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Jersey Eastern Railway

Coordinates: 49°10′55″N 2°06′25″W / 49.182°N 2.107°W / 49.182; -2.107
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

49°10′55″N 2°06′25″W / 49.182°N 2.107°W / 49.182; -2.107

Jersey Eastern Railway / Jersey Railways & Tramways
Jersey Eastern Railway on a map of former railways of Jersey
Plaque at the former Snow Hill terminus in St Helier
Overview
HeadquartersSt. Helier
LocaleJersey
Dates of operation1873–1929
SuccessorAbandoned
Technical
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)
Length6.75 miles (10.86 km)

The Jersey Eastern Railway was a standard gauge railway that began operations on 6 August 1873 in Jersey. The line closed on 21 June 1929.[1]

History

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1916 timetable of services

The Loi pour l'établissement d'un Chemin de Fer entre la Ville de St.-Hélier et Gorey was approved on 16 March 1871 (confirmed by Order in Council 19 March 1872), with 68 articles of the projet in the name of the Jersey Eastern Railway Company Limited. The law (repealed by the Statute Law Revision (No. 3) (Jersey) Law, 1966) authorised the railway from Snow Hill in St Helier, to Gorey and from there to St Catherine's Bay in St Martin, although the latter route was never begun. There was no mention of gauge. Article 54 of the project was significant in stating that any disagreement with property owners must be resolved by the Royal Court for consideration and decision, and the claimant could not cause work to cease by raising the clameur de haro (as had happened with the Jersey Railway construction).

On 15 May 1871, the committee appointed by the States met to consider objections by landowners; the majority were satisfied that they had received fair compensation.

The first turf was dug by Mrs Mourant, wife of Edward Mourant, the chairman of the Board of Directors, at a private ceremony on 17 September 1872. The line was opened on 6 August 1873, with a train of six carriages taking the States Members and their wives along the track to Grouville Station in 15 minutes.

The official opening of Gorey station was on 25 May 1891, to coincide with Queen Victoria’s birthday. The journey of just over six miles from St Helier cost 9d (old pence) first class return, 6d second class return.

In 1923 the Jersey Motor Transport Company started a bus service carrying passengers all over the Island. The Jersey Eastern Railway tried to counter the fierce competition by running their own bus service in 1926, but this was not much of a success, and declining profits led to termination of both the bus and train services on 21 June 1929. The company itself was liquidated in 1932.

Most of the land was sold to adjacent landowners, but part of the route can be seen near Fauvic (at the southeastern tip of the island), where it has been preserved as a footpath.[2]

The Jersey Eastern Railway Terminus Hotel at Snow Hill remains, and is on the Register of Historic Buildings.[3]

Route

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Jersey Eastern Railway
ferry/water interchange
St Helier (Snow Hill)
(opened 1874)
St Helier (Green Street)
(closed 1874)
St Lukes
(opened 1896)
Georgetown
(closed 1896)
Grève D'Azette
(opened 1896)
Samarès
Pontorson Lane Halt
(opened 1925)
Le Hocq
Pontac
Le Bourg
(opened 1925)
La Rocque
Fauvic
Grouville
Gorey Village
ferry/water interchange
Gorey Pier
(opened 1891)

The line began at Saint Helier, with intermediate stations located at Georgetown, Samarès, Le Hocq, Pontac, La Rocque and Fauvic, with the eastern terminus in Grouville, originally opposite the Wimbledon Hotel, later extended to Gorey and then to Gorey Pier.[4]

Locomotives

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View of the railway at Gorey
  • North Western 2-4-0T Built by Sharp Stewart in 1870, (Works No. 2047). Locomotive was purchased from the Jersey Railway in 1878 and was withdrawn in 1898 and eventually sold to a Scottish Quarry.

Messrs. Kitson & Co. of Leeds built all four of the following 0-4-2T engines:

  • Caesarea, 1872. (Works No. 1832)
  • Calvados, 1872. (Works No. 1833)
  • Mont Orgueil, 1886
  • Carteret, 1898. (Works No. 3800)

Railcars

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  • Normandy
  • Brittany

Both were built by Sentinel Waggon Works and purchased in 1927. Both were withdrawn on 21 June 1929 when the line closed, with Normandy being regauged and sold to the Jersey Railway.

See also

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References

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Notes

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  1. ^ "Jersey Heritage Trust" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 September 2007. Retrieved 20 March 2007.
  2. ^ BBC Jersey - Nature - Times, Tides and Towers
  3. ^ Jersey Government (website)[permanent dead link]
  4. ^ 49°11′56″N 2°01′37″W / 49.199°N 2.027°W / 49.199; -2.027 Gorey Pier

Bibliography

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  • Balleine, G. R.; Stevens, Joan (1970). The Bailiwick of Jersey (New rev. and reset ed.). London: Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 0340002670.
  • Bonsor, N. R. P. (1986). Jersey Eastern Railway and the German Occupation Lines in Jersey. The Railways of the Channel Islands, vol. 2; The Oakwood Library of Railway History, 58 A (2nd rev. ed.). Headington, Oxford: Oakwood Press. ISBN 0853613451.
  • Mollet, Ralph (1954). A Chronology of Jersey (4th ed.). Jersey: Société Jersiaise. OCLC 43181706.
  • Paye, P. (2007). The Jersey Eastern Railway. Oakwood Library of Railway History, 143. Usk, Monmouthshire, Wales: Oakwood Press. ISBN 9780853616641.
  • Syvret, Marguerite; Stevens, Joan; Balleine, G. R. (2011). Balleine's History of Jersey. Andover, Hampshire: Phillimore & Co. ISBN 9781860776502.
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