SY9798 : Dismantled railway near Corfe Mullen
taken 25 days ago, near to Corfe Mullen, Dorset, England
The Somerset & Dorset Joint Railway was an amalgamation of two separate railway companies which had between them built lines linking Bath with Bournemouth. Much of the line passed through territory that was very rural and sparsely populated. Development of road transport took away much of the local passenger and fright traffic, while the growth of foreign travel made possible by jet aircraft resulted in a decline in seasonal holiday express trains which used the line to take holidaymakers from the Midlands and North of England to Bournemouth. The line closed in 1966, as part of the "Beeching Cuts" (see separate snippet here: Link )
The Somerset & Dorset Railway Trust has an informative PDF file which gives more detail about the railway and the stations it served: Link
Dr Richard Beeching (1913-1985) was employed during the 1960s by the government as the Chairman of the British Railways Board. In 1963 he produced a report which recommended the closure of thousands of miles of railway lines and thousands of stations, which were deemed to be unprofitable, to streamline the British railway network.
Over the years that followed, many of the lines and stations recommended for closure did indeed close, although some did survive against the odds while a few which did close have since been rebuilt and reopened. The railway closures of that period are often referred to as "Beeching Cuts".
More information about Dr Beeching's report cn be found on the websites of Network Rail Link and the National Archives Link