An East and West Junction and Stratford-On-Avon, Towcester and Midland Junction Railways bridge weight notice, cast iron, 16½"x11¾", the front repainted. As is usual, the company title has been altered to Stratford-On-Avon and Midland Junction…Continue
Started by Graham Ward. Last reply by Russ Firth yesterday.
Stratford & Midland Junction Railway bridge number 42. This is a very rare bridge number, which hardly ever comes up for sale! 28cm x 20cm. It was from a cattle creep between Byfield & Morton Pinkney. £500. PayPal payment required and I can…Continue
Started by Russ Firth on Wednesday.
A couple of items recently up for auction.GREAT CENTRAL RAILWAY COMPANY AND STRATFORD-UPON-AVON & MIDLAND JUNCTION: 6…Continue
Started by Graham Ward May 21.
I hear there has been more building at the station site in Towcester.Anyone know what they've dug up?…Continue
Tags: Towcester
Started by Andy Thompson. Last reply by John Evans Apr 19.
Hello, I'm a new member and I've searched through the articles and can't find anything specific to my answer/ question. Can anyone help?
this is a still from my Northamptonshire video* presentation and I'm trying to work out what the loop is in the elbow of the two routes departing eastwards from Towcester. Railmaponline suggests it is a SMJR transfer loop so trains could (in theory) travel from Bedford to Northampton avoiding Towcester but using SMJR metals. Regardless of this unlikely route, can anyone support this theory or, like some of the older Library of Scotland maps, does it suggest that it's a brick/lime kiln tramway that existed before the 1892 Towcester to Olney branch was completed?
opening and closing dates and the purpose of the line is what I'm trying to obtain
Thank you in advance
railmaponline%20Towcester%20loop.png
Brick%20Works%20Easton%20Neston.png
* I publish videos under the name Matt Davis - Beechings Ghosts http://www.youtube.com/@MattDavis_BeechingsGhosts
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Essentially you are correct about it being a relic of the tramway that connected to the Towcester - Blisworth line, but it is a bit more complex than that. A connection was put in from Lloyds Sidings on the Blisworth route about a mile north of Towcester to serve the nearby new ironworks in 1873 - that project didn't last long but the Easton Neston site then became brickworks.. When the new line from Towcester to Ravenstone was planned there were several spurs and connections involved, which would have included a triangular junction with the Blisworth line in the same place. A bit of the old tramway would also have been upgraded to form part of the new route. In the end it was all simplified and just a connection put in to serve the brickworks from the Ravenstone line - the old connection to the Blisworth line was abandoned. The brickworks lingered on into the 1920s. That's the simple version! This plan sort of explains it - this is what might have happened but the junction for Ravenstone was put in nearer to Towcester station instead, so cutting out most of 'Ry1' and all of 'Ry2' and 'Ry3'. The new siding was where it says 'Brick kilns'
Thank you, muchly.
This all makes sense and solves that problem! Has anyone done a reasonable video on the history of the railway? I may start one of my own on the SMJR
BW
Matt
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