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Foxfield Railway
Railway near Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Foxfield Railway is a preserved standard gauge line located south east of Stoke-on-Trent. The line was built in 1893 to serve the colliery at Dilhorne on the Cheadle Coalfield. It joined the North Staffordshire Railway line near Blythe Bridge. It is open at weekends and operates trains on Sundays, Bank Holidays and some Saturdays from April to October and Santa Special trains in December. It is home to the Knotty Coach Trust, the Foxfield Miniature Railway, a museum, café, bar and a shop.
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History
The Foxfield Railway was built in 1892-1893 to provide a link to the North Staffordshire Railway for the Foxfield Colliery. The railway was built by local labour provided by North Staffordshire Railway employees at weekends and supervised by the North Staffordshire Railway foreman plate layer Noah Stanier, using second hand material, again obtained from the North Staffordshire Railway.[1]
Preservation
When the colliery closed in August 1965,[2] local volunteers formed the Foxfield Light Railway Society to preserve the line. At first, passengers were taken in converted trucks up the formidable 1:19 to 1:26 gradient out of the colliery site at Dilhorne, accompanied by a tank engine.
Eventually, new coaches were purchased and a station was built at Caverswall Road, Blythe Bridge, half a mile from Blythe Bridge station. The service runs for 2+1⁄4 miles (3.6 km) from there to the top of Foxfield Bank.[citation needed]
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Location
The original line left the Crewe to Derby Line a little west of the station. The link has been lifted, but several abandoned wagons can be seen in the old sidings from passing trains. A station and depot have been built at Caverswall Road, half a mile north of Blythe Bridge railway station along Blythe Bridge Road.
The station at Caverswall offers visitor facilities such as a Buffet serving hot and cold food and drinks and a Real Ale bar "The One Legged Shunter". Also a museum building displaying a variety of artifacts relating to local railways and locomotives currently out of service. The adjacent Olcote Animal Sanctuary has an enclosure next to the miniature railway where animals can be found the first three Sundays in a month.
The railway operates Sundays and Bank Holidays from April to October and Santa Special trains during December.
Locomotive fleet
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The Foxfield Railway has the largest collection of standard gauge steam locomotives in Staffordshire, most of which are of industrial origins. Also a reasonable sized collection of industrial diesels.
Operational steam locomotives
Steam locomotives off site
Steam locomotives undergoing overhaul or restoration
Stored steam locomotives
Operational diesel locomotives
Diesel locomotives undergoing overhaul or restoration
Stored diesel locomotives
Electric locomotives
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Passenger carriages
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The railway has a collection of carriages from a wide range of years which are used to take passengers up and down the line.
- The NSR Rolling Stock Restoration Trust
In 2008 a small group was formed with the aim of restoring the two surviving North Staffordshire Railway 4-wheeled coaches, with a long term aim of recreating a proto-typical Victorian train that would have once operated in the local area. The Knotty Trust, as it has become known as, was registered as a charity in 2009 and in 2012 received a £30,000 grant for the completion of the first vehicle (no. 127).[6] This was completed at Stanegate Restorations, who have become a major supporter in the recreation of a Knotty Train.[7] Since then the collection has grown to include other former 'Knotty Coaches' that have been discovered, as well as other historically important vehicles.
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Use as a filming location
Although located in Staffordshire, the railway was used for the filming of sequences for the BBC television series Return to Cranford, which is set in Cheshire. The railway featured in two episodes first broadcast in December 2009. Matilda 'Matty' Jenkyns (played by Judi Dench), invited several of the main characters to ride on the train in an attempt to alter their opinions about the benefits of the railway being extended into the town of Cranford.[11]
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References
Further reading
External links
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