Minffordd railway station

Minffordd railway station
Minffordd National Rail
Minffordd
The upper (Ffestiniog Railway) level of Minffordd station.
Location
Place Minffordd
Local authority Gwynedd
Coordinates 52°55′34″N 4°05′02″W / 52.926°N 4.084°W / 52.926; -4.084Coordinates: 52°55′34″N 4°05′02″W / 52.926°N 4.084°W / 52.926; -4.084
Grid reference SH599385
Operations
Station code MFF
Managed by Ffestiniog Railway (upper level)
Arriva Trains Wales (lower level)
Number of platforms 2 (narrow gauge)
1 (standard gauge)
Live arrivals/departures and station information
from National Rail Enquiries
Annual rail passenger usage
2002/03 *   10,235 (National Rail only)
2004/05 * decrease 10,040 (National Rail only)
2005/06 * decrease 9,532 (National Rail only)
2006/07 * increase 12,203 (National Rail only)
2007/08 * increase 13,839 (National Rail only)
2008/09 * increase 14,408
History
Original company Ffestiniog Railway (upper)
Aberystwyth and Welsh Coast Railway (lower)
Pre-grouping Cambrian Railways (lower)
March 1871 Festiniog station opened[1]
1 August 1872 Aberystwyth and Welsh Coast Railway platform opened[1]
1887 Present station buildings constructed
19 May 1956 Festiniog Railway services resume[1]
1964 Mainline station became unstaffed
National Rail - UK railway stations
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
* Annual passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Minffordd from Office of Rail Regulation statistics. Please note: methodology may vary year on year.
Portal icon UK Railways portal

Minffordd (translation Roadside, literally Lip of the Road) station, is actually two adjacent stations operated entirely independently of each other. The mainline station (called Minffordd Junction by the Victorians) opened on 1 August 1872 at the point where the then newly built Aberystwyth and Welsh Coast Railway line from Dovey Junction to Pwllheli (latterly to become part of the Cambrian Railways) passes under the existing narrow gauge Festiniog Railway built in 1836 to carry dressed slate from Blaenau Ffestiniog to Porthmadog for export by sea, which had carried passengers from 1865 onwards.

A short walk, advertised near the station, leads to Portmeirion.

Contents

Standard gauge facilities

Looking south along the National Rail platform. The southern end, beyond the bridge is disused. To the left is the ramp to the subway under the Ffestiniog Railway.

The standard gauge station consists of a single platform with a simple shelter linked to the narrow gauge station by way of an underbridge and a pedestrian ramp. Access to the Cambrian Line is thus by way of the Ffestiniog Railway "up" platform. Passenger service on the Ffestiniog Railway was withdrawn on 15 September 1939, and reopened to Minffordd 19 May 1956, but easy pedestrian access to the Cambrian Line was maintained throughout the closed period. Mr Parry, GWR and BR stationmaster at Minffordd for 40 years, retired in 1964 and the BR station then became an unstaffed halt. At some point the facilities were replaced by the standard small halt "Bus Stop" shelter.

Narrow gauge facilities

The present substantial stone built Ffestiniog Railway station buildings, at a height of 85 metres (279 ft) above sea level and a distance of just over 2 miles (3.2 km) from Porthmadog Harbour, are on the "up" platform and date from 1887, but there is as yet little evidence of earlier buildings. There was a small wooden building on the "down" platform and this building (possibly dating from the 1870s) was in a derelict condition when it was demolished in 1956. A replica was completed in spring 2002 and was later shortlisted in the National Railway Heritage Awards (2002).

At the beginning of 2011 the line was temporarily severed at the north east end of the station between the end of the loop at Cae Ednyfed Cottage and Bron Turner crossing for the construction of the Porthmadog bypass. The new bridge is wide enough for the passing loop to be extended.

Passenger interchange

Transport Interchange at Minffordd - bus stop on far left of picture; left of picture ramp/subway to National Rail platform; and centre/right Ffestiniog Railway tracks, ends of platforms and foot crossing, and in the middle, the slope down to the Cambrian Coast Line platform.

Passenger interchange between standard gauge and narrow gauge railways in the UK has never been common. The facility at Minffordd with the close proximity of lines is the earliest, 1872, and is still in regular use. There is no evidence of joint timetabling between the gauges here.

During the late 1950s and the 1960s the interchange saw much use by chartered trains bringing visitors to the Ffestiniog Railway but following the reopening of the joint Blaenau Ffestiniog railway station in 1982 most chartered trains now operate by that route.

There have been several notable visitors using Minffordd station.

The first was on 27 August 1889 when Prince and Princess Henry of Battenberg arrived from Barmouth by Cambrian Railways Royal Train. They were received at Minffordd Junction by Mr & Mrs Williams of Castell Deudraeth. A Guard of Honour was mounted by the 2nd Volunteer Battalion Royal Welsh Fusiliers and The Royal Party were conducted by Mr Williams to the Ffestiniog Railway Station where they joined a special train to Tan-y-Bwlch They took tea at Plas Tan-y-Bwlch with Mr & Mrs Oakeley while the Oakeley Silver Band played on the terrace. Mr Oakeley afterwards drove the Prince and Princess to Maentwrog Road station, for their return by The Great Western Railway Royal Train to Llandderfel.[2]

Dr Hastings Banda, President of Malawi accompanied by Lord Snowdon and the Secretary of State for Wales visited the railway on 23 May 1968.[3] Seven years later, on 25 July 1975, The Princess Margaret, Viscount Linley and Lady Sarah Armstrong-Jones travelled from Minffordd in a special train to view the Festiniog Railway Deviation. Lord Linley travelled on the footplate for part of the journey.[4]

After first inspecting Barmouth Bridge, The Chairman of the British Railways Board, Sir Peter Parker, arrived at Minffordd on 17 June 1980 in an inspection saloon hauled by a motor parcels van, as locomotives were not at that time allowed over the Barmouth Bridge. On the Festiniog Railway, Sir Peter travelled on the footplate from Minffordd as far as Tan-y-Bwlch before continuing to Tanygrisiau and then by road to Blaenau Ffestiniog.[5]

Preceding station   National Rail National Rail   Following station
Arriva Trains Wales
Historical railways
Penrhyndeudraeth
Line and station open
  Aberystwyth and Welsh Coast Railway

Cambrian Railways

  Porthmadog
Line and station open
Heritage Railways  Heritage railways
Boston Lodge Halt   Ffestiniog Railway   Penrhyn

Other railway facilities at Minffordd

To the railway historian and indeed the railway archaeologist the railways at Minffordd are of considerable interest with several unique features - at least in the UK.

Minffordd Junction Goods and Minerals Exchange Yard

The Minffordd Yard

The adjacent Minffordd Yard, the former exchange yard between standard gauge and narrow gauge railways, can only be accessed by rail from the down platform of Minffordd station. The exchange sidings laid out in 1872 to the design of Charles Easton Spooner the great advocate of narrow gauge railways, whose book "Narrow Gauge Railways" was published in 1871, were extensive and at first were heavily used primarily for the transshipment of coal and goods destined for Blaenau Ffestiniog. This traffic declined rapidly after the LNWR reached Blaenau Ffestiniog in 1879. Outwards slate traffic by rail from Minffordd did, however, develop and in time surpassed the sea bound traffic via Porthmadog as the volume being exported declined. This slate traffic by rail from Minffordd (ironically, after 1946, using slate brought by road from Blaenau Ffestiniog) lasted until the early 1960s. Minffordd yard is now used exclusively for Ffestiniog Railway purposes and the standard gauge connection was removed in 1973.

Minffordd volunteers' hostel

A new and purpose designed volunteers’ hostel was built between 1992 and 1998 in two stages on land between the railway and the exchange sidings. This hostel replaced a temporary hostel established in Minffordd Yard in 1978. The hostel provides residential accommodation for volunteer staff working on this heritage railway.

Minffordd – Lottie’s Cottage

This Grade 2 Listed building was the crossing keeper's house and was the home of the late Mrs Lottie Edwards, for many years the Quarry Lane Crossing Keeper, and of her late husband Dai Edwards, a railway ganger. It has been carefully and thoroughly restored in their memory. The cottage adjoins the gate, which has now been replaced by an automated system.

Cae Ednyfed

English Translation - Ednyfed’s field

This farm provided stabling for some of the horses used on the railway prior to 1863. These horses operated between Boston Lodge and Rhiw Goch, hauling empty slate wagons up hill. Nos. 1, 2 & 3 Cae Ednyfed – The 3 terraced cottages behind the water tower at Minffordd station are thought to have been used originally in connection with horse traction, possibly as stables. Nos 1 and 2 Cae Ednyfed have recently been combined into a single dwelling.

Minffordd weigh bridge

A pair of railway wagon weighbridges existed side by side, outside the weigh bridge office (that still exists) next to the railway crossing at the road entrance to Minffordd exchange sidings and to the volunteer's hostel. The remains of these weighbridges rest in two slate wagons in the yard. The weigh bridge office recently (2007-8) underwent a major refurbishment.

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Butt (1995), page 161
  2. ^ John Harrison; Festiniog Railway Magazine (FR Society), No.126, Autumn 1989, (Visit of Prince Henry of Battenberg page 252)
  3. ^ P.R. Pennington; Festiniog Railway Magazine (FR Society), No.43, Winter 1968 p16 (also No41 p4), (State Visit)
  4. ^ News; Festiniog Railway Magazine (FR Society), No.70, Autumn 75 pp3-5, (Royal Visit)
  5. ^ News; Festiniog Railway Magazine (FR Society), No.90, Winter 1968 p5, (Visit of BR Chairman)

Sources

  • Boyd, James I.C. (1975). The Festiniog Railway 1800 - 1974; Vol. 1 - History and Route. Blandford: The Oakwood Press. ISBN 0-8536-1167-X. OCLC 2074549. 
  • Boyd, James I.C. (1975). The Festiniog Railway 1800 - 1974; Vol. 2 - Locomotives and Rolling Stock; Quarries and Branches: Rebirth 1954-74. Blandford: The Oakwood Press. ISBN 0-8536-1168-8. 

See also


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Penrhyndeudraeth railway station — Infobox UK station name = Penrhyndeudraeth other name = caption = code = PRH manager = Arriva Trains Wales locale = Penrhyndeudraeth borough = Gwynedd latitude = 52.929 longitude = 4.065 platforms = 1 original = Aberystwyth and Welsh Coast… …   Wikipedia

  • Porthmadog railway station — Infobox UK station name = Porthmadog other name = caption = The station as seen from the level crossing. manager = Arriva Trains Wales code = PTM locale = Porthmadog borough = Gwynedd latitude = 52.931 longitude = 4.134 lowusage0405 = 44,630… …   Wikipedia

  • Minffordd — Railway Station Minffordd (roadside in Welsh) is a village within the Welsh county of Gwynedd. It is situated on the A487 road between Porthmadog and Penrhyndeudraeth. The village has two adjacent …   Wikipedia

  • Dduallt railway station — This article is about the station on the Ffestiniog Railway . For the mountain in Snowdonia, see Dduallt. Dduallt Dduallt station. Location …   Wikipedia

  • Rhiw Goch railway station — UK stations name = Rhiw Goch caption = Rhiw Goch passing loop in 1993. manager = Ffestiniog Railway platforms = 0 locale = Penrhyndeudraeth borough = Gwynedd owner = Ffestiniog Railway years = 1836 events = Opened years1 = 1863 events1 = Closed… …   Wikipedia

  • Ffestiniog Railway — Heritage Railway name = Ffestiniog Railway caption = Two trains passing at Tan y Bwlch, c. 1900 locale = Wales terminus = Porthmadog linename = Festiniog Railway Company builtby = Festiniog Railway Company originalgauge = RailGauge|23.5… …   Wikipedia

  • List of railway stations in Wales — This is a list of railway stations in Wales, one of the four constituent countries of the United Kingdom. It includes all railway stations in Wales that form part of the British National Rail network that currently have timetabled train services …   Wikipedia

  • Token (railway signalling) — A token being offered by a signalman on the Keighley and Worth Valley Railway …   Wikipedia

  • Festiniog Railway — Ffestiniog Railway Von Porthmadog Nach Blaenau Ffestiniog Streckenlänge: 21,93 km Spurweite: 597 mm Eröffnung 1 …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Festiniog Railway Company — Ffestiniog Railway Von Porthmadog Nach Blaenau Ffestiniog Streckenlänge: 21,93 km Spurweite: 597 mm Eröffnung 1 …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”