List of 2 ft 3 in gauge railways

A list of known 2 ft 3 in (686 mm) narrow track gauge railways:

Corris Railway
Talyllyn Railway
Name Opened Closed Length Location Notes
Campbeltown and Machrihanish Light Railway [1][2] 1877 1932[3] 6 miles (9.7 km) Mull of Kintyre, Scotland Remote line serving coal mines and passengers on the Kintyre peninsula.
Caphouse Colliery[4] 1988 present c. 2,000 yards (1,800 m) National Coal Mining Museum, Wakefield Demonstration funicular railway.
Corris Railway 1859 present 12 14 miles (19.7 km) [3] Machynlleth, Wales Built to carry slate from the Corris district. Closed after flooding of the Afon Dyfi. Reopened in 2002.
Hendra China Stone Quarry[5] 1860s 1967 after Unknown Nanpean, England Internal quarry tramway system with cable hauled inclines.
Huncoat Colliery Unknown 1968?[6] Unknown Huncoat, England National Coal Board mine railway. One diesel was sold to the Talyllyn Railway, and runs as No. 9 Alf.[7][8]
Plynlimon and Hafan Tramway[3] 1897 1899 7 miles (11.3 km)[3] Talybont, Wales Short-lived line serving the lead mines around Hafan.
Quarry Close China Stone Works[5] 1863 1973 Unknown Nanpean, England A network of lines connecting several quarries to the GWR branch line from Drinnick Mill.
Talyllyn Railway[3] 1865 present 7 14 miles (11.7 km) Tywyn, Wales Built to carry slate from Bryneglwys quarry to the coast.
York Gasworks Company[9] 1915 1959 c. 400 feet (120 m) York, England Electrified railway, operated by a locomotive built by Dick, Kerr & Co.

Similar gauges

No railways of an identical gauge are known outside Britain, though lines of 700 mm (2 ft 3 916 in) are known in Latvia and Romania (see Narrow gauge railway) and several Cuban sugar cane railways.[10]

Other British railways of similar, but not identical, gauge were:

See also

References

  1. Nigel S.C. Macmillan (1970). The Campbeltown & Machrihanish Light Railway. David & Charles: Newton Abbot.
  2. "Macrihanish Online". 2011. Retrieved 15 February 2011.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 Whitehouse, Patrick and Snell, John (1984). Narrow gauge railways of the British Isles. David & Charles. ISBN 0715301969.
  4. Keith Turner (2002). Cliff Railways of the British Isles. The Oakwood Press. p. 119.
  5. 1 2 Dart, Maurice (2005). Cornwall Narrow Gauge including the Camborne & Redruth tramway. Middleton Press. ISBN 190447456X.
  6. Colliery closed 1968. "The Huncoat Trails". Retrieved 7 October 2011.
  7. Bate, J.H.L. (2001). The Chronicles of Pendre Sidings. RailRomances. pp. 158, 160. ISBN 1-900622-05-X.
  8. Potter, D. (1990). The Talyllyn Railway. David St John Thomas. p. 202. ISBN 0-946537-50-X.
  9. Mitchell, Vic, and Keith Smith (2003). Branch Line to the Derwent Valley, including the Foss Islands Branch. Midhurst: Middleton Press. plate 24. ISBN 1-904474-06-3.
  10. "Sugar Cane Railways in Cuba, 2003" (PDF).
  11. "Industrial Narrow Gauge Railways in England". Retrieved 6 May 2014.
  12. "Century of mining ends at Welbeck Colliery". BBC news. 11 May 2010. Retrieved 5 May 2014.
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