
| Romney, Hythe and Dymchurch Railway | |
'Northern Chief' at New Romney |
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| Info | |
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| Type | Light railway |
| Locale | Kent |
| Operation | |
| Opened | 1927 |
| Operator(s) | Romney, Hythe and Dymchurch Railway Co. |
| Technical | |
| Line length | 13½ miles |
| Gauge | 15 inch |
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Legend
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The Romney, Hythe & Dymchurch Railway is a 15 in (381 mm) gauge light railway in Kent, England. The 13½ mile (23 km) line runs from the Cinque Port of Hythe via Dymchurch, St. Mary's Bay, New Romney and Romney Sands to Dungeness, close to Dungeness power station and Dungeness lighthouse.
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Constructed during the 1920s and opened on 16 July 1927, the Romney, Hythe and Dymchurch Railway was the dream of millionaire racing drivers Captain J.E.P. Howey and Count Louis Zborowski. Zborowski was killed in a motor racing accident at Monza before the Romney Marsh site was chosen, and Howey continued the project alone.
Mountain Class 'Hercules' hauled the inaugural train from Hythe to New Romney with guests including the mayors of the two towns, and General Sir Ivor Maxse.
Howey was not happy with just eight miles from New Romney to Hythe and he extended 5½ miles from New Romney to Dungeness. This section was originally double track, but is now single due to damage during World War II, when the line was taken over by the military. After the war the line re-opened between Hythe and New Romney in 1946, with the singled New Romney to Dungeness section reopened in 1947 by Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy.
As well as a tourist attraction, this railway is a service between the small towns and villages between Hythe and Dungeness and is under contract to the local council to transport children to and from Marsh Academy in New Romney.
All 10 original locomotives remain in service, covering thousands of miles each year. The fleet, already one of the largest of any 15-inch railway in Britain, was expanded in 1976 with German-built locomotive no.11 'Black Prince' (formerly 'Fleißiges Lieschen' = 'Busy Lizzy'). The RH&DR is still the only user of the 4-8-2 "Mountain" locomotive in the UK, with No. 6 'Samson' and No. 5 'Hercules' in regular service. Two diesels, No. 12 'John Southland' and No. 14 (Nameless - later 'Captain Howey'), were constructed in the 1980s.
The line carries 100,000 passengers each year.
The railway celebrated its 80th birthday in 2007 with a week of celebrations including reconstructions of scenes on the railway over the previous eight decades.
From 1926 to 1978, the RH&DR held the title of the "Smallest public railway in the world" (in terms of track gauge). The title was lost to the 12¼-inch (311mm) gauge Réseau Guerlédan in France in 1978[1] and regained from 1979, when the Réseau Guerlédan closed, until 1982, when the 10¼ inch (260mm) gauge Wells and Walsingham Light Railway opened.
The railway was featured in an episode of the BBC series The Inspector Lynley Mysteries.
Stations in full or limited use
Those shown as 'halt' never had a higher status; some full stations below became halts prior to closure.
These stations have never existed but were at one time proposed by the directors.
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Including engines serviceable, under overhaul, awaiting overhaul, or reserved to shunting or engineering duties.[3]
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No 5 'Hercules' at New Romney |
No 14 'Captain Howey' at New Romney |
No 1 'Green Goddess' passes Hythe signal box with an evening departure for New Romney |
No 7 'Typhoon' at Saint Mary's Bay station |
| No. | Name | Livery | Locomotive type | Wheel arr. |
Builder | Year built | Whistle | In Traffic? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Green Goddess | LNER Apple Green | Steam | 4-6-2 | Davey Paxman & Co. | 1925 | Small Chime | Undergoing Heavy Overhaul - Available from March 2009 |
| 2 | Northern Chief | Brunswick Green | Steam | 4-6-2 | Davey Paxman & Co. | 1925 | Bulleid | Yes |
| 3 | Southern Maid | RH&DR Green | Steam | 4-6-2 | Davey Paxman & Co. | 1926 | Ex Isle of Wight Hooter | Yes |
| 4 | The Bug | Brighton Umber | Steam | 0-4-0 | Krauss, Munich | 1926 | RHDR | Yes |
| 5 | Hercules | Midland Rly Maroon | Steam | 4-8-2 | Davey Paxman & Co. | 1927 | GWR Hall | Yes - New Tender awaiting painting |
| 6 | Samson | Great Eastern Blue | Steam | 4-8-2 | Davey Paxman & Co. | 1927 | US Crosby | Yes - New Tender |
| 7 | Typhoon | British Racing Green | Steam | 4-6-2 | Davey Paxman & Co. | 1927 | BR Duke of Gloucester | Yes |
| 8 | Hurricane | LNER Garter Blue | Steam | 4-6-2 | Davey Paxman & Co. | 1927 | Chrome LNER A4 | Yes |
| 9 | Winston Churchill | Maroon | Steam | 4-6-2 | Yorkshire Engine Company | 1931 | Crosby | Limited Mileage |
| 10 | Dr Syn | Black, White Detailing | Steam | 4-6-2 | Yorkshire Engine Company | 1931 | LNER Commonwealth of Australia | Undergoing Overhaul at New Romney Sheds |
| 11 | Black Prince | DB Black/Red | Steam | 4-6-2 | Krupp, Essen | 1937 | South African Chime | Yes - New tender now in place |
| 12 | John Southland | Black/Yellow | Diesel-Mechanical | Bo-Bo | TMA Engineering | 1983 | 2-Tone Horn (AirChime, Ltd) | Yes |
| 14 | Captain Howey | Blue/Silver | Diesel-Mechanical | Bo-Bo | TMA Engineering | 1989 | 2-Tone Horn (AirChime, Ltd) | Yes - Limited Mileage as of 2009 |
| PW1 | Simplex | Green | Diesel-Mechanical | 0-4-0 | Motor Rail Ltd. (Simplex Wks) | 1938 | None | Shunting |
| PW2 | Scooter | Yellow | Petrol-Mechanical | 0-4-0 | RHDR | 1949 | Ex Fire Engine | Shunting |
| PW3 | Red Gauntlet | Red | Petrol-Mechanical | 0-4-0 | Jacot / Keef | 1975 | Halfords | Shunting |
Notes on locomotive names:
Including engines sold, scrapped, failed in trials, or otherwise withdrawn.
ALL were internal combustion locomotives.
| 'Name' or designation | Wheel arrangement |
Builder | Year built | Year withdrawn | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Theakston Fordson | Bo'2' | Theakston | 1928 | c1935 | Very early experiment with internal combustion. Large passenger locomotive with fully enclosed 2-seater cab. Operated on winter passenger services. Judged too slow, and ugly in appearance. |
| Super-Scooter (JAP Scooter) | Ultra-light 4-wheel scooter |
RHDR | c1929 | c1945 | Light, open-cabbed, track inspection scooter, powered by 6hp JAP motorcycle engine. Capt Howey recorded New Romney to Hythe in 8 minutes, light engine.[4] |
| War Department Locomotive | 4-wheel scooter | War Department | 1929 | c1950 | The only privately-owned locomotive to have seen long-term service on the RHDR. Stabled at Hythe engine shed, worked the War Department branch line. Remained in RHDR service briefly after the branch line closed. |
| Rolls Royce Locomotive | Bo'2' | RHDR | c1932 | 1961 | Built out of Capt Howey's Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost motor car. Large, fully-enclosed cab, 2-seater, express passenger engine. Fully rebuilt in 1946 with sleek body-work. Re-engined (with Ford engine) in 1947. Tested at 60mph with empty coaches. |
| Motor Cycle Scooter | Ultra-light 4-wheel scooter |
RHDR | c1949 | c1952 | Light, open-cabbed, track inspection scooter, powered by motorcycle engine. The only RHDR locomotive ever built of which no known photograph exists. Its existence is attested by former railway staff. |
| 'Royal Anchor' | B-B | Charles Lane of Liphook | 1956 | 1956 | Diesel Hydraulic double-ended (two cabs) locomotive, built for RHDR service (as the Rolls Royce locomotive was near withdrawal). Royal Anchor failed trials due to lack of power. The project was abandoned and the locomotive returned to Liphook. It operated on the R&ER 1960-1977, and then at Carnforth 1977–2000. It is now operating privately in the USA. |
Green Goddess' bogie tender was designed and built at Bulleid's suggestion at the Southern Railway's Ashford works in 1947.
The railway was conceived and constructed as a public service, not as a tourist attraction. The railway now relies on tourist trade, but it is not a 'tourist railway' or a 'preserved railway', in the sense that it was built to provide public transport and has continued to do so.
School children are transported under contract to Kent County Council to The Marsh Academy (known as Southlands Comprehensive School until 2007); this service is provided all year during term. Local residents are transported to shopping centres and the railway has operated 'shoppers specials'. Holiday camp trains have operated with camps at Romney Sands and St Mary's Bay. Charters are operated. During the second world war the railway was operated by Somerset Light Infantry as a military railway and there was extensive transport of soldiers on troop trains.
The RH&DR operates 20-seat and 16-seat open and closed coaches. Over 80 years the coach livery changed from green and cream to brown and cream in the 1970s and 1980s, then red and cream in the late 1980s for 15 years. From 2000, a new policy has rakes of coaches (trains of around a dozen coaches) have been painted in individual liveries. Hence there are now green, blue, crimson and preserved teak coaches.
In addition to the main stock, the heritage set is made up of the preserved Clayton Pullman (the last remaining example of a set of 1930s vehicles of superior comfort and design), a preserved 1950s 12-seat coach named 'Ruth', the Royal Saloon (used by Queen Elizabeth II and members of her family), and the licensed bar car (an observation coach with a bar) named 'Gladys'. There are also the disabled access vehicles, 601 'Elsie', 602 'Winn', 603 'May' and combined driving trailer/disabled access vehicle 'Marjorie'.
From the outset, the railway's owners and designers envisaged freight services. Two of the original locomotives (No 5 'Hercules' and No 6 'Samson') were built to the 'mountain' wheel arrangement (4-8-2), of which they are believed to be unique in British history, because this type despite lacking speed can haul heavy freight. In practice the freight services never arose, although freight service has featured in the railway's history.
In 1937 a short branch line was laid to the east of the mainline near Dungeness, running for over a quarter of a mile to the beach. Platform 1 at Hythe was extended beside the station buildings and out to the front of the station. This joint provision was to allow transport of fish from Dungeness to Hythe and there to transfer it to road. The company had four-wheel fish wagons, stencilled "Fish Only", but the service was developed from 1937 following closure of the South Eastern Railway's Dungeness line that year. The fish trade developed in a small way and was withdrawn. Parts of the fish branch line are still in place on Dungeness beach, in use by fishermen to transport fish many years after the service was withdrawn.
The most successful freight service was the uncrushed ballast service. Following withdrawal of War Office operations on the War Department Branch Line, the railway utilised the infrastructure to operate ballast trains. In 1937 a subsidiary ballast company was formed. Tipper wagons were loaded with shingle and transported along the branch line, and then up the main line to Hythe, often lying over in the sidings at Dymchurch to prevent delay to passenger trains using the same tracks. At Hythe the wagons were hauled mechanically up a ramp built on concrete pillars, and their contents tipped into lorries. In 1951, after 14 years, the subsidiary company switched to entirely road transport and the company closed both the branch and the freight incline at Hythe; the concrete pillars were still visible at Hythe until the early 1980s.
The railway is licensed by the Post Office for rail postal services, and is entitled to issue postage stamps. A number of first day covers have been issued. A four-wheel secure postage wagon was constructed.
The railway operates a casual parcels service. Parcels handed in to one station will be delivered to another for collection. This is the only remnant of freight service, although from time to time the railway has a temporary freight contract, such as that in 1975 for transport of drainage pipes
The railway operates its own engineering and permanent way trains, which form the majority of non-passenger services.
The railway has permanent way stock, examples of which include the platelayers' mess coach, assorted tipper wagons (largely left over from ballast operations), secure tool trucks, and flat wagons. There are also four-wheel wagons, both box vans and open trucks, including vehicles surviving from the fish trains. There are also tank wagons, used primarily for spraying weed killer on tracks.
In the late 1920s, shortly after the line opened, there were proposals for an extension from Hythe to Sandling (2 miles away) to meet mainline services at Sandling Junction. It was with this idea that the 4-8-2 locomotives Hercules and Samson were ordered.[5] The project, which involved steep inclines, was abandoned.
In the 1980s, the directors returned to the proposals and had detailed surveys drawn. Again, consideration was given to motive power, with new locomotives discussed. Although still called the "Sandling Extension", the 1980s plan was for a single-track line from the Willop, 2 miles short of Hythe, to provide a more gentle route to Sandling Park and on to Sandling Junction, and would therefore have been a branch line rather than an actual extension to the existing mainline. Once again, the project was abandoned.
In 2003, the small, unbraked, original Greenly tenders were withdrawn from mainline service due to concerns over safety and coal/water capacity. They were the only two of this design running. Both were pulled behind the two mountain locomotives, one of which was out of service after the Burmarsh Road level crossing incident; the other soon to be withdrawn from service for an intermediate overhaul. Once both locomotives were back in service, the railway was faced with a tender shortage and 'Samson' was kept from mainline service while 'Hercules' has been running with the tender from 'Green Goddess' during its storage for overhaul. During the 2007 season 'Samson' was in service using the tender from 'Hurricane' while she was being overhauled. As of 2008, 'Samson' is now fitted with one of the new tenders finished in her Great Eastern livery. The tender for Hercules is still awaiting painting.
In 2008, the tender of Black Prince was made redundant due to its low coal/water capacity and the fact that it was not braked. The new tender has extra capacity for coal and water and has kept the original bogies but have been modified to accept vacuum brakes. The new tender was tested at New Romney on the 27th of September and on the 4th of October, Black Prince completed a 28 mile non-stop without the aid of another tender, a first for this Locomotive.
A serious accident occurred on August 3, 2003, when a car drove into locomotive number 5 Hercules at an ungated level crossing.[6] The train driver, 31-year-old Kevin Crouch, died. Some passengers were treated for shock and minor injuries. The car driver, a woman with a baby, had ignored or failed to see the warning lights. The woman and her baby were taken to hospital but were not badly hurt. The owners of the line and the Health and Safety Executive promised an investigation. The woman was arrested on suspicion of causing death by dangerous driving, but was found guilty on a lesser charge of careless driving.[7]
Another crash between a number 8 Hurricane and a car at a level crossing occurred on 10 July 2005. The driver of the train, Suzanne Martin, wife of the railway's general manager, Danny Martin, was killed.[8] The car driver, a 20-year-old man, had ignored or failed to see warning lights. The two crossings, at Burmarsh Road and Battery Road - and a third at Botolph's Bridge Road - have been fitted with lifting half-barriers, each costing around £90,000.[8] The remaining 10 crossings may also be fitted with barriers. As of August 2007, the two crossings involved in the two accidents, and a third at Botolphs Bridge Road have now been fitted with the new barriers.
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