Kelso Branch

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Overview
LocaleNorthumberland
SuccessorNorth Eastern Railway
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm)
Route map

Legend
Kelso Line
to St Boswells
Kelso
Sprouston
Carham
Scotland
England
border
Sunilaws
Coldstream
Twizell
Norham
Velvet Hall
Tweedmouth
East Coast Main Line
to London │ to Edinburgh

The Kelso Branch was a 23.5 miles (37.8 km) twin track branch railway in Northumberland, England and Roxburghshire, Scotland that ran from Tweedmouth on the East Coast Main Line via seven intermediate stations to Kelso.

History[]

Opening[]

Authorised in 1845 the Kelso Branch was built by the North Eastern Railway to link the communities of the Tweed valley with the fledgling railway network at Tweedmouth. The line opened in two stages, to Sprouston on 27 July 1849, and to Kelso on 1 June 1851.

Alnwick Branch[]

In 1887 the was opened linking to the line just to the west of Coldstream station.

The Tweedmouth-Kelso-St Boswells line provided part of an alternative route when the East Coast Main Line was blocked north of Tweedmouth most notably when in August 1948 when the main line was closed for three months.[1]

Closure[]

In 1955 all the stations on the line apart from Coldstream and Norham closed to passengers, and on 15 June 1964 passenger services were withdrawn along the whole line. Freight services between Tweedmouth and Kelso followed suit the next year on 29 March with the complete closure of the line. The Kelso to St Boswells section closed to all traffic on 30 March 1968. Only one track of the double line between Kelso and Tweedmouth was initially lifted, but all track was removed in 1969 from St Boswells through to Tweedmouth following closure of the freight service to Kelso and complete closure of the Waverley Route.

See also[]

The Kelso and Jedburgh railway branch lines

References[]

  1. ^ "Tweedmouth to Kelso Branch" John Speller's Web Pages; Retrieved 13 February 2017

External links[]


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