ENG_094 Simplex Diesels - West Lancashire Light Railway
Line up of Motor Rail Simplex diesels at the West Lancashire Light Railway. October 04, 1982.
Camera: Contax 139 + Carl Zeiss f2.8 28mm Distagon Lens.
For more 35mm Archive images of the West Lancashire Light Railway please click here: www.jhluxton.com/The-35mm-Film-Archive/Railways/West-Lanc...
The West Lancashire Light Railway (WLLR) is a 2 ft (610 mm) narrow gauge railway that operates at Hesketh Bank, located between Preston and Southport.
The distance between the stations on the railway is 430 yards (393 m), though track extends eastwards beyond Delph station on ledge above the old clay pit which is too narrow to contain a run round loop.
An extension of up to 435 metres (1,427 ft), running along the north bank of the fishing lake has been proposed. The railway has seven steam locomotives, three of which are in operating condition; two are currently being rebuilt and another is on static display. There are also two electric locomotives and many IC locomotives.
The West Lancashire Light Railway was started in 1967, by six railway enthusiast schoolboys from the Hesketh Bank area. They wanted to save the narrow gauge railway equipment which was disappearing from local industries. They leased a strip of land above the clay pits at Alty's Brickworks and started laying track using rails from the former clay tramways and rough timbers as sleepers.
Two Ruston and Hornsby diesel locomotives were acquired from Burscough Brick & Tile Co. one with a 13 hp engine, the other a 20 hp model, they were respectively named CLWYD and TAWD. CLYWD was the first locomotive to run on the railway in 1969.
These two locos were soon joined by more industrial diesels and the first home-built items of rolling stock.
In 1970, the railway acquired an incomplete set of parts of 1903 Quarry Hunslet steam locomotive IRISH MAIL, from Dinorwic slate quarry in North Wales. The major missing component was a boiler. Members of the WLLR retrieved the remains of Quarry Hunslet ALICE from one of the upper levels of Dinorwic.
ALICE's boiler was retained at the WLLR and the rest sold to the Bala Lake Railway.
Over the next decade the railway re-assembled IRISH MAIL and the locomotive was steamed for the first time in 1980.
The running line slowly grew in length until it ran from Becconsall to a station known as Asland, which is no longer the far terminus of the line. The line in its present form runs from Becconsall to Delph, with the original track to Asland running on from Delph but not suitable for running engines.
(Notes from Wikipedia)
ENG_094 Simplex Diesels - West Lancashire Light Railway
Line up of Motor Rail Simplex diesels at the West Lancashire Light Railway. October 04, 1982.
Camera: Contax 139 + Carl Zeiss f2.8 28mm Distagon Lens.
For more 35mm Archive images of the West Lancashire Light Railway please click here: www.jhluxton.com/The-35mm-Film-Archive/Railways/West-Lanc...
The West Lancashire Light Railway (WLLR) is a 2 ft (610 mm) narrow gauge railway that operates at Hesketh Bank, located between Preston and Southport.
The distance between the stations on the railway is 430 yards (393 m), though track extends eastwards beyond Delph station on ledge above the old clay pit which is too narrow to contain a run round loop.
An extension of up to 435 metres (1,427 ft), running along the north bank of the fishing lake has been proposed. The railway has seven steam locomotives, three of which are in operating condition; two are currently being rebuilt and another is on static display. There are also two electric locomotives and many IC locomotives.
The West Lancashire Light Railway was started in 1967, by six railway enthusiast schoolboys from the Hesketh Bank area. They wanted to save the narrow gauge railway equipment which was disappearing from local industries. They leased a strip of land above the clay pits at Alty's Brickworks and started laying track using rails from the former clay tramways and rough timbers as sleepers.
Two Ruston and Hornsby diesel locomotives were acquired from Burscough Brick & Tile Co. one with a 13 hp engine, the other a 20 hp model, they were respectively named CLWYD and TAWD. CLYWD was the first locomotive to run on the railway in 1969.
These two locos were soon joined by more industrial diesels and the first home-built items of rolling stock.
In 1970, the railway acquired an incomplete set of parts of 1903 Quarry Hunslet steam locomotive IRISH MAIL, from Dinorwic slate quarry in North Wales. The major missing component was a boiler. Members of the WLLR retrieved the remains of Quarry Hunslet ALICE from one of the upper levels of Dinorwic.
ALICE's boiler was retained at the WLLR and the rest sold to the Bala Lake Railway.
Over the next decade the railway re-assembled IRISH MAIL and the locomotive was steamed for the first time in 1980.
The running line slowly grew in length until it ran from Becconsall to a station known as Asland, which is no longer the far terminus of the line. The line in its present form runs from Becconsall to Delph, with the original track to Asland running on from Delph but not suitable for running engines.
(Notes from Wikipedia)