Holmfirth Branch Line

Holmfirth Branch Line

Holmfirth station building
Overview
Status closed
Locale West Yorkshire
Termini Brockholes
Holmfirth
Stations 2
Operation
Opened 1 July 1850
Closed 31 October 1959
Technical
Line length 2 mi (3.2 km)
Number of tracks Double
Track gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge

Holmfirth Branch Line

Legend
Penistone Line
Brockholes
Penistone Line

Occupation bridge

Thurstonland Road
New Mill Road
Mytholmbridge Viaduct

Thongsbridge Station

Berry Bank Lane

Holmfirth Station

turntable

Holmfirth
Thongsbridge
Route of the Holmfirth Branch Line

The Holmfirth Branch Line is a disused railway line that ran for 2 miles (3.2 km) from Brockholes to Holmfirth, in West Yorkshire, England. The line was built as double track as there were plans to extend the line up the Holme Valley.

Construction

The Holmfirth branch was built by the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway company. It was due to open on 24 June 1850 but problems meant this was delayed until 1 July 1850, when the first train left Holmfirth at 11:25 a.m. In the first week of operation 1,869 tickets were sold at Holmfirth, along with another 674 at the intermediate station of Thongsbridge.

Extension to the line were proposed on a number of occasions, none of which saw any progress. Parliamentary authority was granted for a scheme in 1847, before the line was opened, which was costed at £56,000, however the powers lapsed in 1852 without any progress. One proposal was to extend the line up the Holme Valley, tunnel under Holme Moss, and connect with the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway.[1]

The route

The line ran from a junction with the Penistone Line near Brockholes railway station and headed south across Mytholmbridge Viaduct before reaching Thongsbridge station, then continued to Holmfirth station.

Mytholmbridge Viaduct

Mytholmbridge Viaduct was the source of some concern for members of the travelling public. The planned embankment had been replaced by timber trestle which was damaged by winds during construction. In an attempt to reassure the public of the safety of this and the Denby Dale viaduct, L&YR appointed Robert Stephenson to produce a report on the structure, published 16 September 1851, in which he concluded that "both structures are perfectly safe".

Despite petitions calling for its replacement, it remained in place until 1865 when the L&YR finally commissioned a stone replacement. This too collapsed during construction on 3 December 1865, taking the trestle with it.[2] This closed the line until 11 March 1867 when the 13 arch stone viaduct was completed.

Thongsbridge station

Thongsbridge station was situated in a deep cutting spanned by two bridges, one at each end. In the original layout, the platforms were staggered either side of Heys Road bridge with the main buildings on the Huddersfield bound platform. This layout was criticised by the Board of Trade after a number of accidents involving passengers.

In 1893 the L&YR commissioned Robert Leak & Co to build a new platform opposite the station buildings and increase the gap between the two 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge running lines from 5 ft 9 in to the more usual 6 ft.

1901 saw the Huddersfield bound platform heightened, a new two storey booking office constructed, and an iron-lattice footbridge built across the line. The goods yard was also extended. Initially this was just a single loop of the Huddersfield bound line but this was improved by providing sidings on the site of the old Holmfirth bound platform. This meant that the yard covered both sides of the line and a cart way was built between the two to provide access.

In August 1852 the station was the location of a narrowly avoided rail accident, involving a Hull to Holmfirth train. Due to the slight gradient between Thongsbridge and Holmfirth, half of the carriages became detached from the rest of the train which then continued to Holmfirth. Whilst the detached carriages remained in the station, the station guard spotted another train approaching at speed. He signalled to the driver of the train to stop which it did just 12 inches from the carriages.[3]

Holmfirth station

Holmfirth station, at the terminus of the line, was located just north of the town centre on Station Road. The building still stands, it's front door now bricked up, and appears to be in good condition, but its current use is unknown.

L&YR installed a 45 ft turntable at the station in March 1883. It was removed in 1938 as Fowler 2-6-4Ts were causing it to deteriorate. Following the removal, most trains operated tender forward to Holmfirth and smokebox forward back.

Services

In the early days, the line was well used with passenger trains regularly consisting of three or more carriages. Most passenger trains were hauled by L&YR 0-4-0T and 0-6-2T locomotives until about 1900 when Aspinall 2-4-2Ts were introduced.

Freight trains during the early part of the 20th century were hauled by L&YR 'A' class 0-6-0Ts and 0-8-0s. The principal traffic was coal coming into the area and woollen goods taken out.

Following the Holmfirth Flood in 1852, sightseeing trains brought passengers to the town to see the devastation for themselves.

Closure

The closure of the woollen piece warehouse, which saw little use after World War II, was one of the first antecedents of a decrease in traffic on the line. Increased competition from buses reduced revenues further and closure of the line was announced for 31 October 1959. The last passenger trains were 2-6-4Ts numbers 42116 and 42413.

The line was dismantled in 1966 and the Holmfirth booking office was soon to be demolished. The booking office site later became Kingdom Hall, a Jehovah's Witnesses church, which was built during one weekend in August 1985 by 2,500 volunteers.

Mytholmbridge Viaduct was demolished in 1976.

See also

References

  1. Earnshaw, Alan (2005). The Holmfirth (Summer Wine) Branch Line. Appleby-in Westmorland, Cumbria: Trans-Pennine Publishing Ltd. p. 23. ISBN 1-903016-63-0.
  2. Board of Trade (1866). Certain Accidents which have Occurred on Railways. London: HMSO. p. 93.
  3. "Thongsbridge - Down Your Way" (PDF). The Cricket History of Calderdale and Kirklees. pp. p. 7.

External links

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