Penydarren Tramway
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The Merthyr Tramroad (sometimes referred to as the Penydarren Tramroad due to its use by Trevithick's locomotive built at that ironworks) was a long line that opened in 1802, connecting the private lines belonging to the Dowlais and Penydarren Ironworks with the
Glamorganshire Canal The Glamorganshire Canal in South Wales, UK, was begun in 1790. It ran along the valley of the River Taff from Merthyr Tydfil to the sea at Cardiff. The final section of canal was closed in 1951. History Construction started in 1790; being ...
at Abercynon, also serving the Plymouth Ironworks along the way. Famous as the line on which
Richard Trevithick Richard Trevithick (13 April 1771 – 22 April 1833) was a British inventor and mining engineer. The son of a mining captain, and born in the mining heartland of Cornwall, Trevithick was immersed in mining and engineering from an early age. He w ...
's experimental locomotive hauled the first train to carry a load (of 10 tons of iron). It was largely superseded when the
Taff Vale Railway The Taff Vale Railway (TVR) was a standard gauge railway in South Wales, built by the Taff Vale Railway Company to serve the iron and coal industries around Merthyr Tydfil and to connect them with docks in Cardiff. It was opened in st ...
opened in 1841 and sections gradually went out of use over the two decades from about 1851.


History

The four principal ironworks at Merthyr Tydfil were
Dowlais Dowlais () is a village and community of the county borough of Merthyr Tydfil, in Wales. At the 2011 census the electoral ward had a population of 6,926, The population of the Community being 4,270 at the 2011 census having excluded Pant. Dowlai ...
(built 1759), Plymouth (built 1763),
Cyfarthfa Cyfarthfa is a community and electoral ward in the west of the town of Merthyr Tydfil in Merthyr Tydfil County Borough, Wales. Community Cyfarthfa mainly consists of the settlements of Gellideg and Heolgerrig and Rhyd-y-car area just west of Mer ...
(built 1765) and
Penydarren : ''For Trevithick's Pen-y-darren locomotive, see Richard Trevithick.'' Penydarren is a community and electoral ward in Merthyr Tydfil County Borough in Wales. Description The area is most notable for being the site of a 1st-century Roman fort, ...
(built 1784). Initially the output of these ironworks was carried by packhorse or on carts 25 miles to Cardiff. In 1794 Cyfarthfa works was linked to Cardiff by the Glamorganshire Canal, the other three ironworks were linked to it by tramways.
Richard Crawshay Richard Crawshay (1739 – 27 June 1810) was a London iron merchant and then South Wales ironmaster; he was one of ten known British millionaires in 1799. Early life and marriage Richard Crawshay was born in Normanton in the West Riding of ...
of Cyfarthfa Ironworks held the controlling interest in the canal company and claimed preferential treatment. The upper heavily locked section of the canal suffered from congestion. A Bill for a tramroad from Merthyr to Cardiff was defeated in Parliament in 1799 by opposition from the Glamorganshire Canal proprietors but the upper section of the proposed line was built anyway, compulsory powers were provided for by provisions in the Glamorganshire Canal Act but were not invoked. The engineer was George Overton and construction began in 1800 under the supervision of Richard Hill of the Plymouth Ironworks. It was completed in 1802. The Dowlais company already had edge rail lines of narrower gauge from their works to near the head of the canal at Merthyr and these were converted to 4 ft 4 in gauge plateways to connect with this new line allowing through running. In 1804 Trevithick's pioneering steam locomotive made a few experimental runs along this line. In 1815 a wooden bridge over the Taff near Quakers Yard collapsed beneath a train carrying iron from Penydarren. The whole train including the horses, the haulier and four other people riding on it fell into the river killing one horse, badly cutting another and injuring two of the people. In 1823 a Bill was unsuccessfully promoted to extend the line to Cardiff. It was some of the same promoters who obtained the Act for the Taff Vale Railway in 1836. Although the Taff Vale Railway opened to Merthyr in 1841 it was not until 1851 that the standard gauge Dowlais Railway was completed allowing through running to its works. Penydarren Ironworks closed in 1859. Plymouth Works did not cease iron production until 1880 but had built a standard gauge line over part of the tramroad in 1871. South of Mount Pleasant the disused tramroad was lifted in about 1890. Only a single surviving photograph of the tramroad has survived, taken in 1862 and showing widening of the Quaker's Yard viaduct.


Construction

The line was a single track
plateway A plateway is an early kind of railway, tramway or wagonway, where the rails are made from cast iron. They were mainly used for about 50 years up to 1830, though some continued later. Plateways consisted of "L"-shaped rails, where the flange ...
with a gauge of 4 ft 4 in over the flanges of the L shaped cast iron plate rails (or between the inside of the flanges). The plates were 3 ft long weighing 56 lb each and were spiked to rough stone blocks about 18 in square. There were frequent passing loops, at Plymouth Ironworks the line ran through a tunnel only 8 ft high beneath the charging area of the blast furnaces. The average gradient from Merthyr to Abercynon was 1 in 145. Near Quakers Yard two timber bridges carried the line over the
River Taff The River Taff ( cy, Afon Taf) is a river in Wales. It rises as two rivers in the Brecon Beacons; the Taf Fechan (''little Taff'') and the Taf Fawr (''great Taff'') before becoming one just north of Merthyr Tydfil. Its confluence with th ...
where it runs through a gorge in a large loop. After the collapse of one of these bridges beneath a train in 1815 they were both replaced by brick arches. Later on chairs were introduced into which the plate rails were keyed.


Operation

Initially one horse pulled about five trams, making one return journey a day. Later trains of about 25 trams hauled by 3 horses became normal. The owners of the line did allow other people to use it on payment of a toll but it is not known if anyone did. Regular locomotive working began in 1832.


Rolling Stock

The wagons (or trams) were about 7 ft 6 in long by 4 ft 9 in wide at the top, made of wood strapped with iron and carried on cast iron wheels 2 ft 6 in to 2 ft 9 in diameter. They weighed about 15 cwt and carried at least two tons. There were 250 of them by 1830.


Locomotives

Trevithick's locomotive built at Penydarren in 1804 made several runs after its famous initial run. On one occasion it was successfully tried hauling 25 tons. It weighed about 5 tons and broke many of the cast iron plate rails. In 1829 Stephenson supplied a six-wheeled locomotive with inclined cylinders mounted at the rear for use on the narrower gauge internal lines at Penydarren, it cost £375. In 1832 it was returned to Stephensons for conversion to a four-wheeled locomotive for use on the Merthyr Tramroad and at the same time the single flue was replaced by 82 copper fire tubes. It was at this time given the name "Eclipse" and commenced work on the Merthyr Tramroad on 22 June 1832. The chimney must have been hinged to allow it to go through the Plymouth tunnel. The Dowlais Company's line linking their works to the Merthyr Tramroad had a maximum gradient of 1 in 16.5 and considered too steep for locomotives to work by adhesion alone. In 1832 the Neath Abbey Ironworks supplied a six-wheeled rack and adhesion locomotive weighing 8 tons named "Perseverance" with inclined cylinders and twin chimneys (allowing them to be lowered alongside the boiler to pass through the tunnel at Plymouth). Another somewhat similar locomotive (but without a geared rack drive) named "Mountaineer" was built in 1833 by the Neath Abbey Co. for the Dowlais Company. As the drawings included a cross section of the Plymouth tunnel and it had a hinged chimney it was presumably intended to be used on the Merthyr Tramroad (unlike a second smaller locomotive built in 1832 which had a fixed chimney). The 0-6-0 "Dowlais" built by Neath Abbey in 1836 had the inclined cylinders mounted at the front (unlike the previous locomotives which had rear mounted cylinders) and rack drive for use on the incline to Dowlais. "Charles Jordan" delivered from Neath Abbey in 1838 was an adhesion only locomotive very similar to "Mountaineer". The last record of spare parts being supplied to Dowlais for these locomotives was in 1840-1841. An 1848 inventory of Dowlais plant lists only "Mountaineer" of the above locomotives. No plateway locomotives were listed in 1856. The locomotives had a maximum 3 ton axle load and plate layers were carried on the trains to replace broken plates. On 1 April 1839 more than 4,000 plates were required to make the tramway good though little more than half that number had been supplied by the three ironworks. By 22 June that year 1,600 more plates were broken, of which the Dowlais engines were blamed for smashing 1,450. By July the tramroad was reported to be almost impassable, for two days being blocked by a derailed Dowlais locomotive and Anthony Hill of Plymouth unsuccessfully applied to the Trustees for the locomotives to be banned.


References

* {{refend Early Welsh railway companies Industrial railways in Wales Horse-drawn railways History of Merthyr Tydfil Richard Trevithick Transport in Rhondda Cynon Taf 4 ft 2 in gauge railways in Wales Railway lines opened in 1802