Timetables in commercial service

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This page provides details of the timetables in commercial service on the Severn Valley and Tenbury branches between opening in the 1860s and closure in the 1960s.

Introduction

At opening on 1 February 1862 all services on the Severn Valley Branch ran 'north south' between Hartlebury and Shrewsbury. There were 12 intermediate stations with just five crossing points, at Stourport, Bewdley, Bridgnorth, Ironbridge and Buildwas.

The main developments on the Branch which affected timetables over the years were:

  • 1864: The Tenbury and Bewdley Railway opened, with Bewdley forming its eastern terminus.
  • 1868: Eardington Station opened.
  • 1878: The Kidderminster Loop Line opened, resulting in Bewdley becoming a junction station.
  • 1883: Passing loops and second platforms were added at Arley and Hampton Loade.
  • 1894: Passing loops and second platforms were added at Cressage and Berrington.
  • 1896: A passing loop and second platform was added at Coalport.
  • 1905 Halts were opened on the Loop Line at Rifle Range Halt (closed again in 1920) and Foley Park
  • 1930s: In an attempt to increase local custom, halts were opened at Burlish, Northwood, Jackfield and Cound. Alveley Halt was also opened to serve Alveley Colliery, although it was not shown in public timetables.

After the Loop Line opened in 1878, services continued to run entirely 'north south' on the Severn Valley Branch and 'east west' between Kidderminster and the Tenbury Branch until the turn of the century. The early 1900s saw the introduction of local services between Kidderminster and Bewdley, and Bewdley and Hartlebury; at the same time some Shrewsbury services began to run to Kidderminster.

Many services on the Severn Valley Branch started and terminated at Worcester, particularly in the early years. However for consistency, journey times and speeds referred to below are those on the Branch itself between Hartlebury and Shrewsbury, unless otherwise stated. References to 'Weekday services' include Saturdays.

1860s

Main article: Timetable: Shrewsbury to Worcester 1862
1862 Timetable

At opening on 1 February 1862, the Severn Valley Railway was operated under lease by the West Midland Railway (WMR). Their first timetable provided for three trains per day between Shrewsbury and Worcester on weekdays, together with a departure from Bridgnorth to Shrewsbury in the morning, returning in the late afternoon (no source has been found to confirm whether the stock was stabled at Bridgnorth overnight or whether an ECSEmpty Coaching Stock move was involved). Journey times between Hartlebury and Shrewsbury averaged 2h 07min for the 40 miles, or less than 19 mph. The first departure of the day from Worcester and Shrewsbury was deemed to be a 'Parliamentary' train (see below).

There was no Sunday service during February 1862,[1] but thereafter one train ran from Worcester to Shrewsbury in the morning, returning in the late afternoon.[2]

Main article: Timetable: Severn Valley and Tenbury Branch 1866

On 1 August 1863 the WMR was amalgamated with the GWRGreat Western Railway, who took over the operation of the Severn Valley Branch. They also operated the Tenbury and Bewdley Railway from its opening on 13 August 1864. On the Severn Valley Branch in 1866, four through trains ran each way between Shrewsbury and Worcester on weekdays, with average journey times between 1h 40min and 2h 5 min. The fastest journey time, the 2:45pm from Hartlebury, was achieved by by means of Arley, Highley, Linley, Cressage and Berrington being treated as request stops.

On the Tenbury Branch, three trains per day ran between Woofferton and Bewdley on weekdays only.

'Parliamentary' trains

William Gladstone's Railway Regulation Act 1844 provided for a basic minimum standard of railway travel by compelling railway companies to provide at least one train per day in each direction over their lines, stopping at all stations, at an average speed of not less than 12 mph including stops, at a fare not exceeding a penny per mile in carriages adequately protected from the weather. These became known as 'Parliamentary trains' or 'Cheap trains'. For some time they were unpopular with the railway companies who often arranged for them to run at inconvenient times of day.

References to these 'Parliamentary' trains could often be found in published timetables. For example the 1862 timetable published in the Shrewsbury Chronicle showed the class of carriages on each train, normally either "1 & 2" or "1,2,3". However first departure from Shrewsbury and Worcester is shown as "1,2,P". The timetables for 1866, 1877 and 1887 all have trains labelled "gov" (presumably standing for "Government") which met the requirement of stopping at all stations.

By 1875 the Midland Railway had upgraded the standard of third class and abolished second class,[note 1] with other companies soon following suit. Thereafter there was no longer a need to run 'Parliamentary' or 'Cheap' trains, although for many years railwaymen would, by tradition, continue refer to particular services in those terms. During the notorious Quintinshill accident in 1912, Signalman Meakin, realising the cause of the first collision, exclaimed to his colleague "You've got the 'Parly' standing there."

See also

Notes

  1. The law required third class accommodation to be provided, which brought about the oddity of carriages having first and third but no second class. This persisted until third class was rebranded by BRBritish Rail or British Railways as 'second' in 1956, and subsequently as 'standard'.

References

  1. Timetable extract
  2. Nabarro (1971) p. 67.

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