West Lancashire Light Railway

Coordinates: 53°42′01″N 2°50′19″W / 53.7003°N 2.8387°W / 53.7003; -2.8387
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

West Lancashire Light Railway
Irish Mail
Overview
HeadquartersHesketh Bank
LocaleEngland
Dates of operation1967–present
Technical
Track gauge2 ft (610 mm)
Length430 yards (393 m)
Other
Websitewww.westlancsrailway.org

The West Lancashire Light Railway (WLLR) is a

narrow gauge railway that operates at Hesketh Bank,[1] situated between Preston and Southport in North West England.[2] The distance between the stations on the railway is 430 yards (393 m),[2] though track extends eastwards beyond Delph station on ledge above the old clay pit which is too narrow to contain a run round loop.[citation needed] An extension of up to 435 metres (1,427 ft), running along the north bank of the fishing lake has been proposed.[3] The railway has seven steam locomotives, three of which are in operating condition; two are currently being rebuilt and another is on static display. There are also two electric locomotives and many IC locomotives.[4]

History

Map of the railway in 2017
Running Shed
Montalban built in 1913 being serviced and watered
Irish Mail
Joffre
Cheetal in the workshop

The West Lancashire Light Railway was started in 1967, by six railway enthusiast schoolboys from the Hesketh Bank area.[5] They wanted to save the narrow gauge railway equipment which was disappearing from local industries. They leased a strip of land above the clay pits at Alty's Brickworks[5] and started laying track using rails from the former clay tramways and rough timbers as sleepers.

Two

Ruston and Hornsby diesel locomotives were acquired from Burscough Brick & Tile Co.[6] one with a 13 hp engine, the other a 20 hp model, they were respectively named Clwyd and Tawd. Clwyd was the first locomotive to run on the railway in 1969.[7]
These two locos were soon joined by more industrial diesels and the first home-built items of rolling stock.

At first, trains were operated on a "travel at your own risk" basis. The first formal timetable was issued in 1971.[6]

In 1970, the railway acquired an incomplete set of parts of 1903

Dinorwic slate quarry in North Wales.[8] The major missing component was a boiler. Members of the WLLR retrieved the remains of Quarry Hunslet Alice from one of the upper levels of Dinorwic. Alice's boiler was retained at the WLLR and the rest sold to the Bala Lake Railway. Over the next decade the railway re-assembled Irish Mail and the locomotive was steamed for the first time in 1980.[6]

The running line slowly grew in length until it ran from Becconsall to a station known as Asland, which is no longer the far terminus of the line. The line in its present form runs from Becconsall to Delph, with the original track to Asland running on from Delph but not suitable for running engines.

In 2015, the WLLR hosted a gala to celebrate the 100th. anniversary of its Joffre class Kerr Stuart locomotive. A second Joffre class locomotive, No. 3014, attended from

Apedale Valley Light Railway. This was the first time that two WWI-era Joffre locomotives had been in steam together in preservation.[9]

The railway is twinned with the Chemin de Fer de Rillé [fr] in France.[10]

Facilities

The railway's sheds and workshops are situated at Becconsall station. The first shed was built by the members using cast-off bricks from Alty's. This original workshop has been much added to over the years and the equipment in this workshop allows most of the work on restoring a steam locomotive to be undertaken, excluding boiler construction. Facilities for visitors have also been built at Becconsall.

Operations

The WLLR is open to the public on Sundays and Bank Holidays from Easter to the end of October, also on some other days during school holidays. Passengers can ride in semi-open coaches which have been built by the railway's volunteers. Gala weekends are also organised, when visiting steam locomotives can be seen in operation. Other events include Easter Egg Hunt, Teddy Bears' Day, Friendly Engines Day, Strawberries and Steam, Halloween, Princess and Pirates Day, Pumpkin Express, Volunteers Day, Children in Need, and Santa Specials.

'Drive an Engine' days can be arranged for individuals or small groups to learn how to operate a steam engine. Bookings can also be taken for birthday parties (and other types of celebration) and for visits by schools, colleges, clubs and societies.

Rolling stock

Steam locomotives

Number Name Builder Type Class Works number Built Status Notes
3 Irish Mail Hunslet
ST
Dinorwic Alice Class 823 1903 Operational, overhaul completed in 2015. Ex. Dinorwic Slate Quarry, Wales
8 Joffre
Kerr Stuart
0-6-0T+WT 'Joffre' class 2405 1915 Restored in 2012. Awaiting overhaul following expiry of boiler ticket in August 2021. Ex. WW1 French Artillery Railways
Utrillas
Orenstein and Koppel
0-4-0T+WT 2378 1913 Ex. Minas y Ferrocarril de Utrillas, Aragon, Spain
22 Montalban
Orenstein and Koppel
0-4-0T+WT 6641 1913 Undergoing overhaul. Ex. Minas y Ferrocarril de Utrillas, Aragon, Spain
Sybil Bagnall
ST
1706 1906 Undergoing restoration. Ex. Dinorwic Slate Quarry, Wales
Cheetal Fowler
WT
15991 1923 Awaiting restoration. Ex. Karachi Port Trust, India

Internal combustion locomotives

Number Name Builder Works number Built Type Status Notes
1 Clwyd
Ruston and Hornsby
264251 1951
DM
[11]
2 Tawd Ruston and Hornsby 222074 1943
DM
[11]
4 Bradfield Hibberd 1777 1931
PM
[11]
5 Ruston and Hornsby 200478 1940
DM
[11]
7 Motor Rail 8992 1946
DM
[11] ex-Furness Brick & Tile Co of Askam, purchased in 1973[12]
10 Hibberd 2555 1942
DM
[11]
11 Motor Rail 5906 1934
DM
[11] ex-Middleton Towers sand railway.
12 Motor Rail 11258 1964
DM
[11]
Motor Rail 7955 1945
DM
Dismantled Rebuilt at the WLLR in 1987.[11] ex-Middleton Towers sand railway.
16 Ruston and Hornsby 202036 1941
DM
Dismantled [11]
20 Lister 10805 1939
PM
[11]
20 Baguley 3002 1937
PM
[11]
21 Hunslet 1963 1939
DM
[11]
25 Ruston and Hornsby 297054 1950
DM
[11]
26 Motor Rail 11223 1963
DM
[11]
31 Mill Reef Motor Rail 7371 1939
DM
ex-Leighton Buzzard Light Railway[11]
36 Ruston and Hornsby 339105 1953
DM
[11] Acquired in 1985 from Scotland.[13]
38 Hudswell Clarke DM750 1949 0-4-0DMF [11]
39 Black Pig Hibberd 3916 1959
DM
[11]
40 Dame Vera Duckworth Ruston and Hornsby 381705 1956
DM
[11]
49 Samson Hibberd 1887 1934
DM
[11]
51 Pathfinder Hunslet 4478 1953
DM
[11] Donated by ICI Gathurst.[14]
Hudswell Clarke DM1393 1967 0-6-0DMF [11]
Lister 29890 1946
DM
Dismantled [11]

Electric Locomotives

Number Name Builder Works number Built Type Status Notes
19 BEV 613 1972
BE
Regauged from 2 ft 6 in (762 mm).[11]
25 BEV 692 1974
BE
Regauged from 2 ft 6 in (762 mm)[11]
Greenbat
Greenwood and Batley
1840 1942
BE
Operational Ex. RAF Fauld
Welsh Pony BEV 640 1926 0-4-0OE Awaiting restoration Ex. Llechwedd Slate Quarry. Displayed at Gloddfa Ganol until 1998.

Wagons

The WLLR and its members own a variety of goods wagons obtained from several UK industrial narrow gauge railways, including tipper sand wagons from

Pilkington Brothers sandfields in the Rainford and Bickerstaffe
areas.

See also

References

  • Thomas, Cliff (2002). The Narrow Gauge in Britain & Ireland. Atlantic Publishers. .

External links

53°42′01″N 2°50′19″W / 53.7003°N 2.8387°W / 53.7003; -2.8387