Penmanshiel Tunnel

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Penmanshiel Tunnel
Overview
LocationScottish Borders
Coordinates55°53′47″N 2°19′39″W / 55.8965°N 2.3274°W / 55.8965; -2.3274Coordinates: 55°53′47″N 2°19′39″W / 55.8965°N 2.3274°W / 55.8965; -2.3274
StatusDisused (abandoned)
Operation
Opened1846
Closed17 March 1979
OwnerNorth British Railway
London & North Eastern Railway
British Rail
Technical
Line length244 m (267 yd)
No. of tracks2
Track gaugeStandard gauge
ElectrifiedNo
Operating speed50 mph (80 km/h)

Penmanshiel Tunnel is a now-disused railway tunnel near Grantshouse, Berwickshire, in the Scottish Borders region of Scotland. It was formerly part of the East Coast Main Line between Berwick-upon-Tweed and Dunbar.

The tunnel was constructed during 1845–46 by the contractors Ross and Mitchell, to a design by John Miller, who was the Engineer to the North British Railway.[1] Upon completion, the tunnel was inspected by the Inspector-General of Railways, Major-General Charles Pasley, on behalf of the Board of Trade.[1]

The tunnel consisted of a single bore, 244 metres (267 yd) long, containing two running lines.

During its 134-year existence, the tunnel was the location of two incidents investigated by HM Railway Inspectorate. The first was in 1949, when a serious fire destroyed two carriages of a south-bound express from Edinburgh. Seven passengers were injured, but there were no deaths.[2]

The second incident occurred on 17 March 1979 when, during improvement works, a length of the tunnel collapsed. Two workmen were killed, and 13 others managed to escape. Later it was determined that the ground was not stable enough to excavate and rebuild the tunnel, so it was sealed up and a new alignment was made for the railway, in a cutting to the west of the hill.[1]

The tunnel was also affected by the August 1948 floods. The damage caused by these floods led to the abandonment of much of the railway network in the south east of Scotland.[3]

August 1948 floods[]

On 12 August 1948, 6.25 inches (160 mm) of rain fell in the area, the total for the week being 10.5 inches (265 mm).[3] Rain falling on the Lammermuir Hills surged into the Eye Water towards Reston, and the channel could not accommodate all of the water. The flood water then backed up the tunnel and flowed to sea in the opposite direction, towards Cockburnspath. The tunnel was flooded to within 2 ft (600 mm) of the crown of the portal.[4]

Train fire (1949)[]

On the evening of 23 June 1949 a fire broke out in the tenth coach of an express passenger train from Edinburgh to King's Cross, about 2+12 miles (4 km) beyond Cockburnspath. The train stopped somewhere near the tunnel, within one and a quarter minutes of the fire starting, but the fire spread rapidly and with such ferocity that, within seconds, the brake-composite carriage was engulfed and the fire had spread to the coach in front. Most passengers escaped by running to the guard's compartment or forwards along the corridor, but some were compelled to break the windows and jump down onto the track. One lady was seriously injured by doing this.[5]

The train crew reacted quickly to the incident. The two coaches behind the two ablaze were uncoupled and pushed back, leaving them isolated up the line. Having drawn forward and uncoupled the two burning vehicles, the driver proceeded with the front eight coaches to Grantshouse station.[5]

The cause of the fire was thought to be a cigarette end or lighted match dropped against a partition in the corridor. The cellulose lacquer covering the corridor walls was found to be highly flammable with a very fast flame spread.[2] It contained large amounts of nitrocellulose (68%).[6] Draughts of air from the open windows may have fanned the flames.[2]

Despite the noxious fumes and the severity of the blaze, which reduced the two carriages to their underframes, only seven passengers were injured, with no fatalities.[2]

Tunnel collapse (1979)[]

Location diagram for Penmanshiel Tunnel, near Grantshouse in Scotland

The next significant event to occur at the tunnel led to its abandonment.

Upgrading work[]

Work was being carried out to increase the internal dimension of the tunnel to allow 8 ft 6 in (2.59 m) high containers to travel through it on intermodal wagons. This was done by lowering the track, in a process involving removing the existing track and ballast, digging out the floor of the tunnel and then laying new track set on a concrete base.[1]

As the tunnel was on a very busy main line, and in order to minimise the disruption to passenger and freight services, it was decided that each of the two tracks through the tunnel would be renewed separately, with trains continuing to run on the adjacent open track.

Work was completed on the "Up" (southbound) track by 10 March 1979, and trains were then transferred to this track by the following day, to allow the "Down" (northbound) track to be modified.[1]

Tunnel collapse[]

At the time the tunnel collapsed there were a total of fifteen people and five items of plant inside. According to the Railway Inspectorate report, shortly before 3:45 a.m. on 17 March 1979,[7] the duty Railway Works Inspector noticed some small pieces of rock flaking away from the tunnel wall, approximately 90 metres (300 ft) from the southern portal. He decided that it would be wise to shore up the affected piece of the tunnel and was making his way towards the site office to arrange this when he heard the sound of the tunnel collapsing behind him.[1]

It is estimated that approximately 20 metres (66 ft) of the tunnel arch collapsed, with the resultant rock fall filling 30 metres (98 ft) of the tunnel from floor to roof and totally enveloping a dumper truck and a JCB, along with the two men operating them. The thirteen other people working inside the tunnel at the time of the collapse were able to escape successfully, but despite the efforts of rescuers (including a specialised mine rescue team) it was not possible to reach the two operators or to recover their bodies.[1]

Official report[]

An official HM Railway Inspectorate report[1] was prepared by Lieutenant Colonel I.K.A. McNaughton, who released it on 2 August 1983. The report concluded that it was impossible to be certain as to the cause of the collapse as access could not be gained to the collapsed portion of the tunnel, and also because investigations into the remaining tunnel structure made no significant findings.

However, geotechnical investigations of the area surrounding the tunnel found evidence suggesting fracturing of rock overlaying the tunnel and, in particular, an anticlinal structure of shattered and sheared rock intersecting the line of the tunnel in close proximity to the area of the collapse. This structure only became apparent during excavation of the cutting for the replacement alignment (discussed below), and it was considered "most unlikely" that the "extreme complexity" of the geology could ever have been appreciated by investigation of rock exposed in the tunnel or though other routine investigatory techniques.

The report accordingly concluded that the collapse was likely to be the result of degeneration of the fractured rock overlying the tunnel, which progressively increased the loading on the tunnel's brick arch ring in a way that could not adequately be distributed into the surrounding hillside. It was further noted that these conditions had quite possibly made the tunnel "dangerously unstable" for many years prior to the collapse, and that the collapse would likely have occurred at some time or another even had the enlargement works not been undertaken.

Finally the report stated that – as the conditions leading to the collapse could not reasonably be foreseen – there were no grounds for finding any individual responsible for the accident. Despite this the British Railways Board was charged in the High Court of Justiciary in Edinburgh with "having failed to ensure that persons in the tunnel were not exposed to the risk of personal injury by the collapse of part of the [tunnel] structure", to which the Board entered a guilty plea and was fined £10,000.[1]

Replacement works[]

After the collapse, it was originally the intention of British Rail to re-open the tunnel by removing the collapsed material and repairing the structure of the tunnel. Once the extent of the collapse became apparent, it was decided that this operation would be too difficult and dangerous, and that a more expedient and cost-effective option would be to construct a new alignment for the railway.[1]

This decision resulted in around 1 km (1,100 yd) of existing railway (including the tunnel itself) being abandoned and replaced by a new section of line constructed in open cut, somewhat to the west of the original course.[8] The operation to reopen the railway took five months of round-the-clock working.[8] The portals of the collapsed tunnel were sealed to prevent further access.

The contractor Sir Robert McAlpine & Sons Ltd started work on the new alignment on 7 May 1979, and it was completed on 20 August.[1][9]

During the closure, some trains from King's Cross terminated at Berwick, with onward services being provided by a fleet of buses, some towing trailers for luggage. The bus service went as far as Dunbar, where a railway shuttle took over between Dunbar and Edinburgh. Other InterCity services reached Edinburgh by diverting from the East Coast Main Line at Newcastle and travelling via Carlisle and Carstairs.[9]

Road diversion[]

As a result of the work to re-align the railway line, it was also necessary to alter the course of the A1 trunk road. A map of the area, showing both the railway and the road diverting to the west is available.[10]

Visible remains[]

The memorial obelisk above the site of the collapse

Since the tunnel was closed, the landscape has gradually 'returned to nature'. The southern portal has been covered by the hillside, and the only clues to the route of the old line are a dry-stone wall marking the railway boundary, and a disused bridge that used to carry the A1 main road over the line.

Memorial[]

As the collapsed portion of the tunnel was never excavated, the site became the final resting place of Gordon Turnbull from Gordon 22 miles (35 km) away and Peter Fowler from Eyemouth, who were killed when the tunnel collapsed. A three-sided obelisk was erected over the point where the tunnel collapsed to act as a memorial. One face of the obelisk displays a cross, while each of the other two faces commemorates one of the men killed.[1]

The memorial is adjacent to a road running over the hill and is marked on 1:50,000 and 1:25,000 scale OS maps, at grid ref: NT 797670 [1]. From the maps it is also possible to determine the abandoned section of the A1 road, but the original course of the railway is not visible.

Gallery[]

See also[]

References[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Report on the Collapse of Penmanshiel Tunnel that occurred on 17th March 1979 by Lt. Col. I.K.A. McNaughton, 2 August 1983, Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, England.
  2. ^ a b c d Col. R. J. Walker (1950). "Report on the Fire which occurred in an Express Passenger Train on 23rd June, 1949, at Penmanshiel Tunnel in the Scottish Region British Railways" (PDF). Ministry of Transport / HMSO. Retrieved 9 September 2019.
  3. ^ a b Thomas (1971)
  4. ^ Nock and Cross (1982) pp 87–88.
  5. ^ a b Rolt (1966), pp 264–268
  6. ^ Col. R. J. Walker (1952). "Report on the Fire which occurred in an Express Passenger Train on 14th July 1951 near Huntingdon in the Eastern Region British Railways" (PDF). Ministry of Transport / HMSO. Retrieved 12 July 2007.
  7. ^ "Report on the Collapse of Penmanshiel Tunnel that occurred on 17th March 1979 in the Scottish Region British Railways :: The Railways Archive". www.railwaysarchive.co.uk. Retrieved 24 January 2021.
  8. ^ a b Biddle, Gordon (1990). The Railway Surveyors. London: Ian Allan Ltd. and British Rail Property Board. ISBN 0-7110-1954-1.[page needed]
  9. ^ a b Nock and Cross (1982) pp 192–193.
  10. ^ http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?ie=UTF8&oe=UTF-8&hl=en&q=&ll=55.88417,-2.305584&spn=0.044481,0.159645&z=13&iwloc=addr&om=1[full citation needed][non-primary source needed]

Sources[]

  • Nock, Oswald; Cross, Derek (1960). Main Lines Across the Border (1st ed.). London: Nelson. OCLC 12273673.
  • Nock, Oswald; Cross, Derek (1982). Main Lines Across the Border (Revised ed.). Shepperton: Ian Allan. ISBN 0-7110-1118-4. OCLC 11622324.
  • Rolt, L. T. C. (1966). Red for Danger (2nd ed.). Newton Abbot, Devon: David & Charles. OCLC 897379.
  • Thomas, John (1971). A Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain. VI Scotland: The Lowlands and the Borders (1st ed.). Newton Abbot, Devon: David & Charles. ISBN 0-7153-5408-6. OCLC 16198685.
  • Thomas, John; Paterson, Rev A.J.S. (1984). A Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain. VI Scotland: The Lowlands and the Borders (2nd ed.). Newton Abbott, Devon: David & Charles. ISBN 0-9465-3712-7. OCLC 12521072.

Further reading[]

  • Report on the Accident which occurred on 23 June 1949 at Penmanshiel in the Scottish Region British Railways (HMSO, 1949)

External links[]

Photographic resources[]

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