Grimsby and Immingham Electric Railway

Grimsby & Immingham Electric Railway

The Grimsby and Immingham Light Railway
Locale North East Lincolnshire England
Dates of operation 19121961
Successor Abandoned
Track gauge Standard
Length 7 miles (11 km)
Headquarters Grimsby

Grimsby & Immingham
Electric Railway

Legend
Barnetby
via Brocklesby

Goxhill
via Killingholme

Immingham Dock
Dock Entrance
Immingham Eastern Jetty
Immingham Dock

Immingham Engine Shed
Immingham Queens Rd
Eastern Entrance to
Immingham Dock

Immingham Town
Immingham Halt
Kiln Lane
Marsh Road LC
No.6 Passing Place
No.5 Passing Place
No.4 Passing Place
Great Coates LC
Barnetby
via Habrough

Pyewipe car sheds
and Pyewipe Depot Halt

Cleveland Bridge
Grimsby Pyewipe Road
Docks
Cleveland Street
Stortford Street
Boulevard Rec
Jackson Street
Grimsby Town
Yarborough Street
Corporation Bridge

Kings Cross
via Boston

Cleethorpes
via Grimsby Docks

The Grimsby & Immingham Electric Railway (G&IER) was an electric light railway, primarily for passenger traffic, linking Great Grimsby with the Port of Immingham in Lincolnshire, England. The line was built by the Great Central Railway (GCR), was absorbed by the London & North Eastern Railway (LNER) in 1923, and became part of the Eastern Region of British Railways. It ran predominately on reserved track.

History

G&IER car 18 (also formerly Gateshead No 18, built by the company in 1923) is washed at Pyewipe Depot before making its last journey.

The origin of the line lay in the decision of the Great Central Railway (GCR) to build a vast new docks complex on the marshlands of the south bank of the Humber near the small settlement of Immingham. The GCR reached agreement for the purchase of the land required and presented two Bills in Parliament of which the second was enacted as the Humber Commercial Railway and Dock Act 1904. A number of railways was authorised in connection with the construction and operation of the dock estate, comprising a new main-line railway approaching from Ulceby in the south (the Humber Commercial Railway); a branch from Goxhill in the west, facilitating services to and from New Holland and the Humber ferries (the Barton and Immingham Light Railway); and a direct link towards Grimsby (the Grimsby District Light Railway, GDLR, for which light railway powers were granted on 15 January 1906).[1][2] Dock operation was labour-intensive and the GCR recognised that it would need to operate a passenger service to bring in dockers from neighbouring towns, principally the fishing port of Great Grimsby about seven miles east. The company also built a large locomotive depot at Immingham, which required workers’ transport. These enactments and considerations were the starting point of the G&IER.

Ex-GCR car 15, built in 1915, passes Pyewipe depot outbound for Immingham

To facilitate construction of the docks the GDLR was initially built from the Grimsby direction as a contractors’ railway and the GCR ran a steam-hauled workmen’s service on this from 3 January 1910.[3] The GCR had two reasons for proposing an electric tramway in addition to this light railway. (Legally the G&IER would form part of the GDLR, although there was no physical connection between them). They had developed a major power generating plant at the Docks, which used electricity extensively for crane and lock operation. This could economically supply the tramway, and did so until 1957. Secondly they envisaged on-street operation in Grimsby itself, extending the area served and facilitating direct connexion with the existing Grimsby and Cleethorpes tramways. The GCR’s 1906 light railway order included a 1½ mile street tramway between Corporation Bridge and Cleveland Bridge in Grimsby, and a private right-of way alongside the existing GDLR between Cleveland Bridge and Immingham Dock.[1]

The network

An ex-GCR car leaves Immingham Town for Grimsby on 1 July 1961. On the far left is the Grimsby District Light Railway

The electric line opened from Grimsby as far as Immingham Town on the eastern fringe of the dock estate on Wednesday 15 May 1912. It was extended about a mile into the estate on 17 November 1913, terminating at the Eastern Jetty, a short walk from the Immingham Dock station of the Barton and Immingham Light Railway. For reasons not fully understood the 1913 extension joined the existing line at Immingham Town by a trailing junction, necessitating a reversal on all through journeys.[4] A short spur was built in 1914 from Immingham Town terminus to Queens Road nearer Immingham Village, but this was never opened to normal traffic,[5] possibly because of the onset of the First World War. The G&IER was mainly single track with passing loops, apart from the 1913 extension from Immingham Town to Immingham Dock which was double track alongside the road,[6] except where it shared the road as it crossed "Tramcar Bridge" east of Immingham Town.[7] There were originally eight intermediate loops on the cross-country Pyewipe – Immingham Town section,[8] numbered in sequence from Pyewipe, although most stops also had names. Four of the loops were removed in 1917, the track being used for war purposes. There were three[9] or possibly four[8] loops on the street section in Grimsby.[10]

There were small waiting rooms and offices at Corporation Bridge and Immingham Dock termini. A temporary structure was erected at Cleveland Bridge after the line was cut back in 1956.

Although the Grimsby terminus at Corporation Bridge was only a few yards from the municipal tramway tracks in Victoria Street the intervening bridge was not rebuilt until 1928, and by then Grimsby’s trams were giving way to trolleybuses and the connecting tramway was never built. The G&IER did, however, operate a local tram service on its street section between Corporation Bridge and Cleveland Bridge for two years 1928 – 1930.[11]

Power supply

The line was electrified at 500 volts direct current, with power supplied through simple trolley wire supported either from span wires between steel poles (concrete poles between Immingham Town and Immingham Dock), or from side brackets. Current collection was by trolley poles. A separate high-tension feeder on wooden poles ran alongside the line, providing current for dock operation in Grimsby.[12][1][13]

Traction power was at first supplied by two substations, transformed and converted from a 6,600 volt ac main fed from the docks generating station.[14] The first was built three miles from Immingham by Siemens Brothers. Two Westinghouse 250 kW rotary converters produced 500 V DC for the trams. Traction feeders were installed every half-mile. The substation itself was a redbrick construction, built by Dennis Gill & Sons of Doncaster for £507. The 1913 extension was supplied by a substation within the dock estate. The second substation, continuously manned, was also built by Gill, for £707, next to the car sheds at Pyewipe. It contained three 250 kW Westinghouse rotary converters. One converter was used for lighting, one for traction and the third as a standby. From 26 November 1957 high tension power was drawn from the National Grid and the dock power station was closed down.[15]

Pyewipe car sheds

Ex-Gateshead car No 17 at Pyewipe, built 1928, was rebuilt by British Railways as a well-equipped repair car, and renumbered 320224. The line’s tower wagon stands behind it.

Pyewipe sheds, which took their name from the local marshes near the Grimsby Borough boundary, serviced all the trams.[16] They did not house the cars,[17][18] which, unusually for British trams, spent all their life outdoors, only entering the workshop when repairs were needed.[19] The workshop had the capacity to hold three trams on two tracks. It also housed a machine shop, paint shop and store. Until 1940 cars were periodically sent to Dukinfield carriage works for major repair. The second-hand Gateshead cars (see below) were overhauled at York before entering service.[20]

Rolling stock

The controls of the ex-GCR tramcars were basic: a Dick, Kerr DB1, Form K4 controller and a vertically-mounted hand brake wheel

The line was originally equipped with eight unique bogie single-decked tramcars, designed by the GCR and built by Brush,[21][22][23] to which four more were added in 1913, and a further four (built by the GCR themselves) in 1914. Four of the original cars were short-bodied,[24][25][26] intended for through operation onto the Grimsby street tramways, but the majority of the fleet, at 43 feet 8 inches feet (16.51 metres) overall length, were by far the largest British trams until modern times: with 72 seats, they had a larger capacity than many contemporary double-deckers.[10] Although relatively progressive for the period, the cars lacked what were already becoming refinements in Europe: they used trolley-poles not pantograph collectors and they lacked any means of coupled or multiple-unit operation, thus failing to exploit the main labour-serving qualities of modern tramcars. The cars had wooden swing-back lateral seats[27] throughout their lives. They had a central luggage and goods compartment (known locally as "The Horse Box") and handled milk, produce, and small consignments. All remaining cars were painted in BR ‘electric green’ after 1951,[28] replacing LNER brown livery.

Ex-Gateshead car No 17

After 1945 Grimsby Corporation promoted a 200-acre industrial estate west of the town and near the G&IER, and in the absence of any direct road workers at the new factories also relied on the tramway. To handle the extra passenger traffic British Railways acquired three single-decked bogie trams from Newcastle Corporation Transport in 1948 (the only cars on the line to have upholstered seats)[29][30][26][31] and a further nineteen were bought in 1951 from the Gateshead and District Tramways Company, which had just ceased operation (one was destroyed during delivery, so only eighteen entered service).[26][32] The ex-Gateshead cars had wooden longitudinal bench seats, allowing more standing room down the vehicles' centres.[33] By then the four ‘short’ trams had been withdrawn, whilst four GCR-type cars and the ex-Newcastle trams were withdrawn by 1953: the undertaking had a maximum of 25 passenger trams in operation by 1954 out of 37 supplied (one of the Gateshead cars was adapted as a works vehicle, and given District Engineer’s number 320224, probably the highest ever carried by a tram anywhere).[34]

Operations

The 1948 timetable - typical of the line's heyday

Because of the particular needs of the workforce the G&IER was unique amongst British tramways in operating a service throughout every day and night for most of its existence. Normally service during the day was every 20 or 30 minutes with less frequent trams overnight and extras at peak times.[35] Because traffic was very heavily peaked, departures at shift-change times often took the form of convoys of up to seven trams.[36] Running time was 27 minutes. At the line’s peak in the 1950s 19 cars were required in service, reduced to ten after 1959. 24 cars were in running order when the line closed.

A typical G&IER ticket of the final type. These were issued by conductors on board the trams.

As an integral part of the railway system, GCR, LNER, and later BR, the tramway featured in the public railway timetables[37] and through tickets were issued from the rest of the system. Amongst others, printed tickets between King’s Cross and Immingham Dock ‘via electric cars’ were available. Local ticketing used the colourful and complex ‘Bell Punch’ system until the end.[38]

The final G&IER timetable: after 1959 the trams only ran in the rush hours

The railway was not signalled, unlike many other single-track tramways, although local signals were introduced after the Second World War at two level crossings.[39] The track on street sections in Grimsby and at Immingham used conventional grooved tramway rail; the private track sections were originally laid with flat-bottomed rail, replaced later by railway-pattern bullhead rail, and the pointwork required a different wheel profile from that normally used on tramways.[40][22]

Closure

Letter announcing the line's closure
GEx-GCR car No 12, built by Brush in 1913, formed the last public working at 14.03 from Immingham Dock on 1 July 1961, seen here reversing at Immingham Town

Handling highly peaked traffic, much of it railway or dock employees travelling either free or at reduced fares, was never lucrative despite high passenger numbers (1.35 million in 1948 and over a million as late as 1956),[41] but as long as docks and railway were under common ownership and management this was a lesser consideration. Although partly re-laid in 1950 the in-town street section was closed from 1 July 1956 when Grimsby Corporation exercised their right to buy the line in order to abandon it, and the trams then terminated at the edge of Grimsby with a connecting bus service. Closure of the remainder was first proposed in 1958, and a bus service commenced on 28 February 1959, worked jointly over an indirect route by Grimsby Corporation and the Lincolnshire Road Car Company. A tram service was only retained in much curtailed form in peak periods, pending completion of a direct road to the industrial estate and the docks. Although the road had still not been built the tramway was again proposed for closure in 1960, and the service was finally withdrawn on 1 July 1961. Even at closure it was still handling around 250,000 passengers a year.

On the last day special trams were operated for enthusiasts, and a ceremonial last car (GCR-type tram No 4) was decorated and carried a commemorative headboard, leaving Immingham Dock at 14.12.[42][43]

Aftermath

Four items of rolling stock have survived.

A bench from Grimsby Corporation Bridge is part of the national collection.[11] In 2015 it was on display at the National Railway Museum, York.

In 2015 the Pyewipe Tramcar Depot, by then trackless, was in industrial use.

In 2013 eight characteristic pointed-topped, spun concrete masts used to support the overhead wires were still in situ by the site of Immingham Town, as was the brick bus (tram) shelter which was erected in the Second World War to replace the wooden version[33] and offer some air raid protection.

In 2015 a number of small artifacts were kept at Immingham Museum.

See also

References

Sources

Further material

External links

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