Whitby, Redcar and Middlesbrough Union Railway

Whitby, Redcar and
Middlesbrough Union Railway

Legend
to Middlesbrough (Cleveland Railway)
Loftus
Grinkle
Grinkle Tunnel 993 yd
Boulby Mine
Staithes Viaduct
Staithes
Hinderwell
Kettleness
Kettleness Tunnel 308 yd
Sandsend Tunnel 1652 yd
Sandsend
Sandsend Viaduct
East Row Viaduct
Newholm Beck Viaduct
Upgang Viaduct
Whitby West Cliff
to Whitby Town,
Scarborough and Pickering

The Whitby, Redcar and Middlesbrough Union Railway (WRMU) was a railway line in North Yorkshire, England, built in the late 19th century, running from Loftus on the Yorkshire coast to the Esk at Whitby, and connecting Middlesbrough via previously built lines in Cleveland to Whitby.

The railway is also known as the Whitby-Loftus Line.

For much of its journey the line hugged the cliffs, and had a troubled build due to the proximity to the sea and poor quality of the construction on many of its original bridges and viaducts. The line was closed in the 1960s, a short section to Boulby Potash Mine re-opened in the 1970s.

History

Background

Whitby had been connected by Whitby and Pickering Railway since the 1830s. Loftus was connected to the rail system by the 1870s via an extension of the Cleveland Railway: both the Cleveland Railway and the Middlesbrough and Guisborough Railway were constructed in the 1860s connecting Middlesbrough to Guisborough.

Loftus to Whitby

The extension of the line from Loftus to Whitby was authorised by an Act of Parliament in 1866, with the majority of construction carried out under John Dickson between 1871 and 1873. Due to a lack of funds and problems with the contractor work was suspended on the route until the NER took up the lease in 1875. John Waddell won the contract, and the line was scheduled to open on 13 July 1881, but due to the extra work required to bring it up to standard, it was a further two and a half years before the line was opened on 3 December 1883. Many bridges were defective and piers out of vertical. The original tunnels were out of line so that when boring was done from either end they did not meet in the centre.[1] Part of the proposed line was dangerously close to the cliff edge and was abandoned by the NER which took a route further inland through Sandsend and Kettleness tunnels.[2]

The section ran from Whitby to Loftus, where it joined the NER Middlesbrough – Loftus route head on. From the beginning the line was run by the NER, which held the lease and ran services to Whitby along the Esk Valley Line and the Malton – Whitby Line. The NER took over the line fully in 1889.

British Railways published a proposal to close the line in September 1957; the line's operating costs exceeded its revenue generation, closure would result in a yearly saving of £10,950 operating costs and avoid £57,000 of structural maintenance (over 5 years) required on tunnels and viaducts particularly between Sandsend and Kettleness.[3][4] With dwindling passengers after the war years, the route was only popular during summer weekends and closed on 5 May 1958. Whitby West Cliff station remained open for another three years, serving trains from Whitby to Scarborough until it closed on 12 June 1961, after which Scarborough trains had to reverse at Prospect Hill Junction where the line from Whitby Town met those from Scarborough and Loftus.

In 1960, work began to dismantle the line, viaducts were sold for scrap metal and concrete was used in the construction of sea defences.

Map of route and surrounding railways

The railway today

In the 1970s the northern section of the line was revived after ICI developed Boulby potash mine next to the former route, north of the village of Boulby in Redcar and Cleveland. This section of the line remains open as a freight line, but the stations remain closed. The dismantled section south of Boulby is now a footpath.

References

  1. Hoole, Ken (1971), Railways in Cleveland, Dalesman, ISBN 0-85206-131-5
  2. Suggitt, G. (2005). Lost Railways of North & East Yorkshire: Countryside Books. ISBN 1-85306-918-3
  3. Williams 2012, pp. 121, 125–6.
  4. Williams 2010, Chapter 4, pp. 110–2.

Sources

Further reading

External links

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