Lincolnshire Loop Line

Former station at Stixwould.
The trackbed here is part of the Water Rail Way

Lincolnshire Loop Line

Locale Lincolnshire
Dates of operation 1848 1963
Predecessor Great Northern Railway
Successor London and North Eastern Railway
Track gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)
Length 58 miles (93 km)
Legend
River Trent
Wharf
Left arrow Sheffield to Lincoln Line Right arrow
Gainsborough Lea Road
Lea
Stow Park
to Retford
Saxilby
Foss Dyke
Skellingthorpe
Left arrow Chesterfield to Lincoln Line

Pyewipe Junction

Boultham & West Holmes Jns

Left arrow Nottingham to Lincoln Line
Lincoln St. Marks
Lincoln Central

Sheffield & Lincs Jcn Rly Right arrow
Sincil Junction

Left arrow Lincoln to Grantham Line
Washingborough Junction

Down arrow Peterborough to Lincoln Line

Washingborough

Five Mile House
River Witham
Louth to Bardney Line Right arrow
Bardney
Southrey
Stixwould
Woodhall Junction
Horncastle Branch Right arrow
Kirkstead and
Little Steeping Railway
Right arrow
Tattershall
Dogdyke
Langrick
East Lincolnshire Railway Right arrow
Boston
Left arrow Nottingham to Skegness Line
Docks
The Haven
Kirton
Algarkirk and Sutterton
Surfleet
Left arrow GN and GE Joint Rly
Spalding
UpperLeft arrow
Midland and Great
Northern Joint Railway

Littleworth
St James Deeping
LowerRight arrow
Midland and Great
Northern Joint Railway
Down arrow GN and GE Joint Rly
Peakirk
UpperLeft arrow East Coast Main Line

Left arrow Midland Railway

Werrington Junction
Walton

UpperRight arrow
Midland and Great
Northern Joint Railway

Rhubarb Bridge

Wisbech Junction
Westwood Junction
Peterborough North
Peterborough Crescent
Right arrow Midland Railway
Down arrow East Coast Main Line

The Lincolnshire Loop Line was a 58-mile (93 km) double track railway built by the Great Northern Railway, that linked Peterborough to Lincoln via Spalding and Boston.

History

The Lincolnshire Loop Line was authorised on 26 June 1846 as part of the London and York Railway bill.[1] The then renamed Great Northern Railway purchased the Witham Navigation and all navigation rights the same year and began construction of the new line, partly beside the river, in 1847.[2] The line opened in 1848 and was for a short period the main route to the north and Scotland until the line from Peterborough to Retford was opened in August 1852. Closure came in sections: the first was Woodhall Junction to Boston which closed to passengers and goods on 17 June 1963.[3]

Route

The line from Lincoln to Boston was known as the Witham loop because it followed the course of the River Witham, passing through Washingborough, Five Mile House, Bardney, Southrey, Stixwould, Tattershall, Dogdyke, and Langrick. The line from Boston to Spalding passed through three intermediate stations, Kirton, Algarkirk and Sutterton, and Surfleet; much of this section is now under the A16 road. The final section to Peterborough also had three intermediate stations, Littleworth, St James Deeping, and Peakirk. This section is the only part of the line that remains in operation, although most of the stations have long been closed and disused.[3]

Six stations, Gainsborough Lea Road, Saxilby, Lincoln, Boston, Spalding and Peterborough North remain open, and are still part of the national network.[3]

List of railway stations

Water Rail Way

There is a variety of art along the cycle route. Much is whimsical sculpture, but this mosaic commemorates a Bronze Age Craft site archaeologists discovered on the South Delph

The trackbed from Boston to Lincoln is now part of National Cycle Route 1, and is also known as Water Rail Way, a punning reference to the route and the bird.[4][5]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Water Rail Way.

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lincolnshire Loop Line.
  1. The National Archives: Great Northern Railway Company: Records
  2. "Disused Stations". Subterranea Britannica.
  3. 1 2 3 Ludlam, A.J. (July 1995). Lincolnshire Loop Line (GNR) and the River Witham. Locomotion Papers. The Oakwood Press. ISBN 978-0853614647.
  4. "Water Rail Way". Sustrans. Retrieved 2013-03-12.
  5. "Photographs of Water Rail Way". Geograph project. Retrieved 2013-03-12.

Coordinates: 53°08′33″N 0°14′31″W / 53.1424°N 0.2419°W / 53.1424; -0.2419

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/11/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.