Wisbech and March line
This article needs additional citations for verification. (March 2015) |
Wisbech and March line | |
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![]() Track south of Wisbech, June 2009 | |
Overview | |
Status | Disused, under consideration for partial re-opening |
Owner | Network Rail |
Locale | England |
Termini | |
Service | |
Type | Rail proposal |
System | National Rail |
History | |
Opened | 1847 |
Closed | 1968 (to passengers); 2000 (to freight) |
Technical | |
Track gauge | 4 ft 8+1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) |
Watlington to March via Wisbech | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The Wisbech and March line is a disused railway line between March and Wisbech in Cambridgeshire, England. A number of proposals are currently being investigated relating to the possible restoration of passenger services along the route.
History
Wisbech, St. Ives and Cambridge Junction Railway Act 1846 | |
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Act of Parliament | |
![]() Great Eastern Railway Act 1862 | |
Status: Repealed | |
Text of statute as originally enacted |
The passing of the Wisbech, St. Ives and Cambridge Junction Railway Act 1846 (
A second line reached Wisbech in March 1848 with the opening of a single-track 9.5-mile (15.3 km) line constructed by the East Anglian Railway from Watlington Junction. Although a connection for freight was made between the two lines, passengers initially had to walk from one station to the other to make a through journey, until the Eastern Counties Railway took over the East Anglian Railway in 1852. Both stations continued to exist until 1863 when the Great Eastern Railway consolidated all passenger services at the through station, with the original terminus station becoming a goods station for freight.
The through station was renamed Wisbech East after nationalisation of the railways to distinguish it from another Wisbech station which had been opened by the Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway on the northern side of the river in 1866, that was given the name Wisbech North (closed to passengers in 1959).
Although not recommended for closure in the
Wisbech was left with no passenger service since 1968, and no railway connection at all since 2000.
State of the route
Wisbech East Station was lost to redevelopment following closure in 1968 and the station site was obliterated by a housing development in 2001.
The track now ends at Weasenham Lane crossing following the tarmacing over of the rails from the level crossing in 2005. Beyond this point, the old Wisbech East Goods Yard (acquired by Nestle Purina from Railtrack in 1995) was last used in 2000. Three years after the last pet food train from Wisbech, the remaining three sidings were lifted. Most of the yard area now forms the factory and car park extension.
The single track, owned by Network Rail, is still connected to the National Rail network via Whitemoor Junction near March but locked off. New signalling was installed at the junction during late 2007[1] for the benefit of outward-bound engineering trains from the re-opened Whitemoor Yard, once the second-biggest freight yard in Europe during World War II and now a stabling point for engineering trains.[2] The railway's infrastructure, including the level crossings, remains largely in place.
East of the former Wisbech East station site the trackbed has been built over meaning it would not be possible to reopen a through-line from March to Watlington without major demolition.
Early restoration discussions
Plans to open the line as a passenger service have been discussed for many years. In 1974, "WAMRAC" (the Wisbech And March Railway Action Committee) was formed with the intention of reopening the Wisbech line to passenger traffic. The committee never achieved this goal, although on 1 July 1984 and the Railway Development Society (RDS, which now campaigns as Railfuture), the WAMRAC organised the last passenger train from Wisbech. This was a special train consisting of a Class 47 loco and ten British Rail Mk2 coaches, which ran from Wisbech to York and Scarborough.
Cambridgeshire County Council considered re-opening the line between March and Wisbech to passengers in 1990, however a quote from British Rail of £1.36 million for the upgrading of the then operational freight line, coupled to an annual £200,000 operating charge, meant that this proposal was dropped.[3]
Bramley Line Heritage Railway Trust proposal

The Wisbech March Railway Group was formed on 22 October 2003 by Wisbech businessman Peter Downs following an initiative he had raised at meetings of the local
In December 2007
The Bramley Line obtained a licence from Network Rail which permits them to clear vegetation but not to undertake track maintenance. The Track Clearance Team commenced at Coldham in July 2006 and continued until November 2014, working back towards Wisbech.[6] The team also replaced and painted fencing at various sites and an isolated siding was laid at Waldersea, with a site office being provided to serve as the group's headquarters. The Group were working to raise the money to pay Network Rail's legal fees to obtain a lease on the line for the purposes of restoring it for tourist trains.
In February 2005 the Bramley Line Group purchased five Class 488 coaches, comprising a rake of four Standard class and one Club Class vehicles. A public appeal raised £2,500 to move the coaches to March[7] but, following vandalism, it was decided in November 2007 that the coaches should be sold; being purchased by a New Zealand-based railway in May 2008. Bramley Line also acquired the former Smeeth Road signal box, complete with lever frame. Since closure the box had been used as a hairdressers and was complete and in good order. It was removed to a site in Wisbech, where it was stored, but not restored.[8]
In November 2014 the project ceased work, and declined an offer of heritage rolling stock, while the future of the route is decided.[9]
In May 2016 a working party of volunteers worked on track-laying around the proposed Waldersea station and depot.
ATOC proposal
In June 2009, the
Having reviewed the ATOC proposals the Wisbech to March Bramley Line published its position statement,[11] with its main points being:-
- The service proposed by ATOC is between Wisbech and Peterborough via March for which they believe an adequate express bus services already exists.
- The capital costs to reinstate a full national rail service are at least £12m and probably more, with, for example, the Stirling to Alloa line re-instatement costing over £65 million.
- The report in respect of the March – Wisbech line contains only an option for review not a proposal for the restoration of a service.
- Network Rail has confirmed to the Bramley Line that the establishment of a community heritage service would not be a barrier to network services returning to the line in the future.
- Community heritage railways require significantly less capital costs to re-establish services and lower operating costs.
A statement made by Conservative councillor Simon King,
Cambridgeshire County Council proposal
In 2012, Cambridgeshire County Council requested a three-phase study from Atkins into the reopening of the line for public transport. The first part, detailing "potential revenue and patronage that may arise from reintroducing passenger services on the line, with an assessment of the operational costs", was published in early 2013. It concluded that a light rail scheme could generate a £15.5m operating surplus between 2014 and 2029.[14]
The report considers restoring the line for
Railfuture
Campaigning group
In March 2014 the route was declared by Stephen Hammond, the transport minister, to be a "strategic priority". The project cost was considered to be between £35 and £52 million but the route was still felt to have the potential to be profitable, with up to 78,000 people expected to make the journey from Wisbech to Peterborough.[17] In February 2015 David Cameron stated that he intended to "have a proper look at Wisbech to March line and to see whether this can work. Infrastructure is a big part of our plan for the east of England."[18]
No-frill train trials
In February 2017, it was announced that no-frills trains would be trialled on Britain's railways with proposals including the Wisbech Line.[19]
Campaign for Better Transport Expanding Railway Report
This line has been identified by Campaign for a Better Transport as a priority 1 candidate for reopening.[20]
Proposed reopening
At a meeting in July 2020 Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Combined Authority voted to recommend plans for a service of two trains an hour between Wisbech, March, Ely, and Cambridge,[21] and in March 2021 authorised £300,000 to prepare a detailed business case for Network Rail.[22] If successful, it was suggested that works could be undertaken between 2024 and 2027, following works in development to improve capacity around Ely,[23] with services beginning in 2028.[21] A journey from Wisbech to Cambridge would take about 45 minutes.[24]
In a review response in 2022, Network Rail identified a number of areas which it said needed deeper consideration before proposals could be assessed further. In particular it highlighted that any Wisbech–Cambridge service plans would rely on train paths being available through Ely, without the proposals having considered whether this could be achieved.[25]
According to Network Rail even if its current proposals to increase capacity through the junctions at Ely gain government funding, which could increase the number of through trains from 6.5 to 11 per hour, all of this additional capacity would already be required for other services. Furthermore, according to Network Rail, even were it possible to create further train paths beyond this, the proposed 2 tph Wisbech–Cambridge service would be "in direct competition with other proposals for paths through Ely", suggesting that potential competitors for paths might include additional Cambridge–Norwich services extending new East West Rail services to Cambridge from Oxford; additional passenger services from the West Midlands to Cambridge, Stansted, or Norwich; and additional freight services, especially between the West Midlands and Felixstowe.[25] Pro-rail advocacy group Railfuture has questioned whether 11 tph would be sufficient to reliably assure even the limited growth in freight traffic Network Rail says it is trying to achieve, given that a long slow freight train can need two train-path slots. Instead it suggests Network Rail should be more ambitious, arguing for a grade-separated flyover that would make trains between the West Midlands and Ipswich or Felixstowe independent of trains between Cambridge and Kings Lynn or Norwich. This it says could achieve 14 tph, with the possibility to increase this to 18 tph.[26]
Network Rail's review of responses to its Ely capacity consultation was expected later in 2023. In the meantime Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Combined Authority have issued a new consultation, asking whether a shuttle or light-rail service between Wisbech and March should also be considered, as an alternative or interim measure.[27]
References
- ^ Rail Magazine "Will rail return to the capital of the Fens?"
- ^ Railway strategies: Whitemoor yard gets green light
- ^ "Around the regions". Rail (132): 20. 4–17 October 1990.
- ^ Official Bramley Line Supporters, "The Start".
- ^ Fenland District Council, Minutes of Council Meeting, 20 December 2007.[permanent dead link]
- ^ BBC Cambridgeshire – History – Walking the Bramley Line
- ^ BBC News, "Community service train re-opens", 4 February 2005.
- ^ Ex-members rail at 'slow' line progress
- ^ Bramley Line declines carriage offer and changes direction while future of Wisbech to March rail link is decided
- ^ Association of Train Operating Companies. June 2009. Retrieved 7 September 2018.
- ^ Bramley Line Position Statement
- ^ Fenland District Council minutes, November 2009[permanent dead link]
- ^ Fenland Citizen: Bid to re-open railway line[permanent dead link]
- ^ March – Wisbech Rail Study, Stage 1 Final Report[permanent dead link]
- ^ Norfolk Railway Society, February News Archived 5 January 2013 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Railfuture East Anglia
- ^ BBC news: Hopes boosted for the reopening of the Wisbech line
- ^ Wisbech Standard: VIDEO: Prime Minister David Cameron on the Wisbech to March rail line, votes for 16 year-olds, and shared council services
- ^ "No-frills mini trains offer route to reopening lines that Beeching shut".
- ^ "Campaign for better Transport" (PDF). Retrieved 4 October 2023.
- ^ a b ‘Capital of the Fens’ back on track? Mayor’s plan for Wisbech rail gets green flag, Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Combined Authority, 9 July 2020]
- ^ Transport Committee Hail Network Rail Partnership for Wisbech-Cambridge, Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Combined Authority, 10 March 2021
- ^ Ely area capacity enhancement, Network Rail. Accessed 17 February 2023
- ^ Draft Local Transport and Connectivity Plan (Fenland Section), Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Combined Authority. Accessed 17 February 2023
- ^ a b Wisbech Rail Review, Network Rail, May 2022; in particular page 11
- ^ Enhancements in the East - Grade Separation at Ely, Railfuture, July 2021
- ^ Brown, Emma Howgego & Hannah (20 November 2023). "Wisbech to March rail link options being discussed". BBC News. Retrieved 20 November 2023.
External links
- Wisbech Rail, Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Combined Authority
- Wisbech Rail Reopening Campaign
- Wisbech & March Bramley Line heritage railway official site