Welcome to dextri.com on July 9 2009.
This is an internet experiment running to monitor browsing habbits of individuals through wikipedia contents.

Leeds and Bradford Extension Railway

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
 v  d  e Leeds and Bradford Extension Railway
CONTu
  ( Blackburn via BBACER )
xKBFe
Colne
exHST
Foulridge
exABZrg exBHFl
Barnoldswick (BR)
exHST
Earby
exHST
Thornton-in-Craven
exHST
Elslack
xABZrg CONTr
  ( Lancaster via NWR )
STRrg ABZrf
eCPICl CPICr
Skipton
STR STR STRrg CONTr
  ( Grassington via YDR )
STRlf KRZu xABZ3rf exCONTl
  ( Ilkley via SIL )
HST
Cononley
eHST
Kildwick and Crosshills
HST
Steeton and Silsden
BHF
Keighley
CONTl eABZ3rg ABZrf
  ( Haworth via K&WVR )
exCONTr exSTRrf STR
  ( Queensbury via QL )
eHST
Thwaites
HST
Crossflatts
BHF
Bingley
TUNNEL1
  Bingley Tunnel
HST
Saltaire
BHFABZld CONTr
Shipley
STR
        ( Leeds via L&BR )
HST
Frizinghall
eHST
Manningham
KBFe
Bradford Market Street
Maps showing both ends and the middle of the former L&BER in 1913

The Leeds and Bradford Extension Railway was an early British railway company in the West Riding of Yorkshire. It built a line from Shipley near Bradford through Keighley and Skipton to Colne. The Skipton–Colne line closed in 1970, but the remainder of the line is still in use today, and once formed part of the Midland Railway's main line route from London to Glasgow.

[edit] History

The Leeds and Bradford (Shipley–Colne Extension) Railway Act of 30 June 1845[1] empowered the company to build its line as an extension of the Leeds and Bradford Railway, which was still under construction between Leeds and Bradford. In July 1846, the company was leased to the Midland Railway, which later absorbed it on 24 July 1851.[2]

The first section of the line was from Shipley, at a triangular junction with the Leeds and Bradford Railway, to Keighley. A tender for construction was let on 15 October 1845 and the section opened on 16 March 1847. The line included a 151-yard (138 m) tunnel at Bingley.[1]

A second section from Keighley to Skipton opened on 7 September 1847, initially as a single track, but doubled by the end of the year. Trains ran between Bradford and Skipton; passengers to and from Leeds changed at Shipley.[1]

The final section between Skipton and Colne was contracted on 9 September 1846 and opened on 2 October 1848.[1] At Colne it was to make an end-on junction with the East Lancashire Railway's Blackburn, Burnley, Accrington and Colne Extension Railway, which did not open until 1 February 1849. By 2 April in the same year the line was part of a through route between Leeds and Liverpool,[1] but the majority of passenger trains were local between Skipton and Colne.[3]

The "Little" North Western Railway built a line, from a junction just west of Skipton, which would eventually become the main line through Skipton. The Skipton to Ingleton section opened on 30 July 1849, and by 1 June 1850 there was a through line to Morecambe.[4] The line was leased to the Midland Railway from 1 January 1859.[5] After the opening of the Midland Railway's Settle-Carlisle Line on 1 May 1876,[6] the Leeds–Skipton line was used by the Midland's London St Pancras to Glasgow express trains. Other trains ran to Morecambe, Carnforth and Hellifield.[7]

The Beeching cuts of 1963 reduced the services along the Skipton–Colne line, and on 2 February 1970 this section of line closed.[8] The Skipton - East Lancashire Rail Action Partnership campaigns to reinstate it.

The Shipley to Skipton line is still in use as part of the Airedale Line, and also used by trains of the Leeds-Morecambe Line and Settle-Carlisle Line.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e Binns, p.8
  2. ^ Awdry, p.87
  3. ^ Suggitt, p.73
  4. ^ Bairstow, p.96
  5. ^ Awdry, p.97
  6. ^ Bairstow, p.28
  7. ^ Binns, pp.19–20
  8. ^ Suggitt, p.75

[edit] References

  • Awdry, C. (1990), Encyclopaedia of British Railway Companies, Patrick Stephens Ltd., Wellingborough, ISBN 1-85260-049-7
  • Bairstow, M. (2000), The "Little" North Western Railway, Martin Bairstow, Leeds, ISBN 1 871944 21X
  • Binns, D. (1984), Steam in Airedale, Wyvern Publications, Skipton, ISBN 0 907941 11 7
  • Dewick, T. (2002), Complete Atlas of Railway Station Names, Ian Allen Publishing, Hersham, ISBN 0 7110 2798 6, Maps 21 and 42
  • Suggitt, G. (2004 reprint), Lost Railways of Lancashire, Countryside Books, Newbury, ISBN 1 85306 801 2
Personal tools

Visit joltnews for the latest headlines
Visit bloit.com for company information
Geed Media does computer consulting on long island.
This page viewed times. See Logs