The Tanat Valley Light Railway (ePub)
Imprint: Pen & Sword Transport
Series: Light Railway Profiles
File Size: 68.2 MB (.epub)
Pages: 152
ISBN: 9781399039680
Published: 18th July 2024
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The Tanat Valley Light Railway Hardback Add to Basket | £25.00 |
Situated in the Welsh borderland to the West of Oswestry, the scenic Tanat Valley reached westwards into Wales, its Llangynog terminus nestling where the road starts the climb over the Berwyn mountain range towards Bala. It was a lightly populated area that sustained agriculture and some mineral extraction whose residents struggled to get their produce to market. During the 19th Century there were several schemes for a railway that failed due their inability to raise sufficient capital.
The Tanat Valley Light Railway is, therefore, a true child of the 1896 Light Railways Act, promoted by the Oswestry Urban District Council the following year to take advantage of the grant-making facilities of that legislation.
Because it took so long to obtain powers, and it was not opened until 1906, the Light Railway never really fulfilled its potential. Operated initially by the Cambrian Railways, it was not heavily worked, although it benefited from pipe traffic generated by renewals of Liverpool Corporation’s Vyrnwy reservoir pipeline. Although closure came in stages during the 1950s, and was deemed to be complete in 1960, a short section of track remains in situ at Porthywaen.
Author Peter Johnson has drawn on the material available at the National Archives at Kew and the Parliamentary Archives in the House of Lords as well as conducting extensive research in digitised newspapers to tell the Light Railway’s story, producing the first in-depth account of its development, operation and closure.
Peter Johnson is also the author of The Shropshire & Montgomeryshire Light Railway – the rise and fall of a rural byway, published by Pen & Sword Transport in 2024. The two railways were connected at Blodwel Junction and the surviving section of the Tanat Valley Light Railway thence to Porthywaen enabled stone traffic on the Shropshire & Montgomeryshire’s Nantmawr branch to continue until 1971.
"For the many lovers of minor Welsh railways this is one to buy."
Review - Friends of the National Railway Museum - No189, Autumn 2024
"This book explains in detail the difficulties of getting the railway started; as with all Peter Johnson's books, no stone is left unturned."
West Highland Railay - The Journal, Issue 204
"This book about a classic, 15-mile Light Railway branch which struggled will interest many readers."
Branch Line News - October 2024
"Like the author’s many other works on bespoke smaller railway concerns, the research is meticulous, with many new photographs and a wealth of appendices covering the cost of construction, the high level of public subsidy and the dreadful balance sheets... Like the book, this preservation centre is well worth a visit."
Steam World - October 2024
About Peter Johnson
Best known for his books on narrow gauge and Welsh railways, Peter Johnson first wrote about travelling post offices in 1985 and added the Post Office (London) Railway to his portfolio in 1995. Living in Leicester, he was employed in local authority fire service communications for 29 years.