Belfast and County Down Railway

Coordinates: 54°36′07″N 5°54′50″W / 54.602°N 5.914°W / 54.602; -5.914

The Belfast and County Down Railway (BCDR) was an Irish gauge (1,600 mm (5 ft 3 in)) railway in Ireland (later Northern Ireland) linking Belfast with County Down.[1] It was built in the 19th century and absorbed into the Ulster Transport Authority in 1948. All but the line between Belfast and Bangor was closed in the 1950s.

History

The company was incorporated on 26 June 1846 with the first section of line from Belfast to Holywood opening for traffic on 2 August 1848. The line was further extended to Bangor by the Belfast, Holywood and Bangor Railway (BHBR), opening on 1 May 1865, and acquired by the BCDR in 1884. The line to Downpatrick was opened on 25 March 1859. The line from Downpatrick to Newcastle was built by the Downpatrick, Dundrum and Newcastle Railway, opening on 25 March 1869 and absorbed by BCDR on 14 July 1884.[2]

Railway-owned steam driven lorry, early 20th century.

A branch to Ballynahinch was opened in 1858.

A branch line from Downpatrick to Ardglass was opened in 1892, as was a loop line at Downpatrick. The branch from Newcastle to Castlewellan was opened on 24 March 1906.[2]

The company operated 80 miles (129 km) of track (Belfast to Newcastle and five branches) exclusively in County Down, with its longest route being from Belfast to Castlewellan, a distance of 41 miles (66 km). All locomotives were constructed by Beyer, Peacock, except No. 2, which was from Harland and Wolff. By 1948 the company had 29 locomotives. Two steam railcars from Kitson & Co. were acquired in 1905. The locomotive works were at Belfast Queen's Quay railway station and closed in 1950. New carriage works had been opened in 1886, with the last carriage being built in 1923.[2]

Routes

Belfast and County Down Railway

Legend
  • Grey indicate facilities that closed before the UTA takeover.

Great Northern Railway
to Dublin

Northern Counties Committee
to Londonderry

GNR
BCR↓

City Hospital
NI Maintenance Shops
(on site of York Road)

Botanic
Yorkgate
Belfast Central
Great Victoria Street
Great Northern Railway
Belfast Queens Bridge
BCR↑
B&CDR

River Lagan
Cross Harbour Rail Link
Belfast Queen's Quay
Titanic Quarter

B&CDR Depot and
Carriage Works

Ballymacarrett
Junctions

Fraser Street Halt

Ballymacarrett
Ballymacarrett
Goods Yard

Victoria Park

Sydenham
Bloomfield

Tillysburn
(proposed)

Neill's Hill

County Antrim
County Down

Kinnegar
sand pits siding

Holywood
County Antrim
County Down

Marino
Cultra Halt
Comber Greenway

Craigavad
Seahill
Knock

Helen's Bay
Dundonald

Crawfordsburn

Carnalea
Comber

Bangor West
Andrew's Mill siding

Bangor
Ballygowan

Newtownards
Shepherd's Bridge Halt
Conlig
Saintfield
Ballygrainey
Ballynahinch Junction
Millisle Road Halt
Donaghadee
Creevyargon Halt
Crossgar
Ballynahinch
King's Bridge Halt
Inch Abbey
Downpatrick
Loop Platform

Downpatrick
King Magnus' Halt
Downpatrick and
County Down Railway

Ballydugan Halt
(proposed)
Downpatrick
Racecourse Platform

Tullymurry
Ballynoe
Ballykinlar Halt
Bright Halt
Dundrum
Killough
Great Northern Railway
to Banbridge

Coney Island
Castlewellan
Ardglass
Newcastle
Helen's Bay railway station

Steamships

The BH&BR Act of 1881 authorised that company not only to have a railway built between Holywood and Bangor but also to run steamships "for the purpose of establishing an improved and efficient communication between Belfast, Holywood and Bangor".[4] The BH&BR did not exercise this power, but several years after it had been taken over by the B&CDR the latter company started running scheduled passenger steamship services on the route.

The B&CDR took advice from the Glasgow and South Western Railway (G&SWR),[4] which had been running passenger paddle steamers since 1891. For the 1893 season the G&SWR had ordered a new ship, PS Minerva (1893), to be built by J&G Thomson at Clydebank. The two railways then ordered from Thomson's two sister ships of a slightly revised design: PS Glen Rosa for the G&SWR and PS Slieve Donard for the B&CDR. Thomson's launched Slieve Donard on 20 May 1893 and she entered service between Belfast's Donegall Quay and Bangor on 20 June.[4] She was named after Slieve Donard, the highest peak in the Mourne Mountains in County Down.[4]

In October 1893 the B&CDR ordered a slightly larger paddle steamer, PS Slieve Bearnagh, named after Slieve Bearnagh, the second-highest peak in the Mourne Mountains.[4] She made her first voyage on Belfast Lough on 1 May 1894.[4] Donard and Bearnagh worked between Donegall Quay and Bangor, between them providing six sailings per day from Mondays to Saturdays and five on Sundays.[5] From Mondays to Saturdays one mid-afternoon sailing per day extended around the coast to Donaghadee.[5] On Saturday afternoons other sailings continued from Bangor across Belfast Lough to Larne.[5]

Later that summer a local steamer line, the New Belfast, Bangor and Larne Steamboat Company, went into liquidation and the B&CDR bought two of its ships, PS Bangor Castle and PS Erin, from the receivers.[6] These ships were older and smaller than those that Thomson had supplied, and the B&CDR seems to have made little use of them.[6] Bangor Castle had been on charter to the Southampton, Isle of Wight and South of England Royal Mail Steam Packet Company since 1888 and was scrapped in 1899.[7]

In 1899 the railway sold Slieve Donard to Alexander Campbell, co-founder of the P&A Campbell pleasure steamer company. Slieve Bearnagh remained with the B&CDR, occasionally making excursions to Portaferry on the Ards Peninsula, Ardglass in south Down, and Larne and Portrush on the coast of County Antrim[4] in addition to her regular scheduled route on Belfast Lough.

At the end of the 1911 sumer season the B&CDR put Slieve Bearnagh up for sale and ordered a new paddle steamer, again slightly larger than her predecessors. A&J Inglis of Pointhouse, Glasgow launched the new ship, PS Erin's Isle, on 12 June 1912 and fitted her out in less than a month.[5] On 19 June 1912 the railway sold Slieve Bearnagh to D&J Nicol of Dundee for service on the east coast of Scotland.[4] Erin's Isle was in B&CDR service from 12 July 1912 until her fourth summer season ended on 29 September 1915.[5] On 20 November 1915 the Admiralty requisitioned her for £400 per month to be a Royal Navy minesweeper.[5] On 7 May 1919 she was sunk by a mine,[8] for which the Admiralty paid £53,676 compensation.[5] However, the railway found that a new ship would cost £64,000 and decided not to return to owning steamships.[5]

Ulster Transport Authority

In 1946 the Northern Ireland Government announced that it would unite under a single authority all public transport that was wholly within Northern Ireland. The Transport Act (NI) 1948 created the Ulster Transport Authority which took over the BCDR on 1 October 1948 and the Northern Counties Committee on 1 April 1949.

On 15 January 1950 the UTA withdrew services on the former BCDR lines between Comber and Newcastle; Ballynahinch Junction and Ballynahinch; and Downpatrick and Ardglass.[9][10] The Northern Ireland Transport Tribunal had authorised these closures on 15 December 1949.[11]

The UTA withdrew services between Ballymacarrett Junction and Donaghadee on 22 April 1950.[10] The line between Castlewellan and Newcastle remained open until 1 May 1955,[12] served by Great Northern Railway Board trains to and from Banbridge. Once these two sections had been closed, the line between Belfast and Bangor was the only part of the former BCDR that remained open.

When the UTA took it over, the BCDR had 29 locomotives, 181 carriages and 25 other coaching vehicles, 629 wagons mostly covered vans and wagons but also including some 6-wheeled fish vans, and 54 service vehicles.[2]

Incidents and accidents

On 10 January 1945, 22 passengers died and 24 were injured when a railmotor car ran into the rear of a conventional train stopped at a signal at Ballymacarrett Junction. The 7.40 a.m. rail motor Holywood to Belfast crashed into the rear of the 7.10 a.m. Bangor to Belfast train. The darkness and local fog were a factor but the driver of the rail motor was held to blame.[13] The Railway had to pay out some £80,000 in compensation, which crippled the company financially, leading to its early nationalisation in 1948.

Downpatrick & County Down Railway

The Downpatrick & County Down Railway operates the only Irish Gauge heritage railway in Northern Ireland on the former BCDR main line. It has restored two BCDR carriages, No. 148 and Ireland's last railmotor, No. 72, and has several more under overhaul or on display in their gallery, awaiting restoration.

A passing steam train on the Downpatrick & County Down Railway in the Ulster drumlin belt near Downpatrick.

The Comber Greenway

The line from Belfast to Comber was converted in the 2000s to The Comber Greenway, a 7-mile (11 km) walk and cycleway.

BCDR Chief Engineer

References

  1. 54°15′58″N 5°37′08″W / 54.266°N 5.619°W
  2. 1 2 3 4 "Belfast and County Down Railway". Irish Railwayana. Archived from the original on 15 August 2007. Retrieved 1 September 2007.
  3. "The BCDR Company". Dundonald Railway Station, Then and Now…. Archived from the original on 25 August 2007. Retrieved 28 January 2015.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Patterson 1982, p. 13.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Patterson 1982, p. 14.
  6. 1 2 McCutcheon 1980, p. 149.
  7. "PS Bangor Castle (ex - Palmerston)". paddlesteamers.info. Tramscape. Retrieved 1 November. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  8. "PS Erin's Isle". Clydebuilt database. Clydesite.co.uk. 2002–2012. Retrieved 29 October 2012.
  9. Pue 1975, p. 33.
  10. 1 2 Pue 1975, p. 45
  11. "Belfast & County Down Railway". The Railway Magazine (London: Transport (1910) Ltd) 96 (586): 73. February 1950.
  12. Pue 1975, p. 51.
  13. Duncan, R. Dundas (2 June 1945). Belfast and County Down Railway (PDF). Belfast: Ministry of Commerce.

Sources and further reading

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, September 18, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.