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1 History  





2 Relics  





3 References  














Berks and Hants Railway






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


  • t
  • e
  • Berks and Hants Railway

    Great Western Main Line
    Left arrowtoBristol │ to London Paddington Right arrow

    0¾
    Reading

    ¾
    Reading West

    Coley branch
    to Central goods

    Southcote junction

    Mortimer

    boundary

    10½
    Bramley

    15½
    Basingstoke

    Theale

    Aldermaston

    10¼
    Midgham

    13½
    Thatcham

    Newbury Racecourse

    17¾
    Newbury

    22½
    Kintbury

    25½
    Hungerford

    boundary

    30½
    Bedwyn

    34¾
    Savernake Low Level

    Burbage Wharf goods station

    Wootton Rivers Halt

    39¼
    Pewsey

    Manningford Halt

    42¾
    Woodborough

    45¾
    Patney and Chirton

    50¾
    Devizes

     
    miles from Reading
     
    Mortimer railway station on the Basingstoke branch

    The Berks and Hants Railway comprised two railway lines built simultaneously by the Great Western Railway (GWR) south and west from Reading in an attempt to keep the London and South Western Railway (LSWR) out of the area that it considered to be its territory in England.

    One line ran from Reading to Hungerford and was entirely in the county of Berkshire ("Berks"). A later Berks and Hants Extension Railway continued the Hungerford line to DevizesinWiltshire. Since 1906 part of this route has formed the direct Reading to Taunton Line used by trains to Devon and Cornwall. The term 'Berks and Hants Line' has been used intermittently by officials and passengers for the whole route from Reading to Taunton even though it does not enter Hampshire and most was never built by the Berks and Hants Railway.

    The second line ran from Reading to Basingstoke and terminated adjacent to the LSWR station there. Later the GWR station was closed and trains on the Reading to Basingstoke Line now use a platform of the rebuilt LSWR station.

    History[edit]

    Berks. and Hants. Railway Act 1845
    Act of Parliament
    Citation8 & 9 Vict. c. xl

    In 1844, the GWR proposed a 7 ft 14 in (2,140 mm) broad gauge branch line from Pangbourne railway station to Newbury while the LSWR was promoting an alternative 4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge branch from Basingstoke to Newbury and Swindon, the heart of GWR territory. However, the following year saw an act of Parliament passed to allow the construction of the GWR-backed Berks and Hants Railway from Reading to both Basingstoke and Hungerford. The capital for this company was put forward in the names of GWR directors, and the following year a new act of Parliament saw the Berks and Hants formally absorbed into the larger company.[1]

    The first section to open was that to Hungerford on 21 December 1847. The line to Basingstoke left the Hungerford line at Southcote Junction on the outskirts of Reading, and was opened nearly a year later on 1 November 1848.

    The Berks and Hants Extension Railway was opened from Hungerford to Devizes on 11 November 1862. This was part of a GWR scheme to provide a more direct line from London to ExeterinDevon, however other elements of the route failed to materialise and the direct route to Exeter was built by the LSWR from Basingstoke through Salisbury.

    A third rail was laid along the Basingstoke branch on 22 December 1856. This mixed gauge was to allow standard gauge goods trains to run through from the Midlands to ports on the South coast. Broad gauge trains stopped running on this route from 1 April 1869.

    On 27 June 1874, a special road coach service was instigated between Hungerford and Devizes while the engineers converted the single track on this section to standard gauge. The remainder of the line from Hungerford to Southcote Junction at Reading was worked as a single line with trains in both directions using the normal eastbound line with a passing place kept at Newbury while the westbound line was converted. The last broad gauge train ran on 30 June and the following day the trains started to use the new standard gauge westbound line and ran through to Devizes again. Conversion of the eastbound line could then take place, and a normal service resumed on 4 July.[2]

    At Devizes the Extension Railway connected with a branch line from Holt Junction on the Wilts, Somerset and Weymouth line which allowed through trains over the Berks and Hants to Bristol Temple Meads. The Stert and Westbury Railway was opened on 29 July 1900, (1 October 1900 for passengers) from a new station called Patney and ChirtontoWestbury which allowed a shorter journey via Hungerford to Weymouth from where passengers could sail to the Channel Islands. From 2 July 1906 through passenger trains on the Reading to Taunton line started running over the Berks and Hants line following the completion of a new cut-off line from Castle Cary railway stationtoCogload Junction near Taunton.

    Relics[edit]

    Most of the original Berks and Hants stations have been rebuilt; however, there are two early survivors.

    References[edit]

    1. ^ MacDermot, E T (1927). History of the Great Western Railway, volume I 1833–1863. London: Great Western Railway.
  • ^ MacDermot, E T (1931). History of the Great Western Railway, volume II 1863–1921. London: Great Western Railway.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Berks_and_Hants_Railway&oldid=1187375691"

    Categories: 
    Great Western Railway constituents
    7 ft gauge railways
    Rail transport in Berkshire
    Rail transport in Hampshire
    Railway lines opened in 1862
    1862 establishments in England
    Hidden categories: 
    Use dmy dates from October 2020
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
     



    This page was last edited on 28 November 2023, at 21:36 (UTC).

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