Penlee Quarry railway
Steam locomotive Koppel with V-skip waggons, 1906
Overview
HeadquartersNewlyn
LocaleCornwall
Dates of operationabout 19001973
SuccessorAbandoned
Technical
Track gauge2 ft (610 mm)
Length12 mile (0.8 km)

The Penlee Quarry railway was a 2 ft (610 mm) narrow-gauge industrial railway serving the Penlee Quarry at Newlyn in Cornwall, England, UK. It was Cornwall's most westerly railway and one of the last operating narrow-gauge industrial railways in the UK.

History

Mineral extraction at Penlee dates back to the early 19th century, when copper, zinc and rare minerals were mined. Stone quarrying was started by James Runnalls of Penzance, at a quarry near the Old Battery in 1879.[1] The operations were transferred to the current site at the turn of the 20th century, becoming known as Gwavas Quarry. Penlee supplied mainly aggregate (crushed stone) but on occasion also supplied large chunks of stone as rock armour ("armourstone"). The full-scale aggregate operations ran throughout most of the century, reaching peak output in the 1960s and 1970s.

With production increasing, a 2 ft (610 mm) narrow-gauge railway was opened around 1900. This connected the quarry with the south pier of Newlyn harbour, approximately ½ mile away to the east. A steam locomotive named Koppel was purchased to work this line. Internal combustion locomotives replaced steam from 1930 onwards. Stone was shipped from Newlyn to destinations around the Bristol Channel and the south coast and in later years to as far afield as Germany.

The railway was more or less straight, apart from the curve on to the south pier at Newlyn. It was double track for most of the route, although at some point in the past it had been singled, the double track being reinstated as production increased in the later years. In the 1960s when a ship was being loaded, six locomotives were needed for operations, four higher-powered ones on the main line and two lower-powered ones shunting the empty tipper wagons through the two loading points. The empty trains were reversed back to the loading points from the harbour.

In 1973, the railway ceased operations and was replaced by an electrical conveyor system using the same route. Operations at the quarry then slowed throughout the late 1970s and the 1980s, eventually coming to an end in 1989/90.

Present day

Stone was supplied for a few isolated small contracts until 1994, since when the quarry has been dormant. There are now plans to use the quarry site as part of a marina and housing development.

Penlee Quarry is a Site of Special Scientific Interest, designated in 1997,[2] noted for its geological formations and igneous rocks.[3]

Locomotives

Name Number Builder Type Date Works number Notes
Koppel Stahlbahnwerke Freudenstein 0-4-0WT 1900 73 Renamed Penlee in 1914. Withdrawn in 1946 and preserved at Newlyn harbour. Now under restoration at the Leighton Buzzard Light Railway
Penlee LM1 Kerr Stuart 4wDM 1930 4468 Withdrawn 1961; scrapped 1965
LM2 Hunslet 4wDM 1942 2665 Acquired from Tarslag Ltd, Winslow in 1947; withdrawn 1958; scrapped 1965
Penlee LM3 Hunslet 4wDM 1942 2666 Acquired from Tarslag Ltd, Winslow in 1947; transferred to British Quarrying Co Ltd, Lydd Beach Shingle Works, Kent via Amalgamated Roadstone workshops, Malvern, Worcestershire 1954; returned to Penlee 1958; Now Yaxham Light Railway, Norfolk, No.19 Penlee, 2009[4]
LM4 Orenstein & Koppel 4wDM 1942 10408 Scrapped 1953
LM24 Ruston Hornsby 4wDM 1936 175412 Originally at British Quarrying Co Ltd, Allington Quarry, Maidstone, Kent. Transferred from there via Amalgamated Roadstone workshops at Borough Green, Kent and Malvern, Worcestershire 1954–56; scrapped 1965
LM28 Ruston Hornsby 4wDM 1944 229655 Transferred from Amalgamated Roadstone workshops at Borough Green, Kent c1954; to Amalgamated Roadstone workshops Malvern, Worcestershire 1958; in 1959 at Bredonvale Products Ltd., Defford, Worcestershire; now believed to be privately preserved.
LM30 Ruston Hornsby 4wDM 1944 229656 Transferred from Amalgamated Roadstone workshops at Malvern, Worcestershire 1961
LM37 Ruston Hornsby 4wDM 1936 177643 Transferred from St Keverne & Associated Quarries Ltd, Porthoustock, St Keverne, Cornwall after 1949; scrapped or sold
LM38 Hibberd 4wDM 1948 2401 Transferred from Carreg-y-Llam Quarries Ltd, Llithfaen, Caernarvonshire 1951; to Amalgamated Roadstone workshops at Malvern, Worcestershire 1954; returned from St Keverne & Associated Quarries Ltd, Porthoustock, St Keverne, Cornwall 1961; sold for scrap 1966
T.W. Lewis LM39 Ruston Hornsby 4wDM 1954 375316
J.W. Jenkin LM40 Ruston Hornsby 4wDM 1954 375315
No.2 LM42 Ruston Hornsby 4wDM 1940 200748 Acquired from M.E.Engineering Ltd., Cricklewood in 1961 via the Amalgamated Roadstone workshops at Malvern, Worcestershire
LM44 Ruston Hornsby 4wDM 1947 246793 Acquired from MacSalvors Ltd, Pool, Camborne in 1962
LM45 Ruston Hornsby 4wDM 1942 213848 Acquired from MacSalvors Ltd, Pool, Camborne in 1962
LM46 Ruston Hornsby 4wDM 1951 287664 Acquired from MacSalvors Ltd, Pool, Camborne in 1963
LM47 Ruston Hornsby 4wDM 1951 287664 Acquired from George Wimpey & Co Ltd, contractors, No.82, 1964

See also

References

  1. "Newlyn". The Cornishman. No. 36. 20 March 1879. p. 7.
  2. Scott, Peter; Walton, Geoffrey (January 2008). "The geology of Penlee Quarry its impact on previous quarrying and future use" (PDF). Ussher Society 46th Annual Conference. Ussher Society. p. 12. Retrieved 2 February 2012.
  3. "Penlee Quarry" (PDF). Natural England. Retrieved 27 October 2011.
  4. "No.19 PENLEE". Yaxham Light Railway. 2009. Archived from the original on 17 October 2009. Retrieved 2 June 2009.
  • Farmer, Keith (August 1968). "Amalgamated Roadstone". Industrial Railway Record. Industrial Railway Society. 20: 269–281/288.
  • Penlee Marina plans and quarry history, 2009. Retrieved on 2009-06-02

50°05′45″N 5°32′32″W / 50.0959°N 5.5423°W / 50.0959; -5.5423

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.