Rother Valley Railway
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![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/19/Chichester%2C_Haughley%2C_Headcorn_%26_Robertsbridge_RJD_152.jpg/220px-Chichester%2C_Haughley%2C_Headcorn_%26_Robertsbridge_RJD_152.jpg)
The Rother Valley Railway (RVR) is a
Following a public inquiry in 2021, the Government approved the project in May 2023 and granted the RVR's application for a Transport and Works Act Order. This came into force on 2 August, allowing the reinstatement scheme to be completed. There will be then an end-on link with the Kent and East Sussex at Bodiam enabling through-running of passenger trains between Tenterden and Robertsbridge for the first time since 1954. Heritage trains will make use of the Rother Valley Railway's own new station at Robertsbridge Junction, a short walk from the mainline station. Work is expected to begin on the final phase of reinstatement in 2024, following detailed surveys.
The final section
Reinstatement work at either end of the railway has already been completed. The remainder consists of a distance of about 3.5 kilometres. Several bridges need to be rebuilt between Northbridge Street and Junction Road, and three road crossings made, including the A21 Robertsbridge by-pass. The proposal to build this by-pass was the major reason preventing the acquisition from
On 16 March 2017,
On 9 May 2023 it was announced that the Secretary of State had decided to make the Transport and Works Order.[2] The Order is now in force.
Reinstatement so far
Since inception in 1991, the Rother Valley Railway has been acquiring parts of the former
Further Progress
Application to the Secretary of State for Transport for an order under the Transport and Works Act was submitted by RVR on 19 April 2018. Many representations for and against the draft order were submitted, and the Secretary of State for Transport announced that a public local inquiry would be held. This inquiry was scheduled to begin on 26 May 2020, was deferred, and eventually began in July 2021. It sat for 19 days and concluded on 3 September 2021. The Inspector submitted a 275 page report to the Secretary of State, with a recommendation to grant the application. The Secretary of State decided to make the Order and this was announced to the various parties concerned in a decision letter dated 9 May 2023. The Order was subsequently made, and came into force on 2 August. It includes powers of compulsory purchase. RVR welcomed the decision, and is making preparations to complete the work once surveys of two sections of route, now being acquired, have been carried out. Meanwhile in Spring 2019 work began to prepare the former trackbed between Austen's Bridge and Junction Road for tracklaying, this work being substantially completed by the end of 2020 and a section of track laid.
The RVR does not yet feature regular passenger trains, but the base at Robertsbridge houses a small shop and visitor centre open to the public each Sunday, in a building formerly used as the
Origins of the scheme
The Kent & East Sussex Railway Preservation Society was formed in 1961 following closure of the line by British Railways.
After many trials and tribulations, the Tenterden Railway Company Limited was incorporated in 1971 as a company limited by guarantee, and in 1973 was successful in purchasing that part of the line between Tenterden and Bodiam. The company later became known as the Kent & East Sussex Railway (K&ESR). The original preservationists wanted to reopen the whole line through to Robertsbridge, but were refused permission by the then Transport Minister Barbara Castle to take over the western section between Bodiam and Robertsbridge, despite taking the Minister to the High Court. The western section was lifted and abandoned in the mid 1970s. The reason for this refusal was the Ministry plan to build a by-pass to take the A21 around Robertsbridge.
K&ESR focused efforts on the eastern end of the line. Trains first ran again on the K&ESR on 3 February 1974, between Tenterden and Rolvenden, and the line was gradually restored and extended in stages, reaching Wittersham Road in 1977, Northiam in 1990 and finally Bodiam on 2 April 2000, exactly 100 years to the day since the original opening of the line to passengers.
A separate company, the Rother Valley Railway (East Sussex) Ltd, was formed on 22 May 1991 with the approval of the Tenterden Railway Company to reinstate the railway between Bodiam and Robertsbridge. It has since simplified its name to Rother Valley Railway Ltd. The plan is that K&ESR will operate this extended railway once completed, as its constitution provides. The main reasons for a separate organisation were to allow K&ESR to remain focused on its existing activities, to avoid placing that activity at any financial risk, and to enable the new project to proceed with its own dedicated management team. Later this team was able to achieve charity status as the Rother Valley Railway Heritage Trust, operating through its company, the Rother Valley Railway Ltd.
Rolling stock
The following locomotives are on site[3]
- "Titan", a Drewry DM shunter, Vulcan Foundryworks number D140.
- "Dougal", a Drewry 0-4-0 shunter, Vulcan Foundry works number D77.
- D2112, an DMshunter.
In addition are a number of other wagons and carriages undergoing or awaiting restoration.
See also
- Kent and East Sussex Railway
- Colonel Stephens
- From 1988 until the early 1990s, another "Rother Valley Railway" had a brief existence on the site of Upperthorpe and Killamarsh station near the River Rother in South Yorkshire. The line had three locomotives on loan, a five-ton steam crane and a membership of over eighty.[4] Although the line featured in a two-page article in The Railway Magazine in 1990, little seems to have happened and the society faded away.[5][6] After many years details have been published stating that the society was unable to gain agreement with the necessary local authorities, so was unable to proceed. They sought another opportunity elsewhere, which they found by taking over Cleethorpes Council's struggling miniature railway, turning it into the Cleethorpes Coast Light Railway in 1991. That "Rother Valley Railway Limited" was formally dissolved on 9 June 1992.[7]
References
- ^ "'Unanimous approval' for Rother Valley extension". Steam Railway. Bauer Consumer Media Ltd. Retrieved 17 March 2017.
- ^ "Transport and Work Act 1992: Application for the proposed Rother Valley (Bodiam to Robertsbridge Junction) Order" (PDF). Department for Transport.
- ^ Skullclamp Creations. "Rolling Stock". Retrieved 22 April 2008.
- ^ Hill 1990, pp. 398–9.
- ^ Booth 2013, p. 52.
- ^ Booth 2017, p. 104.
- ^ Scott 2015, pp. 89–90.
General references
- Booth, Chris (2013). The Lancashire, Derbyshire and East Coast Railway A pictorial view of the "Dukeries Route" and branches. Blurb. 06715029.
- Booth, Chris (2017). The Lancashire, Derbyshire and East Coast Railway Chesterfield to Langwith Junction, The Beighton Branch and Sheffield District Railway. Fonthill. ISBN 978-1-78155-628-3.
- Hill, Peter (June 1990). Kelly, Peter (ed.). "Revival in the Rother Valley". The Railway Magazine. Vol. 136, no. 1070. Cheam, Surrey: IPC Magazines Limited.
- Scott, Peter (2015). A History of the Cleethorpes Miniature Railway: The Story of the Seaside Miniature Railway, from Opening in 1948 to the Present Day Cleethorpes Coast Light Railway, Including the Railways at Wonderland & Pleasure Island. ISBN 978-1-902368-41-2. Minor Railway Histories No.7.