Forest of Dean Central Railway

Forest of Dean Central Railway
Overview
Statusclosed
OwnerForest of Dean Central Railway until Great Western Railway absorbed it in 1923
LocaleGloucestershire
Termini
Service
TypeHeavy rail
Operator(s)Great Western Railway
History
Opened25 May 1868 to Howbeach,
1869 to New Fancy
Closed1877 beyond Howbeach,
October 1922 no regular trains beyond Blakeney,
2 August 1949 official closure
Technical
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge [converted 11–13 May 1872 from 7 feet 14 inch (2.140 m)]

The Forest of Dean Central Railway was a mineral railway line designed to connect certain collieries in the central part of the Forest of Dean to a new dock at Brimspill on the River Severn. It was authorised by the Forest of Dean Central Railway Act 1856, but serious difficulties were encountered in raising the money to build it. It opened in 1868 by which time the principal colliery intended to be served had ceased operation. It was unable to finance the construction of the dock at Brimspill and relied on transfer of traffic to the main line of the South Wales Railway (later the Great Western Railway).

It was a broad gauge line, and it was worked from the outset by the Great Western Railway. It was converted to standard gauge in 1872. The limited traffic potential resulted in a continuing inability to pay routine outgoings, and it was leased to the Great Western Railway in 1885.

About 1921 the last colliery on the line ceased operation and the line was shortened back to Blakeney, where there was a goods depot. That business too ended in 1949, and there was no more commercial use of the line.


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