Roger Farnworth Railways
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RE: Roger Farnworth Railways
King's Lynn. ...... I was 12 years old when we moved to King's Lynn in 1972 and we stayed there right through my teens until I left home for University in 1978. I have long thought about spending a little time reviewing the railway history of the town. This first post covers King's Lynn Harbour Branch which left the mainline just before that line entered the town in South Lynn http://rogerfarnworth.com/2018/09/16/kin...our-branch |
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RE: Roger Farnworth Railways
King's Lynn again. ... The harbour branch left the mainline South of King's Lynn. The docks branch left the mainline close to King's Lynn Station. The post below includes a very short history of the harbour and docks and then covers the length of the branch from the station to John Kennedy Road. http://rogerfarnworth.com/2018/09/24/kin...nch-part-1 |
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RE: Roger Farnworth Railways
King's Lynn again ...... The second part of a study on the Docks Branch in King's Lynn. ...... http://rogerfarnworth.com/2018/09/24/kin...nch-part-2 This post covers the area around the Alexandra Dock. A further post will follow to cover the railways around the Bentinck Dock. |
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RE: Roger Farnworth Railways
King's Lynn again. ..... This is the third post about the Docks Railway in King's Lynn. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2018/10/07/ki...nch-part-3 The post covers the area around Bentinck Dock and has some detail about the Savage's Works on the East side of the dock. Savage's were internationally renowned for their steam-powered fairground attractions. |
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RE: Roger Farnworth Railways
King's Lynn again. .............. A few random bits and pieces which relate to the docks railways in King's Lynn .... http://rogerfarnworth.com/2018/11/06/kin...cellaneous |
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RE: Roger Farnworth Railways
King's Lynn again. ............... One of the directors of the Docks and Harbour Railways in King's Lynn was William Burkitt, a self-made local business man who had the means to order his own locomotive from Alfred Dodman & Company of Kings Lynn. The loco was named 'Gazelle'. This is the story of that locomotive. It pulls, Colonel Stephens, King's Lynn and the Shropshire and Montgomery Light Railway into one story! http://rogerfarnworth.com/2019/07/21/gazelle |
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RE: Roger Farnworth Railways
King's Lynn again. ................... There is a lot more to cover about the railways in and around King's Lynn. This post gives a flavour of what is to come in due course. http://rogerfarnworth.com/2019/10/21/ear...kings-lynn There is a significant length of the Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway, the branch to Hunstanton, the original length of the line from Gaywood towards Bawsey and a number of quarry and other short lines, without even considering the main line towards Ely. When time permits. .............. |
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Re: The Glasson Dock Branch
In early November 2019, my wife and I spent a week or so staying just to the Southwest of Lancaster. During our time there we walked along much of the old Glasson Dock Branch which is now a cycleway alongside the River Lune. We were fortunate with the weather! The linked article below describes the line and its history. ..... http://rogerfarnworth.com/2019/11/27/the...ock-branch Quote: Glasson Dock sits at the mouth of the Lune Estuary to the Southwest of the City of Lancaster. |
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Re: King's Lynn, Norfolk UK
The Lynn and Fakenham Railway - Part 1. ... This post results from reading Issue No. 30 of the "Railway Archive" Journal. It contains an article about the locomotives originally purchased for the Cornwall Minerals Railway. That company dramatically over-ordered motive power and when it lease was taken over by the GWR, 50% of its original order were returned to the manufacturer Sharp, Stewart of Manchester. Eight if these locomotives found their way to the Lynn & Fakenham Railway and eventually onto the books of the Midland & Great Northern Joint Railway. This first post about the Lynn & Fakenham Railway focusses on these locomotives. ... http://rogerfarnworth.com/2019/11/16/the...way-part-1 Quote:Although first mooted in the 1840s, the Lynn & Fakenham Railway was not opened, over its full length, until 1880. It only had a short independent life, being absorbed into the Eastern & Midlands Railway in 1883. |
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Re: The Penydarren Tramroad
This next post relates in passing to the Penydarren Tramroad. It focuses primarily on the Plymouth Ironworks an Collieries which grew as a result of the existence of the Tramroad and the later railways in the Taff Valley. ... http://rogerfarnworth.com/2019/11/13/the...aff-valley Quote: South Duffryn or Plymouth Colliery, situated to the south of Pentrebach and just north of Troedyrhiw, was opened by the Hills Plymouth Company in 1862. It was served by the Taff Valley Railway and the Penydarren Tramroad. I have been prompted to write this short post by reading an article written by Clive Thomas in the Archive Journal of September 2014. |
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