Llanelly and Mynydd Mawr Railway
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Legend
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- This article describes the historical railway.
For the current heritage railway see Llanelli and Mynydd Mawr Railway
The Llanelly and Mynydd Mawr Railway was authorised by [Act of Parliament] on 19th July 1875. It made use of part of the long defunct Carmarthenshire Railway or Tramroad which had been authorised by an Act on 5th November 1801. The older line began running trains in 1803, the initial line being a plateway of about 4 foot gauge, with motive power provided by a pair of horses. This distribution line allowed for coal extraction in the hinterland to be connected to the Sandy area and Llanelly Docks and in 1798 the Stradey Iron Works established by Alexander Raby had begun trading and later received coal, ironstone and limestone for its furnaces via the Carmarthenshire line.
Oldest public railway claim
The Llanelly & Mynydd Mawr Railway took over much of the route of the defunct Carmarthenshire Tramroad that had been authorised by an Act of Parliament on 5th November 1801. That line can claim to be the first public railway in use in Britain. In his book published by The Oakwood Press and entitled ‘The Llanelly and Mynydd Mawr Railway’ Martin Connop Price refers to the Carmarthenshire Tramroad:
'Construction proceeded apace, and in May 1803, the line was open for traffic from the ironworks at Cwmddyche down to the sea, a distance of one and a half miles. This short length of line thereby can claim to be the first public railway in use in Britain, because the better known Surrey Iron Railway, engineered by William Jessop, was not ready for traffic until July 1803. By that month Barnes (James Barnes, report author) was able to report that the first five miles of the Carmarthenshire, together with certain branches, were already in use.' (Source – the Oakwood book quoted above p17)
Mixed fortunes
By 1844 the Carmarthenshire Tramroad ceased trading and it was to take over 30 years for the line to reopen. At a meeting in Llanelli Town Hall chaired by C.N.Neville Esq. M.P., it was resolved to reopen the line and to extend it to Cross Hands. In 1880 Mr Waddell the contractor stated that he was "pushing ahead with vigour".
The LMMR fully opened in 1883 although there had been some traffic since July 1881. (Source – the Oakwood book quoted above p50) The company used the anglicised spelling "Llanelly" rather than the Welsh Llanelli. Mynydd Mawr means "Great Mountain" in English. The track was re-laid using edge rails to standard gauge with a new viaduct over the main line to reach the docks.
The LMMR company disappeared in 1922 on being absorbed into the Great Western Railway which was in turn nationalised into British Railways in 1948. Throughout the twentieth century the line continued as a main artery for coal distribution, latterly from the Cynheidre Colliery until it closed in 1989.
Swiss Valley Cycle Route
Following a campaign lasting almost ten years from the Llanelli and District Railway Society (L&DRS) to save the intact, but derelict line the hopes were dashed in the mid-90's when the railway was sold by British Rail property board to the local authorities as part of a scheme to transform the track bed into a cycle way. This path is now labelled as the Swiss Valley Cycle Route, part of National Cycle Route 47, itself a part of the Celtic Trail.
Llanelli and Mynydd Mawr Railway Company Limited
Whilst the L&DRS's efforts were thwarted, a new charitable company was incorporated on the 15 April 1999 as a non-profit making company limited by guarantee (with no remuneration paid to its Directors). The company is named The Llanelli and Mynydd Mawr Railway Company Ltd, therefore reviving the name of the former operator albeit with the later Llanelli spelling. The primary objective of the registered charity is to reinstate a railway on the historic line. A heritage centre will also interpret the history of coal mining in the area and in particular the industry which the railway served.
Locomotives
In the early years the LMMR had a fleet of its own steam locomotives to work the line: