Cholsey and Wallingford Railway
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The Cholsey and Wallingford Railway is a long standard gauge heritage railway in the English county of Oxfordshire. It operates along most of the length of the former Wallingford branch of the Great Western Railway (GWR), from Cholsey station, north of
Reading Reading is the process of taking in the sense or meaning of letters, symbols, etc., especially by sight or touch. For educators and researchers, reading is a multifaceted process involving such areas as word recognition, orthography (spelling ...
on the Great Western Main Line, to a station on the outskirts of the nearby town of Wallingford.


History

The first proposals for the Cholsey to Wallingford line date from 1861, and envisaged an independently owned route from Cholsey to Princes Risborough via Wallingford, Benson, Watlington and
Chinnor Chinnor is a large village and civil parish in South Oxfordshire about southeast of Thame, close to the border with Buckinghamshire. The village is a spring line settlement on the Icknield Way below the Chiltern escarpment. Since 1932 the ci ...
. This line would have been a through route, with junctions with the Great Western Railway at Cholsey and the Wycombe Railway at Princes Risborough. In 1862, a Bill was presented to Parliament for a short branch from Cholsey to Wallingford, but this was withdrawn early in 1863, before it had come up for consideration. It was replaced by the Wallingford and Watlington Railway Bill which was passed by Parliament in July 1864. The W&WR opened as far as Wallingford on 2 July 1866.In ''An Illustrated History of the Wallingford Branch'', Karau and Turner say Monday, 7 July 1866, as does Jenkins in ''Oxfordshire Railways Through Time'', but this includes a calendar error and is contradicted by contemporary press reports in Jacksons Oxford Journal, referenced below, London Evening Standard and Oxford Times. Unfortunately, two months earlier, in May 1866, the
Overend, Gurney & Co Overend, Gurney & Company was a London wholesale discount bank, known as "the bankers' bank", which collapsed in 1866 owing about £11 million, equivalent to £ million in . The collapse of the institution triggered a banking panic. History Ear ...
bank had crashed, causing the severest financial crisis of the nineteenth century. The Bank Rate was raised to 10%, making it impossible for the W&WR to raise the capital for its planned continuation to Watlington. In 1871, Parliament consented to the railway abandoning its plans for the line beyond Wallingford. The company was sold to the GWR in 1872. The railway became popularly known as the ''Wallingford Bunk''. The Curator of the Cholsey and Wallingford Railway Museum attributes the following story to the late Mrs Harold Gale. "Around the turn of the century, the loco did a 'bunk'. It left Cholsey station without its coaches. Harold and Len Gale, returning from football in Reading, had uncoupled the loco while it waited in the bay platform." The line closed to passengers in 1959, and the last British Rail goods traffic into the old Wallingford Station ran in 1965. However most of the line was retained to serve the
maltings A malt house, malt barn, or maltings, is a building where cereal grain is converted into malt by soaking it in water, allowing it to sprout and then drying it to stop further growth. The malt is used in brewing beer, whisky and in certain food ...
adjacent to the railway to the south of Hithercroft Road, Wallingford. Rail service to this plant ceased in 1981 when BR removed the junction at Cholsey. The Cholsey and Wallingford Railway Preservation Society was then formed to conserve the line for tourist services. It first ran train rides for the public in 1985, with regular advertised services over the full available length of the line beginning in 1997. Steam traction has also been reintroduced.


Services

Most services on the Cholsey and Wallingford Railway are currently hauled by the resident diesel locomotives with visiting steam locomotives for special events. Trains run on weekends and bank holidays between April and September, and at Halloween and Christmas. The railway's web site has details of operating days. The original branch platform at Cholsey station is now used by the CWR, and trains connect there with Great Western Railway stopping services on the Great Western Main Line between
Reading Reading is the process of taking in the sense or meaning of letters, symbols, etc., especially by sight or touch. For educators and researchers, reading is a multifaceted process involving such areas as word recognition, orthography (spelling ...
and
Didcot Didcot ( ) is a railway town and Civil parishes in England, civil parish in the Ceremonial counties of England, ceremonial county of Oxfordshire and the Historic counties of England, historic county of Berkshire. Didcot is south of Oxford, eas ...
stations. The original Wallingford railway station and the last segment of the line have long been built on, and the old station site is now crossed, ironically, by Beeching Way. The line now terminates at a makeshift station which is the railway's headquarters on Hithercroft Road (formerly known as Old Moor Lane). The new station is adjacent to the site of the maltings that kept the line alive into the preservation era. The maltings were demolished early in the new millennium and replaced by housing, releasing some extra land to the railway. The CWR plans to build a permanent station when resources are available.


Rolling stock


Locomotives

The line is the home to several diesel locomotives, including three of British Rail's ubiquitous Class 08 shunters, which are used on most trains. Steam also currently operates on the railway, by locomotives Peckett 2142 and 6515 Isebrook.


Operational

* British Rail Class 08 08 022 ''Lion'', ex- Guinness Brewery, Park Royal, London (Operational, August 2022) (DE = diesel-electric) * British Rail Class 08 08 060 ''Unicorn'', ex-Guinness Brewery, Park Royal, London (Operational, August 2022) * British Rail Class 08 08 123 ''George Mason'' (Operational, August 2022) * Peckett & Sons Works No 2142 Northern Gas Board No 1, owned by the Darlington Railway Preservation Society. (Operational, August 2022) * 12 Sentinel Sentinel Works No 6515, privately owned. (Operational, August 2022)


Not operational

* Hibberd ''Carpenter'', ex-Guinness Brewery, Park Royal, London (under repair, July 2017) (DM = diesel mechanical)


Railcars

* One
Wickham trolley The Wickham trolley was a railway engineering personnel carrier built by D. Wickham & Co of Ware, Hertfordshire. This long established firm introduced their rail trolley in 1922 as a lightweight track inspection and maintenance vehicle. This was ...


Carriage and wagon

The line has a varied collection of passenger carriages and freight wagons.


Gallery

Image:02I05I2015 CWR Steam Event C2.jpg, Peckett 0-4-0ST 'Northern Gas Board No. 1' at Cholsey Image:Peckett Ivor Cholsey and Wallingford Railway 11-04-2009.jpg, Peckett 0-4-0ST ''
Ivor the Engine ''Ivor the Engine'' is a British cutout animation television series created by Oliver Postgate and Peter Firmin's Smallfilms company. It follows the adventures of a small green steam locomotive who lives in the "top left-hand corner of Wales" ...
'' at Cholsey Image:A5 British Railways Class 14 D9523 Visits CWR 11-05-2013.jpg, British Railways 0-6-0DH Class 14 D9523 at Cholsey in May 2013 Image:02I05I2015 CWR Steam Event A2.jpg, Both Peckett 0-4-0ST steam locos 'Ivor' and 'Northern Gas Board No. 1' at Cholsey Image:British Railways 0-6-0PT No 6430 Cholsey.jpg, British Railways 0-6-0PT 64xx Class No. 6430 at Cholsey in July 2016


Notes


References


External links


The official Cholsey and Wallingford Railway web site
{{coord, 51.59769, N, 1.13472, W, source:placeopedia_type:landmark_region:GB-OXF, display=title Heritage railways in Oxfordshire Railway companies established in 1861 Railway lines opened in 1866 Railway companies disestablished in 1872 Rail transport in Berkshire Rail transport in Oxfordshire Wallingford, Oxfordshire 1861 establishments in England