Hayle Railway was an early railway in West Cornwall, constructed to convey copper and tin ore from the Redruth and Camborne areas to sea ports at Hayle and Portreath. It was opened in 1837, and carried passengers on its main line from 1843.
Part of the main line was incorporated into the route of the West Cornwall Railway in 1852, and is part of the main line railway to the present day; information about the modern operation of the railway route in Cornwall can be found at Cornish Main Line.
Steam traction was used on part of the route from the outset, but horse traction was used at first at the western end. There were four inclines (described below) which were rope-worked.
The railway enabled the transportation of copper and tin ore from the mines, using coastal shipping or onward transport. Coal (for fuelling pumps which kept the mines dry) and machinery and timber were brought in, and general merchandise was conveyed.E T MacDermot, History of the Great Western Railway, volume II, published by the Great Western Railway Company, London, 1931Alan Bennett, The Great Western Railway in West Cornwall, Runpast Publishing, Cheltenham, 1988, S C Jenkins and R C Langley, The West Cornwall Railway, Oakwood Press, 2002, The Story of Cornwall's Railways, undated, published by D Bradford Barton, Truro
The line was built to standard gauge, the first such in Cornwall, and it had no connection with any other railway. The permanent way was T-beam rails laid on stone block Railroad tie. It was single-line throughout, except for double track on the inclines.
The line from Redruth to Hayle was in length; Tresavean to Redruth Junction was ; the Portreath branch was ; the Hayle branch (on the quays at Hayle) was long, and there were short branches to Roskear () and North South Crofty (). (There are 80 chains in a mile; one chain is 22 yards, or about 20 metres.)
Construction proceeded well, except for the provision of a drawbridge at the western end of the line. (Presumably this was the bridge at the sluice at the mouth of Copperhouse Pool.) In 1837 the company proposed to open all of its line east of the bridge, which would have connected all the mines to the harbour, but would have left the foundry owned by Henry Harvey, located immediately to the west, disconnected. Harvey was concerned that this temporary arrangement would disadvantage him competitively, and he drew attention to a clause in the authorising Act requiring that "the line should be completed before opening". His objection motivated the directors of the company, and the drawbridge was speedily completed.
The line was therefore opened from Hayle foundry to Pool and Portreath on 23 December 1837. The continuation to Redruth was formally opened on 31 May 1838, and fully opened to the public on 11 June 1838. The Tresavean line opened on 23 June 1838.
The network therefore consisted of:G H Anthony, The Hayle, West Cornwall and Helston Railways, Oakwood Press, Lingfield, 1968
At the south-west corner of the station site, the Tresavean branch trailed in, and the line headed west, following the route now used by the main line. It passed Portreath Junction, where the line from the harbour there trailed in. A little further was Pool station (later called Carn Brea). Immediately to the east of the station were workshops and engine sheds, and connections to mines. Further west the Crofty branch (to mines) diverged, and then the Roskear branch, also serving mines and workshops, trailed in at Roskear Junction.
Next was Camborne station, beyond which the line ran a little to the south of the present main line, to the head of the Penponds incline, just to the west of Pendarves Road. The engine house that must have been here has been obliterated by housing development.
The bottom end of the incline was to the west of Mill Road; having reached the lower level, the line curved round sharply to the north, following the contour, turning west again. It crossed the small valley formed by an arm of the Red River immediately to the north of the present viaduct, and the then by a separate bridge over the adjacent Old Mill Lane (in fact a footpath and farm track). The later replacement viaduct is at a much higher level and crosses both the river and lane in a single structure, but the original lane bridge is still present; it is shown as "tunnel" on some modern large scale maps.
The old line continued broadly westward, at first a little to the north of the modern route, with a southward loop to follow the contour through the site of the later Gwinear Road station, and then to near Trenowin Farm, where the line continued almost due west; the present line diverges to the south. Crossing Steamers Hill, the line came to the head of Angarrack incline and descended to Phillack, running on the north side of Copperhouse Pool. The three arch bridge over a stream at Lethlean (near Phillack, just south of the middle of Glebe Row) is the oldest surviving railway bridge in Cornwall Hayle Historical Assessment Cornwall - a Report for English Heritage, Nick Cahill, Cornwall Archaeology Unit, 2000, online at [1] ; but the report's Inventory[2] reads "...It is said to be the oldest ..." and it is difficult to see why it is older than the Penponds "tunnel" referred to earlier. This bridge was the subject of a restoration project conducted by Hayle Scouts in 1982.
Continuing to the western end of the Pool, there was probably a "station" called Hayle Riviere close to the present North Quay.
From the swing bridge the line swung sharply west and then followed the southerly alignment of Penpol Terrace, crossing under the present-day Hayle Viaduct, and then turning north, once more under the later Hayle Viaduct, to sidings on East Quay; there were also siding connections to Harvey's machine factory. North Quay was also served by sidings, with a junction, facing for trains from Redruth, east of the swing bridge.
When passenger services were first in operation, in May 1843, trains apparently started and terminated at Crotch's Hotel, close to Foundry Square. A proper station building came into use in Foundry Square from 27 May 1844. The Hayle station buildings were on the outside of the railway's loop south of the present Hayle viaduct, between the Hayle Railway line and the present B3301 road. There were two buildings; the eastern building is marked Literary Institution on the 1879 Ordnance Survey map, having changed to that use. The buildings are numbers 333 and 334 on the inventory and map 16d in Hayle Historical Assessment Cornwall, (but a different numbering system was used in the summary document). A photograph of 1938 in indicates that it was then in use by the Hayle Women's Unionist Association; it was demolished in December 1948.Vic Mitchell and Keith Smith, Western Main Lines : St Austell to Penzance, Middleton Press, Midhurst 2001,
Barton states that the Tresavean line "was horse worked, locomotives normally running only to the top of the incline up from the main Camborne - Redruth main line".
A more general description of the use of inclined planes in railway situations is at Cable railway.
The four inclined planes were at:
The Redruth incline was long, with a rise of ; it was gravity worked, and was in operation from 1837 to 1935.
The Portreath incline was long with a rise of about . It was worked by a stationary steam engine.
Penponds incline was about long, and was worked on the counterbalanced principle.
Angarrack incline was long with a fall of about ; it was powered by a stationary steam engine. Inclined Planes in the South West, Martin Bodman, Twelveheads Press, Truro, 2012,
The railway received an estimate to provide four stationary steam engines in 1836, in the amount of £7,100, although in the event the Penponds and Tresavean inclines were gravity operated.Richard Thomas of Falmouth, article in the Trevithick Society Journal, No 35, 2008, 30, quoted in Inclined Planes in the South West, Martin Bodman, Twelveheads Press, Truro, 2012,
There were no fixed signals, and trains were despatched under the time interval system. In
At the time of takeover, there were 119 trucks and 6 passenger coaches.
There was considerable demand for the conveyance of passengers. A steam packet service had been introduced in 1831 between Hayle and Bristol, and from 1841 it was possible to continue to London by the Great Western Railway. The Hayle company's Act authorised the conveyance of passengers, although this was not considered important at first, but in 1843 a passenger service was initiated between Hayle and Redruth, starting on 22 May 1843. There may have been unofficial usage of the mineral trains by passengers before that date.
The stations (except at the termini, these were probably little more than locations where the trains stopped) were at:
Note: Only Oakley refers to Hayle Riviere
At first the stopping place at Hayle was at Crotch's Hotel, near Foundry Square. Oakley states that Crotch "operated the railway in the early days"; this may mean that he provided the passenger vehicles, as Anthony reports that "two railway carriages, or 'Omnibusses' as they were called, were provided by 'an individual at Hayle and fitted up at his own expense' -- evidently Mr Crotch".
The passenger operations were a great success, and this encouraged the directors to run excursion trains on Whit Monday 1843, "to enable passengers to go and return at any time of the day, visiting the beautiful bay of St Ives, the sandy beaches of Gwithian and Hayle, and Gwennap, the noted scene of Wesley's labours". (John Wesley had preached at the location over a number of years in the previous century.)
By July 1844 there were three passenger services each way daily, taking an hour for the journey.
Bradshaw's Guide for 1850 shows the three return journeys mentioned above, leaving Redruth for Hayle at 9.00, 12.00 and 4.15 pm, and taking 50, 60 and 45 minutes respectively; the return journeys were at 10.00, 1.10 pm and 5.00 pm, taking 50, 50 and 60 minutes respectively. The distance is quoted as 12 miles, and the fare was 1s first class, 9d second class and 6d third class. "Omnibuses attend at Hayle and Redruth ... to convey passengers to Penzance or Truro, and for Falmouth." Bradshaw's Guide, 3rd mo (March) 1850, reprinted in facsimile by Middleton Press, Midhurst, 2012,
Anthony records that an accident took place on Whit Monday 1844. A train was conveying passengers from Hayle to Redruth for a religious service at Gwennap Pit. "It was about eleven o'clock in the morning when the engine and the first three coaches of the train were successfully hauled to the top of the Angarrack incline. When the second part of the train was about half way up, the wire rope broke, and to the horror of the unfortunate passengers, the trucks began to run back, slowly at first, and then increasing to an alarming speed. A number of passengers jumped out and were injured, but those who stayed on board, ended up, shaken but safe, back at Hayle."
A similar accident took place in 1846, when a coupling broke on a heavily loaded passenger train. A six wagon passenger train was ascending the incline, although normal practice was to limit these "trains" to four. The incline was operated on the counterbalance principle, and when the counterbalance reached the lower end of its travel, not all of the long train was safely above the summit. A secondary stationary steam engine was put in gear to assist the completion of the ascent, and in doing so there was a sudden jerk, causing the couplings behind the second wagon to break. Four carriages with 130 people on board ran away down the incline; several persons jumped off and two were seriously injured, but the runaway vehicles came to a stand at Hayle bridge, about two miles away. West Briton and Cornwall Advertiser (newspaper), 5 June 1846, online at [3] West Cornwall Gazette, 26 May 1846 and 5 June 1846, quoted in Bodman; this may be a typographical error for the Royal Cornwall Gazette
The West Cornwall Railway got an Act of Parliament on 3 August 1846, and the powers included the purchase of the Hayle Railway and adoption of most of its alignment. The actual purchase took effect on 3 November 1846.
The West Cornwall Company decided to improve the Hayle Railway main line, altering its alignment from Hayle to the south of Copperhouse Pool, converging with the old main line at Trenawin, so avoiding the Angarrack inclined plane. At Penponds, the inclined plane was avoided by the construction of a new timber viaduct 693 feet long at a higher level over the valley there, enabling easing of the gradient.Brunel's Timber Bridges and Viaducts, Lewis, Brian, Ian Allan Publishing, 2007, The stations at Hayle and Redruth were relocated on the respective new sections of West Cornwall route.
The new owner closed the Hayle Railway network on 16 February 1852 to enable conversion work to take place, and it reopened on 11 March 1852 as part of a new Penzance to Redruth line, using the Hayle Railway terminus at Redruth. The old Angarrack alignment was abandoned east of Phillack, and the old Penponds alignment was abandoned. The Tresavean and Portreath branches continued in operation under the new owner.
The West Cornwall Railway opened its main line east of Redruth (with a new station there) ceremonially on 25 August 1852, and the old Hayle Railway station at Redruth was reduced to a goods station.
Portreath branch
Tresavean branch
Inclines
Operations
Rolling stock
> £250 £350 £500 £1,340
Passenger business
Accidents
"On Friday afternoon last, as the second afternoon down train from Redruth, laden with ore and passengers, reached the branch line which leads to the north quays of Messrs. SANDYS, CARNE, and VIVIAN, Hayle, a tremendous crash took place. The rail at that part of the line being under alteration, the sleepers were bared, and the rail temporarily laid on them. Before the train arrived at the branch line, the passenger carriages were, as usual, cast off for the terminus, and following the train by the given impetus. The engine proceeded on with the rest of the train to the diverging line, and when it reached the place under alteration, the rail slipped off the sleepers, and the foremost carriage was thrown off, turned upside down, and dashed to atoms. The second carriage was piled on the first and destroyed, and the third on the second. The fourth was brought up by the third, and the rest of the train by the large granite sleepers, the whole having been forced off the rail. By that time the passenger carriages ran on and were brought up against the engine. We rejoice to state that only a few persons were slightly bruised and frightened. When the train reached that place, some one of the train generally runs forward on the carriages to the foremost carriage. Fortunately, in this instance, he had only got so far as the last but one; when he was hurled on the cliff uninjured. Had he been in the foremost carriage, he would have been crushed to death. If some one had dragged the passenger carriages, that collision might have been prevented. Each carriage contained three and a half tons of ore, and although no ore was lost (being in sacks), the damage is estimated at L100."The West Briton Newspaper, 8 September 1843, on line at http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~wbritonad/cornwall/1843/misc/sep.html
Purchase by the West Cornwall Railway
See also
External links
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