Rhondda and Swansea Bay Railway

Rhondda and Swansea Bay Railway

The Rhondda and Swansea Bay Railway connected the coal mines of the Rhondda Valley to the Swansea Bay ports.

Connecting with the Taff Vale Railway at Treherbert, it had branches to Aberavon and Port Talbot docks. It was later extended to Swansea and a branch to Neath was added, bringing the total length to 31 miles. Commercially a poor route, it was operated by the Great Western Railway from 1907, and fully incorporated from 1922.

Under the Beeching Axe, as a loss making concern the railway was an early closure opportunity, being closed from 1962 and completely shut in 1970. Its Neath industrial branch survived until 1983

Background

From 1870 onwards, the demand for Rhondda steam coal was expanding quicker than the infrastructure of the Taff Vale Railway and Bute Docks could provide. In 1874 the total coal and coke exported from Cardiff and Penarth was 2,886,000 tons, which had risen to 7,774,828 tons by 1882. By 1880 a train typically took 23 hours to travel from the Ocean Colliery to Bute Dock, and 27 hours for the empty wagons to return. This slowed production, as no additional railway capacity had been built, and only the Roath Basin provided additional dock capacity [http://www.therhondda.co.uk/transport/railways.html Rhondda Railways ] ] .

Two attempts were made to break the monopoly of the Marquess of Bute. The Barry Railway and Docks built at a cost of £2 million a new dock at Barry Island with a railway connecting with Rhondda above the narrow Tongwynlais gorge. The first coal was shipped on 18 July, 1889, with a second dock opened in 1898, and a third in 1914. On 16 March, 1896 the main line between Porth and Barry was opened for passenger traffic, to connect with the paddle steamers of P and A Campbell.

R&SBR

The merchants of Swansea had wanted to tap into the coal fields of the Rhondda Fawr for some time, but proposals brought to them until that point had all required massive construction in the Afan Valley, and steep gradients into Treherbert restricting train loads.

Eventually a proposal was made to cut a tunnel from Blaen Rhondda to Treherbert, which would allow easier access to Rhondda Fawr [ [http://www.archivesnetworkwales.info/cgi-bin/anw/fulldesc_nofr?inst_id=34&coll_id=76512&expand= Archives Network Wales - Transport - Railways/Acts Of Parliament ] ] .

Construction

Incorporated in 10 August, 1882 [http://ukhrail.uel.ac.uk/glossary/gl-r.html] , the line connected the coalfields of the Rhondda Valley to the Swansea Bay ports. It connected with the Taff Valley Railway at Treherbert and had branches to Aberavon and Porth Talbot docks. It was later extended to Swansea and a branch to Neath was added, bringing the total length to 31 miles.

By the time the R&SBR arrived in the Afan Valley, the GWR had built the Abergwynfi branch in the easier route. The construction of the R&SBR necessitated the construction of the 160 metre long Gelli tunnel [ [http://www.geocities.com/cardiffrail/Gelli-Tunnel.html Rhondda and Swansea Bay Railway - Gelli Tunnel ] ]

On 2 July, 1890 the Rhondda Tunnel, a distance of 3,300 yards (the longest railway tunnel in Wales, and the seventh longest in the United Kingdom), was completed. The single-line tunnel split into double track on emerging from Rhondda reaching Blaen Rhondda, the RSBR's only station in the Rhondda. From there, the line continued to the Taff Vale Railway at Treherbert. After the completion of the Briton Ferry to Swansea link on 14 December, 1894 Treherbert was connected to Swansea docks.

Non-commercial route

However, the combination of the length of the line and the tortuous route taken meant that there was an up gradient through the Rhondda tunnel from Treherbert, meaning that the weight of full trains was restricted. Resultantly, traffic on opening was effectively commercially restricted to serve only those collieries at the top of the Rhondda Fawr, furthest away from the down slope lines of the opposing companies serving the docks at Cardiff, Newport and Barry Island. Resultantly, these railway companies and docks expanded at a far greater rate than the R&SBR.

However, the opening of the line bough strain on Swansea's docks, so necessitated the opening of the larger capacity Prince of Wales Dock [ [http://www.swanseaheritage.net/article/gat.asp?ARTICLE_ID=163&PRIMARY_THEME_ID=1 Prince of Wales Dock - Swansea Heritage Net - History in pictures ] ] . Cymmer in the Afan Valley at one time boasted three railway stations - Cymmer General (amalgamated with Cymmer Afan), Cymmer Corrwyg (closed 1930).

Decline

Due to its lack of commercial provision of its route, and its late entry into the Rhondda Valley, the company struggled to survive and operations were taken over by the Great Western Railway less than 15 years after opening in 1907, the peak of coal exports from Rhondda Fawr. Worked independently, the railway was fully incorporated into the GWR under the terms of the Railways Act 1921, and absorbed on the 1 January, 1922 [http://www.british-genealogy.com/forums/archive/index.php/t-13240.html Railway Signalman [Archive - B-G Forums sponsored by Parish Chest Ltd ] ] .

Closure

The line closed from 1962 onwards with the closure of Rhondda Tunnel. Passenger services on the western section from Aberavon ceased in late 1963, and on the northern section from 1970.

The section along the Afan Valley is now the route of the Afan Valley Cycleway [ [http://www.forestry.gov.uk/website/ourwoods.nsf/LUWebDocsByKey/WalesNeathPortTalbotAfanForestParkAfanForestParkAfanForestParkVisitorCentreOldParishRoadWalkBlueWalk Forestry Commission - Afan Forest Park - Old Parish Road Walk - Blue Walk ] ] , while the former Cymmer station is now a public house, known locally as "The Refresh" [ [http://philtpics.fotopic.net/p39710919.html cym2.jpg.jpg :: Known locally as 'The Refresh', the refreshment room of the Rhondda & Swansea Bay Railway's station at Cymmer Afan now serves as a public house. This was the view looking north towards Blaengwynfi on 25th March 2007 ] ]

Chronology

The chronology for the line is as follows: [http://www.railscot.co.uk/Rhondda_and_Swansea_Bay_Railway/frame.htm RAILSCOT | Rhondda and Swansea Bay Railway ] ]

tations

From East to West:
*Treherbert - owned by the Taff Vale Railway
*Blaen Rhondda
*Blaengwynfy
*Cymmer
*Dyffryn Rhondda halt
*Cynonville halt
*Pontrhydyfen
*Cwm Avon
*Aberavon Town
**Junction to Aberavon Dock, later renamed Port Talbot
*Aberavon Seaside
*Baglan Sands halt
*Briton Ferry (East)
**Junction to Briton Ferry dock
*Court Sart
**Junction to Canal Side located in Neath
*Cape Platform
*Jersey Marine
*Baldwins halt
**Junction to Swansea docks
**Junction to Swansea High Street (GWR)
*Danygraig
*Swansea Riverside

References

*"Through the tunnel from Treherbert : memories of the Rhondda and Swansea Bay Railway" - "by Bernard Lazarus, published by Steam Days 60, 1994 [ [http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/wal/GLA/Books3a.html GENUKI: Glamorgan Book List ] ]

External links

* [http://www.therhondda.co.uk/transport/railways.html History of railway development in the Rhondda]
* [http://www.railholiday.co.uk/news.htm Former R&SBR carriage being restored in Cornwall]

Walks

* [http://www.bbc.co.uk/wales/southeast/tours/places/pages/treorchy_walk.shtml A walk along the R&SBR] using the Afan Valley Cycleway
* [http://www.bbc.co.uk/wales/southeast/tours/places/pages/treorchy_walk.shtml A walk along the R&SBR] from Tynewydd to Blaencwm


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