Whitby Redcar and Middlesbrough Union Railway

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Whitby Redcar and Middlesbrough Union Railway
LUECKE
Tees Valley Line to Marske
STRrg ABZrf
STR KBFe
Saltburn
WBRÜCKE
Upleatham Viaduct
eHST
North Skelton
exHLUECKE eABZrd
to Boosbeck
eBHF
Brotton
eABZlf exSTRlg
Carlin How Junction
eBHF exSTR
Skinningrove
STR exSTR exENDEa
Skinningrove zig-zag
exENDEr eKRZo exABZ3rf exABZrf
Kilton Viaduct
STR exKDSe
Liverton Mines
eBHF
Loftus
eHST
Grinkle
TUNNEL1
Grinkle Tunnel 993 yds
xENDEe
Boulby Mine
exHST
Staithes
exHST
Hinderwell
exHST
Kettleness
exTUNNEL2
Kettleness Tunnel 308 yds
exTUNNEL1
Sandsend Tunnel 1652 yds
exHST
Sandsend
exWBRÜCKE
Sandsend Viaduct
exWBRÜCKE
East Row Viaduct
exBRÜCKE2
Newholm Beck Viaduct
exBRÜCKE2
Upgang Viaduct
exBHF
Whitby West Cliff
exSTR KBFa
Whitby Town
exABZlf exSTRlg STR
Prospect Hill Junction
exSTRlf exKRZo eABZrf
Bog Hall Junction
HLUECKE HSTR xKRZo STRrf
Esk Valley Line to Ruswarp
exWBRÜCKE
Larpool Viaduct (Over River Esk)
exLUECKE
Scarborough & Whitby Railway to Hawsker

The Whitby, Redcar and Middlesbrough Union Railway (WRMU) was a short lived railway line, running along the North east coast of England from the River Tees at Middlesbrough to the Esk at Whitby, where it met the Scarborough & Whitby Railway line and the Whitby and Pickering Railway (Now the Esk Valley Line as far as Grosmont and the NYMR to Pickering). For much of its journey it hugged the cliffs, and had a troubled build due to the proximity to the sea and poor build quality of the construction on many of the original bridges and viaducts.

It was essentially created from two separate sections of railway - From Middlesbrough to Loftus and from Loftus to Whitby (West Cliff).

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Loftus to Middlesbrough

This section has a complex heritage in itself, being built in stages by the Cleveland Railway, the Middlesbrough and Guisborough Railway and the NER. The first section north of Loftus as far as Priescroft Junction, near Brotton was part of a route built to serve the rapidly developing ironstone industry. The line ran via Nunthorpe (over what is now part of the Esk Valley Line), through Guisborough and on to Loftus with branches to various ironworks and mines along the way. North of this came the Saltburn Extension, opened to goods in 1872, and to passengers in 1875. Originally it had no stations, as its main purpose was for goods traffic, although North Skelton opened in 1902.

The line was authorised by an act of parliament in 1866, with the majority of construction by John Dickson from 1871 to 1873. Due to a lack of funds and problems with the original contractor work was suspended on the route until the NER took up the lease in 1875. John Waddell won the contract, and the line was scheduled to open on 13 July 1881, but due to the extra work required to bring it up to standard, it was two and a half years before the line was finally opened on 3 December 1883. Many of the bridges were defective and piers out of vertical. Even the original tunnels were so out of line with each other that when boring was done from each end the would not have met in the centre![1] Part of the proposed line was so dangerously close to the cliff edge that the NER abandoned it and took a route further inland through Sandsend and Kettleness tunnels.[2]

[edit] Loftus to Whitby

The completed section ran from Whitby to Loftus, where it met the NER Middlesbrough - Loftus route head on. From the beginning the line was run by the NER who held the lease and who were at that time also running services to Whitby along what is now the Esk Valley Line and Whitby's 'main line' the Malton - Whitby line. The NER took over the line in 1899.

By 1958, British Rail claimed that £58,000 worth of maintenance was required to keep the line open (mainly on repairs to the viaducts).[2] With dwindling passengers since the war years, the route was now only popular during summer weekends. The line closed on 5 May 1958. Only Whitby West Cliff station remained open for another three years, serving trains from Whitby to Scarborough until it too finally closed on 12 June 1961, after which Scarborough trains had to reverse at Prospect Hill Junction where the line from Whitby Town met those from Scarborough and Loftus.

In 1960 work began to dismantle the line, viaducts were sold for scrap metal and concrete was used in the construction of the local sea defences.

[edit] The railway today

In the 1970s the northern section of the line was revived after ICI decided to sink Boulby mine for potash, conveniently located next to the former route, just north of the village of Boulby in Redcar and Cleveland. This section of the line remains open today as a freight line, but all of the passenger stations remain closed. The dismantled section south of Boulby is now used as a footpath by walkers.


[edit] References

  1. ^ Hoole, K. (1971). Railways in Cleveland: Dalesman. ISBN 0-85206-131-5
  2. ^ a b Suggitt, G. (2005). Lost Railways of North & East Yorkshire: Countryside Books. ISBN 1-85306-918-3