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Southend Pier Railway

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Southend Pier Railway
A narrow gauge train, in green and cream livery, runs along the pier railway in Southend on the right side of the photo. The sky is blue with white fluffy clouds. There are people walking along the pier on the left side of the photo.
A new Severn Lamb train runs towards Pier Head Station 2023
Overview
StatusOperational
OwnerSouthend-on-Sea City Council
LocaleSouthend-on-Sea
Termini
  • Shore station
  • Pier Head station
Stations2
Service
TypeLight rail
Services1
History
Opened28 May 1890
Technical
Track length2,046 yd (1,871 m)
Number of tracks1
Track gauge
  • 3 ft (914 mm) c.1830–c.1889
  • 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) 1890–1978
  • 3 ft (914 mm) 1986–present
Operating speed18 mph (29 km/h)
SignallingAutomatic

The Southend Pier Railway is a 3 ft (914 mm) narrow gauge railway in the English city of Southend-on-Sea, Essex. It runs for 1.25 miles (2.01 km) along the 1.34 miles (2.16 km) length of Southend Pier, providing public passenger transport from the shore to the pier head.

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Transcription

History

19th century

The horse tramway on the original pier

The original pier at Southend was a wooden construction erected in 1830 by a private company. To assist in the loading and unloading of vessels at the seaward end, a 3 ft (914 mm) gauge horse-drawn tramway was laid down along its length.[1][2] When construction of the new pier was sanctioned by the Southend Local Board, the plans included provision for an electric railway. Construction of the line commenced in 1888 concurrently with the building of the new pier, under the direction of C. R. Norton, the former electrical engineer of the pier, electrification being carried out by Colonel R. E. B. Crompton.

By 1889, about 34 mi (1.2 km) of 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) gauge single track had been laid and a single motor car was run over it. This was equipped with a 13 hp (9.7 kW) motor taking current at 200 V DC from the pier's own generator. The compound-wound generator being belt driven from a Davey, Paxman & Co 25 hp (19 kW) steam engine with a locomotive-type boiler. Current collection was from a centre rail consisting of a steel channel and copper strip mounted on petticoat insulators, with a carbon brush pickup on the motor cars. The return circuit was through the running rails. In 1890, the 1+14 mi (2.0 km) single track was completed and two trailer cars acquired to form a three-car train. By 1893, a passing loop had been completed and a second train of three cars added.

Over the six years from 1893, traffic on the pier had developed to the point where another two trains were needed. At the same time, in 1899, a second generator was provided and the passing loop extended. However, in 1902, Southend Corporation established its own generating station in London Road and the pier plant became redundant and was disposed of. The new supply was at 500 V DC; so the four motor cars were refitted with new motors rated at 18 hp (13 kW) each. The trains were made up to four cars each by the purchase of four new trailer cars from the Falcon Works at Loughborough. Two of these were purchased by the Volk's Electric Railway in Brighton when they became redundant in 1949. They were converted into motor cars numbered 8 and 9. These cars continued to operate in Brighton until the late 1990s, when they were again retired. Car 8 was returned to Southend to join the Southend Pier Museum collection, and car 9 is on display at the South Downs Heritage Centre at Hassocks.[3]

20th Century

Southend Pier Railway
(1930–1978)
Shore
Station
(to workshop)
Signal Box 2
Signal Box 1
Pier Head
Station

In 1909 a further four trailer cars were purchased to form four trains of five cars each. The motor cars proved to be underpowered for this load and, in 1910, each motor car was refitted with twin BTH 27 hp (20 kW) motors. In 1911 the conductor rail was replaced with 45lb/yard steel rail, similar to the running rails, with new pickups, made of cast iron, being fitted to the motor cars. In 1914, another eight cars were purchased and the trains made up to seven cars each. In 1919, the original track, now twenty years old, needed replacement, so new running and conductor rails were laid throughout the pier.

In 1923, experimental magnetic brakes were fitted to one train set. The experiment was evidently not a success as they were discarded after about a year. At the same time, new wheels with Bessemer steel tyres were fitted to all the cars.

The year 1928 saw the extension of the midway loop by a further 150 yd (140 m) and new loops were constructed extending from the North (shore) and South (pier head) stations. The following year these loops were joined up to form a double track railway 93 chains, (2,046 yd (1,871 m)) long, along the length of the pier. The track came out of cover at pile 18, the two signal cabins were at piles 47/48 and 179/180, and the south station was at piles 217 to 225. At some stage, a workshop was built along the west side of the shore station to handle routine maintenance.

During the Second World War the pier was closed to visitors. It was taken over by the Royal Navy on 9 September 1939, and renamed HMS Leigh, and was used as an assembly point for convoys with anti-aircraft guns on the pier head. It was also the main shipping control point for the Thames Estuary.[4] The trains were used to supply the guns with ammunition and ferry casualties ashore from the ships. Masters of passing merchant ships used to complain the trains set off the acoustic aircraft early warning devices fitted to their vessels.

AC Cars electric trains in 1974. Note the third rail and longitudinal sleepers.

By 1949 the original rolling stock was approaching 60 years old and so it was decided to replace it. New stock was ordered from AC Cars of Thames Ditton, the survivors of which worked the line until its closure in the mid-1970s. Twenty-eight cars were supplied, forming four trains of seven cars each, consisting of three motor cars and four trailer cars in M-T-T-M-T-T-M formation, the motors cars being operated in multiple. Each train could carry up to 260 passengers. At a top speed of 18 mph (29 km/h), the journey took four minutes each way, and during peak periods a train ran every five minutes, continuing until 11 pm. The record for passengers carried in one day stands at 55,000.[1][5]

There were three common patterns of operation:

  • Peak: all four trains in service. At any time two trains would be moving, one in each direction, while two more were sitting at the stations. As a train was on its way in to a station, the waiting train would depart, so passengers arriving at a station would normally – but not guaranteed – find a train waiting.
  • Off-peak: two trains were sitting locked up, while the other two ran a service.
  • Low season: one train ran a shuttle service on one track while all the other trains were stored, at one end or the other, on the other track.

By the 1970s there were only two trains left in service, consisting of cars 1–7 and 22–28. One of the surplus motor cars was converted into a works loco, consisting of a driving cab at the south end and a flat bed mounted on the remainder of the chassis. This was used for the transportation of goods out to the bars and stalls at the end of the pier, and also acted as a permanent way train.[1]

In 1978, the electric railway closed, due to deterioration and the cost of repairs. The 1949-built electric cars were withdrawn, although three preserved examples can be found in the Southend Pier Museum.[1][6] It is noted that in 1982, after rail traffic had ceased, a 2w-2PMR Wickham trolley was present on site, although marked as Out of Use.[7]

Train in burgundy and white livery in 1987 (collapsed pier section behind)

The railway was reopened by Princess Anne on 2 May 1986 after rebuilding to 3 ft (914 mm) gauge.[8] Two new diesel trains were built by Severn Lamb and introduced on a simplified line comprising a single track with a passing loop and twin-track terminal stations.[9] As originally delivered, the trains were liveried in all-over burgundy with a white waist-band, but were repainted to a two-tone blue in 2006, retaining the white waist-band. They also carried a Southend Borough Council logo.[1]

A battery powered single passenger car, built by Castleline of Nottingham, entered service in November 1995 for service in winter. This car is numbered 1835, the year that Southend Pier first appeared on Admiralty charts.[2] There are also several wagons for maintenance trains.

21st century

On 9 October 2005, a fire severely damaged much of the pier head including the railway station. The station was temporarily re-sited, until a new and modern structure was opened on the original site in September 2009.[10][11] Although the passenger trains were not damaged, two wagons used on maintenance trains were destroyed in the fire.

In September 2016, the railway was out of action due to emergency engineering works, though the pier itself was still open to the public.[12] The Pier Railway reopened in late 2016.[12] Two new trains, built by Severn Lamb, were scheduled to replace the 1986 built trains in 2021.[13][14] The new trains began arriving at the pier on 28 September 2021. They are painted in the green and cream livery carried by the earlier electric trains.[15]

Operation

Southend Pier Railway
(1986-present)
(to workshop)
Passing loop
Sir William Heygate approaching the shore terminus in 2006. The pedestrian access to the pier can be seen descending from the station roof

The line is owned and operated by Southend-on-Sea City Council, and operates every day the pier is open. The normal service uses a single train, and runs every half-hour. At peak times a two train service is operated, providing a 15-minute interval service. Trains operate between stations known as Shore and Pier Head with no intermediate stops.[16]

After the reopening on 2 May 1986, the Southend Pier Railway operated two diesel trains, each consisting of a diesel-hydraulic locomotive at the southern end, five trailer coaches and, at the northern end, and a driver control unit with passenger space. The two trains were named Sir William Heygate and Sir John Betjeman. The Sir William Heygate remains in service as a reserve train for the time being. The Sir John Betjeman has been decommissioned, the locomotive parked at the pier end station, and the carriage bodies removed from their chassis and reused as waiting shelters at various places in the station and around the pier.[17]

The service is now provided by two battery-electric trains. The first battery-electric train was named Sir David Amess in tribute to the murdered MP, by Prince Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall at a ceremony to mark the granting of city status to Southend on 1 May 2022.[18] The second train is named William Bradley after the pier head keeper from 1871 to 1891.[19][20]

A twin-track island platform is provided at each terminus, and there is a passing loop in mid-pier, but otherwise the line is single tracked. The pier head terminus is in the open air, but the shore terminus is enclosed, and also provides rail access to a workshop for maintaining the trains. The Southend Pier Museum is situated below the shore station in the original workshops.[21]

Rolling stock

Current fleet

 Class  Image  Type   Top speed  Number  Carriages  Built
 mph   km/h 
Severn Lamb BEMU
Battery electric multiple unit (BEMU) 10.0 16.1 2 2 sets formed of 6 carriages each 2021

Past fleet

 Class  Image  Type   Top speed  Number  Carriages  Built
 mph   km/h 
Severn Lamb locomotive
Diesel hydraulic locomotive 10.0 16.1 2 2 sets formed of locomotive, 4 carriages plus 1 driving van 1986
AC Cars EMU
Electric multiple unit 18.0 28.9 4 4 sets with 7 cars each
Formation= DM-T-T-M-T-T-DM
1949

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Southend Pier Railway information leaflet. Southend Civic Centre. 1974.
  2. ^ a b Piermaster (16 October 2009). "Southend-on-Sea". Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd. Retrieved 20 August 2010.
  3. ^ "Cars No. 8 & 9". Volk's Electric Railway Association. Retrieved 14 May 2022.
  4. ^ "History". Southend Pier and Railway. Retrieved 30 January 2022.
  5. ^ South East Echo (retrieved 23 2010)
  6. ^ "Southend Pier History". The South East Echo. Retrieved 25 August 2010.
  7. ^ Industrial Locomotives 1982 including Preserved and Minor Railway Locomotives. Warley, West Midlands: Industrial Railway Society. 1982. p. 69. ISBN 0-901096-43-1.
  8. ^ The Railway Magazine (September 1986 p551)
  9. ^ New trains for Southend Pier Rail Enthusiast issue 57 June 1986 page 29
  10. ^ "Pier to cost millions to restore". BBC. 10 October 2005. Retrieved 20 August 2010.
  11. ^ "Southend Pier restoration and new train station by Saville Jones Architects". Architects' Journal. 30 September 2009. Retrieved 19 August 2010.
  12. ^ a b http://www.southend.gov.uk/info/200306/southend_pier_and_cliff_lift/79/opening_times_ticket_prices_and_pier_train_information[dead link]
  13. ^ Severn Lamb's Southend-on-Sea Success Severn Lamb 8 January 2020
  14. ^ Countdown begins for Southend Pier fleet as renewal gets green light The Railway Magazine issue 1429 April 2020 page 72
  15. ^ Critchell, Matthew (28 September 2021). "Southend Pier: New trains arrive ahead of being opened to visitors". Basildon Canvey Southend Echo. Retrieved 29 September 2021.
  16. ^ "Opening Times, Ticket Prices and Pier Train Information". southend.gov.uk. Southend-on-Sea Borough Council. Retrieved 25 January 2016.
  17. ^ "Southend Pier train carriage gets new home on pier head". Southend Echo. Retrieved 2 May 2022.
  18. ^ "Southend: 'Sir David's pier train is a lasting legacy to him'". Southend Echo. Retrieved 2 May 2022.
  19. ^ "Southend Pier train returns to service after doors failure". 22 September 2022. Retrieved 18 March 2024.
  20. ^ Mair, Toni. "Mayor presides over double celebration at city's historic pier". Southend-on-Sea City Council. Retrieved 18 March 2024.
  21. ^ "History". Southend Pier Museum. Retrieved 30 January 2022.

External links

51°31′27″N 0°43′08″E / 51.52423°N 0.71876°E / 51.52423; 0.71876

This page was last edited on 18 March 2024, at 19:38
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