|
It
was back in March of 1848 that the first stretch of the Wensleydale
Railway opened. It linked Northallerton with Leeming Bar and over
the following decades the rails reached into the heart of Wensleydale.
Quiet
market towns and rural villages were suddenly within hours, rather
than days, of major cities.
Although
it served a useful link between the Settle-Carlisle line and the
East Coast route to Scotland and London, the little railway in the
Dales had a quiet peaceful existence Too quiet in fact and in the
1950s it fell victim to the motorcar and bus.
Railway
memories
My
first memory of the line was at the age of two or three. My auntie
had a house which looked over the line at Aiskew near Bedale.
She
knew the signal man at the Aiskew level crossing and used to take
me down the road to watch the occasional train. This was the 1960s
and even then traffic on the main road was 20 times the level of
the Wensleydale line.
See
the photo gallery of the railway's preparation
However
the line refused to die and although the section from Redmire to
Garsdale was removed, freight traffic survives to the present day
although you have to be very lucky to spot a train.
There's
the occasional movement by the army and the yearly weed killer service.
Not a lot disturbs the peace between Bedale and Leyburn.
Crossing
keeper
The
train services may have gone but the people who worked on the line
are still here. Anne Riddle has lived at Finghall for 32 years.
She was the crossing keeper and has remained as a tenant in the
old station house.
She
knew nothing about the railways when she applied for the job at
Finghall. After being accepted she went on a stringent training
course and even though she had a young child at the time, she 'womaned'
her post night and day through a variety of Dales weather.
Now
history is repeating itself. Soon the gates of this little crossing
over the Old Great North Road may be swinging back and forth more
often.
The
Wensleydale Railway is taking a 99 year lease on the line and plans
to run regular passenger trains again. It means that the Wensleydale
Railway, effectively, has Britain's longest franchise. Wouldn't
GNER like a 99 year deal?
|