-6-0 45212 is at Haworth receiving attention from Haworth works staff so linesiders will have to wait a little longer before the locomotive is out on the branch. BR Class 4MT 4-6-0 75078 will be at the head of the steam service for a 7 day turn of duty from Saturday right through the week to Friday. 75078 will be joined on Sunday by WD 2-8-0 90733.
The normal early morning diesel railbus on Saturday will once again feature English Electric Class 20 no. 20 031 at the head of locomotive hauled stock. The Class 101 DMU will operate the Sunday morning diesel service.
75078-160716'3-GH
For the timetables in operation this weekend, please click HERE to visit the timetable page.
Whilst every effort will made to ensure that the advised motive power and coaching stock are available, the Keighley & Worth Valley Railway reserve the right to change this when operational circumstances so dictate.

Tuesday 19 July 2016

Ivatt Tank 41241 in BR days


41241 in BR days

by news@kwvr
Ask anyone if, whilst allocated to Skipton shed, Ivatt 2-6-2T 41241 hauled rolling stock along the Worth Valley branch and you will receive a resounding "No!"
Whilst physically that answer is correct, the record books suggest otherwise, 41241 hauled on a daily what in this day and age could be called a 'ghost train'.
That well known KWVR figure, David Pearson, has sent in this absolute gem of BR at work in the latter days of steam.
In the National Archive is the correspondence sending her from Llandudno Junction to Skipton. It clearly states that she was sent to Skipton in 1964 to work the Worth Valley branch goods train. The branch had closed in 1961 and this was commented upon by an unknown hand at Euston, when sending the memo back to Crewe where the comment was added; "send in any case; will employ at least two men and use some coal".
Astonishingly, the move was made and at least one KWVR volunteer remembers her passing his school in Keighley as she arrived from Skipton more or less every day, light engine, about noon. On arrival she was parked in the Banana Siding alongside the long demolished goods shed, where she stayed for about three hours doing absolutely nothing, rather than work the branch goods, had it still been open and operated. She then went back to Skipton about 3.30 p.m. having done nothing at all. She did this utterly pointless exercise for at least two years, presumably employing at least two men and burning lots of coal; a remarkable comment on the objectives of a nationalised industry.
We are grateful to David for passing on for a wider audience information that came to light some years ago, during research into the wider subject of locomotives that worked on the KWVR whilst part of the national network. You couldn't make it up.
David Quail's photograph taken on the 11th July 1966 shows 41241 in a woebegone state in steam at Skipton shed. Waiting to take the Worth Valley freight? We'll never know.
David Quail's photograph taken on the 11th July 1966 shows 41241 in a woebegone state in steam at Skipton shed. Waiting to take the Worth Valley freight? We'll never know.

Friday 15 July 2016

K&WVR Locomotive Roster for Weekend 9th & 10th July and all next week to Friday 22nd July 2016


Locomotive Roster for Weekend 9th & 10th July and all next week to Friday 22nd July 2016

by news@kwvr
This weekend is the 4th of our series of Vintage Train Sundays when our more venerable locomotives and rolling stock are allowed to stretch their legs on the main line.
TVR 0-6-2T no. 85 will head the ‘main’ Vintage Set which will be formed of four coaches, comprising coaches from the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Trust and Vintage Carriages Trust:
Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Club Car, no. 47
Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway 6-wheel 3rd Class coach, no. 1507
Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Brake 3rd, no. 1474
Metropolitan Railway Brake 3rd, no. 427
The ‘shuttle’ Vintage Set hauled by LNWR 0-6-2T 'Coal Tank' will once again consist of two carriages from the Vintage Carriages Trust fleet:
Great Northern Railway 6-wheel Brake, no. 589
Southern Railway 'Chatham' Brake, no. 3554
1054-160619'2-PLa
BR Class 4MT 4-6-0 75078 will head the main timetable services throughout the weekend, with the weekday service in the hands of MR 4F 0-6-0 43924.
The normal early morning diesel railbus is rested on Saturday and English Electric Class 20 no. 20 031 will take a locomotive hauled set on the morning diesel run before handing over to 75078. The Class 101 DMU will operate the Sunday morning diesel service.
For the timetables in operation this weekend, please click HERE to visit the timetable page.
Whilst every effort will made to ensure that the advised motive power and coaching stock are available, the Keighley & Worth Valley Railway reserve the right to change this when operational circumstances so dictate.

Sunday 10 July 2016

LMS ‘Black 5’ 45212 Arrives Home

ex-LMS ‘Black 5’ 45212 Arrives Home

by news@kwvr
After a long and protracted restoration to mainline condition, ex-LMS Class 5MT 4-6-0 45212 has returned, albeit for a very limited period, to the KWVR for final painting and running-in prior to returning to Ian Riley's at Bury for any remedial work and final preparation for returning to the mainline.
45212-160707'4-TG