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August
2003. Havant to Hayling Island, Hampshire. The first section
of the 'Hayling Billy' cycle route has been opened from Havant to
Langstone Harbour. A railway path already exists from Langstone
Harbour to the old Hayling Island terminus, and the two sections
will be linked when the superstructure on the harbour bridge is
replaced. The route is known as the 'Hayling Billy' trail because
this was the local name for the two-coach Terrier-hauled trains
that used to ply the branch. (Ralph Rawlinson)
August
2003. St. Ives to Cambridge. There are plans for a traffic-free
route between St. Ives and Cambridge alongside the proposed guided
bus route which will utilise the trackbed of the former Eastern
Counties Railway. Completion is not expected until 2006 at the earliest.
(Ralph Rawlinson)
August
2003. Ilkeston to Derby. Derbyshire County Council is proposing
a multi-user trail from the outskirts of Derby to Ilkeston following
the line of the former Great Northern Railway. (Ralph Rawlinson)
August
2003. Barnstaple to Ilfracombe, Devon. Devon County Council
is soon starting construction work between Willingcott (near Mortehoe
station) and Lee Bridge on the edge of Ilfracombe in order to provide
a 3 mile traffic-free cycle route into the town. The long-term aim
remains to convert the whole of the former branch, but there are
sections of private ownership between Braunton and Willingcott.
The first 5½ miles between Barnstaple and Braunton are already
part of the Tarka Trail. (Ralph Rawlinson)
August
2003. Spetisbury to Charlton-on-the-Hill, Dorset. Dorset County
Council is progressing with plans to improve the surface of the
old Somerset & Dorset Railway between these two villages in
order to create a traffic-free section of NCN route 25. Work on
this 1½ mile section should be completed by the end of the
year, and there are plans to extend it to Blandford Forum. (Ralph
Rawlinson)
August
2003. Ilminster to Chard, Somerset. A section of the old
Great Western line between Ilminster and Peasmarsh (on the
A358) has
been
open for a couple of years now, but Sustrans has just started work
on an extension to Chard Reservoir, half a mile from Chard, in
order
to create a good traffic-free route between the two towns. The
new section features a number of fortifications such as dragon's
teeth,
and we would like to know how these came to be there. Please get
in touch via our Contact page
if you know their history. Update: These
structures turn out to be defensive fortifications from World
War 2, built
as part of the Taunton
Stop Line. (John Grimshaw)
August
2003. Shepton Mallet, Somerset. More good news for fans of the
lamented Somerset & Dorset Railway a further stretch
of trackbed is being opened up to walkers and cyclists. The new
route will run from a minor road at Thrupe (grid reference ST 604466)
to just short of the A37 at Shepton Mallet (ST 623438). The distance
involved is a little under two miles, is entirely on the old railway
trackbed and includes Winsor Hill Tunnel. Update: This development
had not started as at April 2006. While an unofficial path exists
along parts of the trackbed north of Shepton Mallet, there are major
obstructions: Bath Road Viaduct is securely fenced off, and private
land is reached shortly after crossing Ham Wood Viaduct. However,
both of the tunnels at Winsor Hill are open and appear to be in
good condition. (John Grimshaw and Jeff Vinter; update by Phillip
Earnshaw)
July
2003. Scottish Borders. Scottish Borders Council have incorporated
a mile of the Waverley line (Carlisle-Edinburgh) into their Minto
Hills Walk. The railway part runs from Hassendean station bridge
to Clockerhall Farm accommodation bridge and is signed throughout.
The Council continues to incorporate railway routes into its footpath
plans, with the Borders Abbeys Way using much of the old Jedburgh
branch. Parts of the Ravenswood Junction to Kelso line are also
walkable. Most of the Waverley route is due for opening as walkways
south of Hawick in due course once land issues have been settled.
(Chris John)
July
2003. Newport to Sandown, Isle of Wight. Further to the entry
for March, q.v., a visit this month revealed that the conversion
of this route into a walk and cycle trail by the Isle of Wight County
Council has been carried out to a high standard. Most noteworthy
is the section south of Merstone station, where the council has
excavated the former trackbed and a road-over-rail bridge, all of
which had been buried by infilling. (Jeff Vinter)
March
2003. Honeybourne to Broadway, Gloucestershire. The Gloucestershire
Warwickshire Railway has applied to Cotswold District Council to
take over management of 4 miles of trackbed between Honeybourne
and Broadway. It would then construct a cycleway sympathetic to
eventual track reinstatement, which it says Sustrans might not.
(Ralph Rawlinson)
March
2003. Newport to Abergavenny, Gwent. A new cycleway that has
come to light following the re-issue of Landranger maps 161 and
171 is National Cycle Network Route 46 from Newport to Abergavenny.
This incorporates five miles of converted trackbed, namely the whole
of the former GWR Pontypool (Trevethin Junction) to Abersychan &
Talywain line (including Cwmnantddu Viaduct), and the southern end
of the LNWR Brynmawr to Abersychan & Talywain branch. These
two lines, closed to passengers in 1941 and to all traffic in 1980,
made an end-on junction at Abersychan & Talywain. NCN 46 also
includes a two mile stretch of the former Monmouthshire Railway
& Canal Company line between Newport Mill Street and Pontypool
Crane Street. (Ralph Rawlinson)
March
2003. Wetherby to Walton, West Yorkshire. A new railway path
of 1½ miles between Wetherby and Walton should now be open. (Sustrans
Ltd)
March
2003. Kirklees, West Yorkshire. A new railway path of
2 miles has been opened from Leeds Road, Deighton, to Huddersfield.
The
route, which passes near Deighton Railway and two local schools,
has been developed by Kirklees Council and will be integrated
into
the National Cycle Network on completion of a link to Dewsbury.
(Sustrans Ltd)
March
2003. Doncaster, South Yorkshire. A new 3 mile route between
Bentley Doncaster and Highfields Country Park has been opened at
a cost of £180,000. The route avoids the Great North Road by using
the former Brodsworth mineral line to link with the Trans Pennine
Trail at Scawthorpe. The project included the acquisition of Castle
Hills, a protected Norman earthwork, for care and maintenance. Local
farmer Robert Smith supported the proposal and is delighted to see
so many family cyclists using the route. (Sustrans Ltd)
March
2003. Abercynon to Merthyr Tydfil, Mid Glamorgan. Plans are
well in hand to celebrate the bi-centenary of the pioneering run
of Richard Trevithick's steam locomotive along the Pennydarren Tramroad
in 1804. The first 2½ miles of the tramroad form part of the Taff
Trail, and, if Merthyr Tydfil Borough Council can secure funding,
the remaining sections north of Pontygwaith Bridge will be developed
into a trail, with the narrow bore Plymouth Tunnel restored and
re-opened. (Ralph
Rawlinson)
March
2003. Queensbury to Cullingworth, West Yorkshire. A proposal
has been made to turn this route into a new railway path and cycle
trail, and Bradford Council has rejected an application from a waste
disposal company to continue dumping waste in its cuttings. If successful,
this 5¼ mile route would be known as "The Great Northern Rail
Trail". It includes viaducts at Pinch Beck, Hewenden and Cullingworth.
(Michael Steptoe and Ralph Rawlinson)
March
2003. Ringwood, Hampshire. The former railway line from Ringwood
station to the Dorset county boundary at Ashley Twinning has now
been opened to the public, thanks to a joint scheme between Sustrans
(the Bristol based path building charity) and Hampshire County Council.
Sustrans has undertaken to maintain the three viaducts over the
River Avon, while the county council has put in a good quality surface
suitable for walkers and cyclists. An official opening is planned
for May. At Ashley Twinning, the new route connects with Dorset
C.C.'s 'Castleman Trailway', which follows the old railway to West
Moors and eventually Upton (near Hamworthy), although a detour takes
the route off the trackbed between West Moors and Oakley, south
of Wimborne Minster. (Tim Grose)
March
2003. Ringwood, Hampshire. Oops - we missed this one! We have
just discovered that Hampshire C.C. dedicated a public footpath
from Ringwood (near the station site) eastwards to Crow Arch Lane,
a distance of about 1½ miles, back in the early 1990s. If you are
considering a long distance railway walk in the south of England,
it is worth considering the former main line from Brockenhurst to
Hamworthy via Ringwood, since so much of it is now open to the public.
The old trackbed can be followed with relative ease from Lymington
Junction, west of Brockenhurst, as far as the lane south of Burley.
From here, public footpaths should be used to reach Crow Arch Lane,
then it's plain sailing all the way to Upton, mainly on the Castleman
Trailway, described in the entry above. (Tim Grose)
March
2003. Ringwood, Hampshire. While we are on the subject of Ringwood,
it is worth mentioning the former line from Ringwood to Christchurch
via Hurn. The northern part of this has disappeared beneath the
modern A338 Ringwood to Bournemouth road, but a short section, including
a cutting and the site of the 19th century navvies' camp, survives
in Avon Forest Park, at the Ringwood end. Things improve at Hurn
station, which is now the Avon Causeway Hotel. A few years ago,
this proclaimed its railway past with a Pullman carriage and diesel
locomotive, albeit an industrial one. Are they still there? Between
Hurn and Fairmile, on the northern edge of Christchurch, the trackbed
is owned by Hall & Co, the aggregate company, but locals use
it freely for walking and horseriding. (Jeff Vinter)
March
2003. Newport to Sandown, Isle of Wight. A few years ago, this
cross-island branch line was fragmented into two main sections,
Shide to Blackwater (1½ miles) and Horringford to Sandown (3½ miles).
However, the Isle of Wight County Council has been filling in the
gap between Blackwater and Horringford so that, by July this year,
it will be possible to walk or cycle along the old railway all the
way from Shide to Sandown. The only detours will be half a mile
north of Merstone station, and a similar distance around Horringford
station. Unfortunately, the section from Newport to Shide has disappeared
beneath a new road, but these improvements will create a new railway
path of about 9 miles - welcome news indeed as the summer approaches.
(Graham Lambert)
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