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Cheltenham and Great Western Union Railway

The Cheltenham and Great Western Union Railway was a broad gauge railway that linked the Great Western Railway at Swindon, Wiltshire, with Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England. Much of the route is still in regular use today (see Golden Valley Line). The line between Cheltenham and Gloucester was worked jointly with the Birmingham and Gloucester Railway, necessitating mixed gauge track and shared maintenance. The line between Gloucester and Standish Junction was owned by the C&GWUR, but the Bristol and Gloucester Railway had running rights over it. The Bristol and Gloucester Railway and standard gauge Birmingham and Gloucester Railway then merged, and were then quickly taken over by the Midland Railway. The Bristol & Gloucester line was soon converted to standard gauge to allow through trains from Bristol to Birmingham, thus extending the mixed gauge as far south as Standish. Despite this joint working, the stations were generally independent with the individual railways providing duplicate facilities at Cheltenham, Gloucester and Stonehouse.

Chronology

  • 1836 Authorised by Act of Parliament
  • 1840 Railway opened from Cheltenham to Gloucester (only for Birmingham & Gloucester Railway trains)
  • 1841 Railway opened from Swindon to Cirencester
  • 1843 Railway company sold to Great Western Railway
  • 1845 Railway opened from Kemble to Gloucester leaving Cirencester on a short branch
  • 1847 Independent station opened at Cheltenham
  • 1872 Line converted from broad gauge to standard gauge, and mixed gauge lines around Gloucester removed
  • 1882 Kemble station opens at Kemble Junction after local landowner finally gives permission for a station
  • 1903 Introduction of steam railmotor local passenger services in the Stroud Valley, resulting in the opening of 7 small halts to boost traffic
  • 1964 Stroud Valley local services withdrawn and all the halts and some of the intermediate stations closed. Only Kemble, Stroud and Stonehouse remain.
  • 1965 Line from Kemble to Cirencester closed
  • 1966 Cheltenham St James closed as London services transferred back to Cheltenham Lansdown (now Cheltenham Spa).

Stations

Includes stations opened by the Great Western Railway and BR Between Stonehouse (Burdett Road) station and Gloucester trains on this line passed next to the station at Haresfield, but the station only served Midland Railway trains running between Bristol and Gloucester, and there were no platforms facing the C&GWUR (Great Western) tracks. The Midland had its own station at Stonehouse, though this shut in 1965.

References

  • {{Cite book
| author = Mike Oakley | title = Gloucestershire Railway Stations | edition = 2003 | publisher = Dovecote Press, Wimborne | ISBN = 1-904349-24-2 | page = pp62 }}
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This article based upon the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheltenham_and_Great_Western_Union_Railway, the free encyclopaedia Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Further informations available on the list of authors and history: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cheltenham_and_Great_Western_Union_Railway&action=history
presented by: Ingo Malchow, Mirower Bogen 22, 17235 Neustrelitz, Germany