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The story of
the Southwold Railway, the narrow gauge line that operated between
Halesworth and Southwold from 1879 to 1929, is well known. Less
familiar are the details of earlier failed proposals to link the
towns with a Blyth valley railway.
The 1840s and
50s were very active decades for railway construction in East Anglia.
Norwich was linked to Yarmouth in 1844, and to Brandon and Ely in
1845, with connections from there to London. Lowestoft was connected
via Haddiscoe to the Norwich-Yarmouth line at Reedham in 1847. Then,
in 1854, a line from Haddiscoe through Beccles to Halesworth was
opened. What was by then the East Suffolk Railway extended its line
from Halesworth to Woodbridge in 1859 giving, with the Eastern Counties
Railway through Ipswich, a direct route to London.
In the twenty
years before the Southwold Railway opened there were several attempts
to promote a connection. In 1855 the Mayor of Southwold presented
a petition to the ESR requesting that a branch be constructed to
Southwold but this was rejected. In 1856 local businessmen and others
met and resolved to form a committee and to approach the local gentry
and MP for their support. Progress seems to have been slow because
in September 1860 the Southwold Town Council was still at the stage
of preparing a memorial for presentation to Sir Morton Peto (contractor
and director of the ESR). There was disunity in the town on raising
the necessary money and apparent concern that those of position
and influence were not setting an example. The project cost was
estimated to be £40,000 and Peto was said to be willing to
"enter upon the necessary arrangements" if half could
be subscribed. But Peto became further committed with the finances
of the ESR. He was unable to continue support of the Southwold branch
project, causing its failure.
By 1865, a Blyth
Valley Railway had been surveyed and plans deposited with the county
and relevant parishes. Southwold Corporation and Sir John Blois
had agreed to sell land and it was proposed to seek an Act of Parliament.
Public meetings and subscriptions notwithstanding, the Bill presented
in 1866 failed. A subsequent Bill also failed and in 1871 it was
reported that the Blyth Valley Railway proposals were again being
revived under "influential London auspices". Either another
new Bill failed or it was withdrawn and not until 1875 were new
plans deposited. Meanwhile an 1872 Southwold-Halesworth Tramway
proposal had also collapsed through lack of funds. The 1875 railway
proposals were competing with the Southwold Railway. The narrow-gauge
proposal succeeded but it too was dogged by disunity and lack of
confidence in the local community. Its original local directors
resigned and a London-based board developed the line.
Sources:
Suffolk
County Record Office AE150/2/5.,
Halesworth Times,
Suffolk Mercury.
David M. Lee, Southwold, February 1995
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