Snailbeach District Railways
Map of the Snailbeach District Railways
Snailbeach Lead Mine, served by the railway
Overview
HeadquartersTonbridge until 1948
LocaleEngland
Dates of operation18771959 (rail operation)
Successorabandoned
Technical
Track gauge2 ft 4 in (711 mm) [a]
Length3+12 miles (5.63 km)

Snailbeach District Railways was a British narrow gauge railway in Shropshire. It was built to carry lead ore from mines in the Stiperstones to Pontesbury where the ore was transshipped to the Great Western Railway's Minsterley branch line. Coal from the Pontesford coal mines travelled in the opposite direction. The line ended at Snailbeach, the location of Shropshire's largest and richest lead mine, though there had been a plan to extend it further, which would have brought it closer to more lead mines.

History

The railway was incorporated by Act of Parliament on 5 August 1873 and opened in 1877. It was built with an unusual gauge of 2 ft 4 in (711 mm).[1] The line was prosperous at first, carrying 14,000 long tons (14,225 t; 15,680 short tons) annually and paying a 3% dividend. However, in 1884, the Tankerville Great Consols Company mine, the largest user of the railway, closed, and tonnage fell to 5,500 long tons (5,588 t; 6,160 short tons).[2]

In 1905, the Ceirog Granite Company opened a quarry near Habberley, and a branch was built to serve this. An extra locomotive was required, and 0-4-2 T Sir Theodore was borrowed from the 2 ft 4+12 in (724 mm) gauge Glyn Valley Tramway. However, the slight difference in gauge made this locomotive too wide for the track, and it was returned unused. Instead, a new locomotive, Dennis, was bought.[2]

Freight reached a peak in 1909 when 38,000 long tons (38,610 t; 42,560 short tons) were carried, but this proved to be a short-term change in fortune for the railway, and demand dwindled again during World War I. In 1923 it was taken over and re-equipped by Colonel Stephens. Stephens bought two new Baldwin locomotives from the War Department Light Railways.

When the mines closed, the line lost much of its traffic but was rescued by a new traffic flow of stone from Callow Hill Quarry. There was virtually no traffic on the upper part of the line but it remained open as the locomotive shed was at Snailbeach.

In 1947 all three remaining steam locomotives were unusable and the railway was moribund. The locomotives were cut up at Snailbeach in 1950. The lower section was leased by Shropshire County Council who used it to transport road-building materials from Callow Hill Quarry to Pontesbury. When the last steam locomotive failed, loaded wagons were run from the quarry to Pontesbury by gravity, and then, when enough were ready, hauled back using a Fordson tractor straddling the rails. The railway finally closed in 1959, the last railway equipment being scrapped in 1961. The Talyllyn Railway purchased the remaining track.

The quarry remained open but the railway was lifted and, between Callow Hill and the road bridge at Pontesbury, converted into a road. Shropshire County Council ran their lorries along this road and paid rent to the railway company. As lorries became larger the long single-track road from Callow Lane to the quarry became impractical and was closed. A new access road was built in 1998 from the A488 in Pontesbury to the quarry at Callow Hill, when the quarry was extended and deepened. Shropshire County Council sold the quarry to Tarmac plc, in 2003. Quarrying permission existed until 2013. As at late 2006 there was no active work at the quarry and most heavy machinery had been removed.

Line preservation

A short section of the track still in situ in 2005

The railway company was still in existence in 1984 when it was put up for sale (offers in the region of £25,000). The sale included the company records as well as the land. The only parts that were sold were the Callow Hill quarry and the trackbed from the exchange sidings at Pontesbury through to Callow Lane near Minsterley. A small section of land was sold to private purchasers at Snailbeach (near Prospect House and Cottages) and the Crowsnest terminal. A small section near the Plox Green road bridge is owned by Shropshire Council and is said to be lead contaminated due to drainage from the spoil piles. A small parcel of land covering the trackbed on the other side of this bridge is used as a playing field and the Snailbeach Village Hall.

Income was expected from the lease to the county council (lasting until 1997) and from wayleaves for services laid along the old trackbed.

Callow Hill Quarry (2006) is owned by Tarmac plc and largely mothballed. Occasional quarry products are transported only a short distance along the route of the old railway to a public road (A488) leading to Pontesbury.

Some remnants of the railway can still be seen, notably in Snailbeach, where the engine shed has been restored and rails remain in place on the lines leading to the old mines, and a reconstructed hopper wagon is available for inspection.

Locomotives

Number Name Builder Type Works Number Built Bought Notes
Belmont Hughes Falcon Works 0-4-2ST 1874 (?) 1877 Scrapped c.1912
Fernhill Lennox Lange 0-6-0ST 1881 1881 Scrapped c.1906
1 Dennis[3] W.G. Bagnall 0-6-0T 1797 1906 1906 Scrapped 1937
2 Kerr Stuart[4] 0-4-2T
"Skylark" class
802 1902 1923 Scrapped 1950
3 Baldwin Locomotive Works 4-6-0PT
class 10-12-D[3]
44383 1916 1923 Scrapped 1950
4 Baldwin Locomotive Works 4-6-0PT
class 10-12-D
44522 1917 1923 Scrapped 1950

See also

Notes

a At least one source lists the gauge as 2 ft 3+34 in (705 mm).

References

  • Dalston, H. F. G. (November 1944). "The Snailbeach District Railways". The Railway Magazine. London: Tothill Press Limited. 90 (554).
  • Kidner, R.W. (1938). Mineral Railways. The Oakwood Press.
  • Tonks, Eric S. (1974). The Snailbeach District Railway. The Industrial Railway Society. ISBN 0-901096-17-2
  • Industrial Locomotives of Cheshire, Shropshire and Herefordshire. The Industrial Railway Society. 1977. ISBN 0-901096-32-6
  1. Shropshiremines.org Snailbeach District Railway
  2. 1 2 Oppitz, Leslie (1993). Shropshire and Staffordshire Railway Remembered. Countryside Books. pp. 31–33. ISBN 1-85306-264-2.
  3. 1 2 Dalston 1944, p. 356.
  4. Dalston 1944, p. 355.

Further reading

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