Fledborough Viaduct

Viaduct in the United Kingdom

53°14′7.0″N 0°46′43.5″W / 53.235278°N 0.778750°W / 53.235278; -0.778750 (Fledborough Viaduct)CarriesEx-Lancashire, Derbyshire and East Coast RailwayCrossesRiver TrentLocaleFledborough / North Clifton, NottinghamshireMaintained bySustransCharacteristicsDesign59 brick arches; 4 trussed steel girder spansTotal length814 metres (890 yd)WidthTwin Standard Gauge RailHistoryDesignerRobert Elliott-CooperOpened1897Closed21 February 1980LocationMap
The former rail line is now part of National Cycle Route 647 which takes cyclists over the river Trent

Fledborough Viaduct is a former railway viaduct near Fledborough, Nottinghamshire which is now part of the national cycle network.

  • v
  • t
  • e
Lancashire, Derbyshire
& East Coast Railway
Legend
Chesterfield (Market Place)
Boythorpe Viaduct over
MR Brampton Branch
and Boythorpe Railway
 
Horns Bridge over
Midland Main Line
GCR Chesterfield Loop
River Rother
Duckmanton Tunnel
Arkwright Town
Doe Lea Viaduct over
MR Doe Lea Branch
Bolsover South
Scarcliffe
Summit
Sheffield Midland
Attercliffe Road (MR)
West Tinsley
Catcliffe
Treeton (MR)
Woodhouse Mill (MR)
Upperthorpe and Killamarsh
Spinkhill
Clowne South
Summit
Creswell and Welbeck
Shirebrook North
(Originally Langwith Junction)
Langwith Junction shed
Shirebrook South
LowerLeft arrow
GNR
to Nottingham Victoria (1901)
Shirebrook West
Left arrow
MR (now Robin Hood Line)
Nottingham Midland to Worksop
Right arrow
Warsop
Edwinstowe
Ollerton
Boughton
Tuxford Central
Tuxford Works
Tuxford shed
Dukeries Junction
Left arrow
GNR (now ECML)
Kings Cross to Retford
Right arrow
Fledborough
Fledborough Viaduct
over River Trent
Clifton-on-Trent
Doddington and Harby
Skellingthorpe
Lincoln

History

The viaduct is a substantial structure which carried the double-track LD&ECR's Chesterfield Market Place to Lincoln Central main line over the River Trent.[1]

It is situated between the former stations of Fledborough and Clifton-on-Trent, but nearer the latter.

Opened in 1897, it consists of 59 arches spread either side of four metal girder spans which cross the river itself. Nine million bricks were used in its construction which cost £65,000.[2]

Timetabled passenger services over the viaduct ended in September 1955, though summer weekend excursions from Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire to Cleethorpes and Mablethorpe and from Manchester Central to Yarmouth Vauxhall continued until 1964.[3][4][5]

From the 1960s traffic east of Langwith Junction was overwhelmingly coal, much of which went straight from collieries to High Marnham Power Station which opened in 1959, this traffic therefore turned off about half a mile before the viaduct. The Grimsby to Whitland express fish train ran until at least 1962 via Fledborough[6] and through Mansfield Central.

The four original steel truss spans over the River Trent were replaced with steel plate girder spans of single track width in 1965. These were positioned within the existing spans before the old spans were removed.[7]

Traffic continued to run over the viaduct until 21 February 1980 when a goods train derailed at Clifton-on-Trent seriously damaging the track. Reinstatement was deemed uneconomic and the line from Pyewipe Junction over the viaduct as far as High Marnham was closed and ultimately lifted.[8]

Coal traffic continued from the west to High Marnham power station until this closed in 2003. Since 2009 that stretch of line has become Network Rail's High Marnham Test Track.

Modern Times

Today the railway trackbed eastwards from the site of Fledborough station, across the viaduct, through Clifton to Doddington & Harby forms an off-road part of National Cycle Route 647 which is part of the National Cycle Network.

From Harby onwards through the site of Skellingthorpe almost to Pyewipe Junction the trackbed forms an off-road part of National Cycle Route 64.[9][10]

See also

References

  1. ^ NoAuthor 2011, p. 16.
  2. ^ Cupit & Taylor 1984, p.22 and centrepiece.
  3. ^ Walker 1991, inside front cover.
  4. ^ Working Timetable 1964 (Up): via flickr
  5. ^ Working Timetable 1964 (Down): via flickr
  6. ^ Walker 1991, Plate 120.
  7. ^ "Trent Viaduct Reconstructed". Notes and News. Railway Magazine. Vol. 112, no. 777. January 1966. p. 50.
  8. ^ Ludlam 2013, p. 144.
  9. ^ Harby to Lincoln NR64: via sustrans
  10. ^ Fledborough to Lincoln by Bike: via cycle-route

Sources

  • Booth, Chris (2013). The Lancashire, Derbyshire and East Coast Railway A pictorial view of the "Dukeries Route" and branches. Vol. Two: Langwith Junction to Lincoln, the Mansfield Railway and Mid Nott's Joint Line. Blurb. ISBN 978-1-78155-660-3. 06884827.
  • Cupit, J.; Taylor, W. (1984) [1966]. The Lancashire, Derbyshire & East Coast Railway. Oakwood Library of Railway History (2nd ed.). Headington: Oakwood Press. ISBN 978-0-85361-302-2. OL19.
  • Dow, George (1965). Great Central, Volume Three: Fay Sets the Pace, 1900–1922. Shepperton: Ian Allan. ISBN 978-0-7110-0263-0. OCLC 500447049.
  • Ludlam, A.J. (March 2013). Kennedy, Rex (ed.). "The Lancashire, Derbyshire & East Coast Railway". Steam Days. 283. Bournemouth: Redgauntlet 1993 Publications. ISSN 0269-0020.
  • NoAuthor (2011) [1948]. British Railways Atlas 1947: The Last Days of the Big Four. Shepperton: Ian Allan Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7110-3643-7.
  • Walker, Colin (1991). Eastern Region Steam Twilight, Part 2, North of Grantham. Llangollen: Pendyke Publications. ISBN 978-0-904318-14-2.

External links

  • Fledborough Viaduct on old OS map npemaps
  • Fledborough Viaduct signalling and trackwork plus High Marnham Power Station signalboxes
  • Fledborough Viaduct resumee and photo forgottenrelics
  • Fledborough Viaduct photos and bibliography transportheritage
  • Fledborough Viaduct photos oldminer
  • Fledborough Viaduct and High Marham Power Station neolithicsea
  • Fledborough Viaduct and Dukeries Trail nottinghamshire