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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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#31
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On Wed, 3 Nov 2004, Mark Brader wrote:
I believe that includes the only ever railway swing bridge. Nope. The Oxford Companion to British Railway History says: # Opening bridges were built across some navigable waterways, # allowing shipping to pass. They were usually swing bridges, # like Like the bridge over Alresford Creek, on the Brightlingsea to Wivenhoe railway, a mile or two from where i grew up. It was demolished long before i was born, but i remember being told about it. tom -- Demolish serious culture! |
#32
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![]() "R.C. Payne" wrote in message ... If you allow reused infrastructure from older transport forms incorporated into new ones, then the Higham and Strood tunnels must count, as they were dug for the Thames & Medway canal in 17xx. 1819-24 Peter |
#33
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![]() "Peter Masson" wrote in message ... ......and across an Oxford Canal branch on the entrance to Oxford Rewley Road (LMS) station. Peter The swing bridge deck was still there in June this year, alongside the 'Sheepwash Channel', stuck in the open position and hemmed in on all sides by new building work. Paul |
#34
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In article , Mark Brader
writes I believe that includes the only ever railway swing bridge. Nope. Indeed, far far far from "only". The Oxford Companion to British Railway History says: # Opening bridges were built across some navigable waterways, # allowing shipping to pass. They were usually swing bridges, # like Thowse Bridge, Norwich (one of the earliest), Trowse (note spelling) is still in use, and has a 25kV overhead power rail. Selby over # the Yorkshire Ouse, That's still there as well, though it's no longer on the ECML. At one time the tracks had four rails each, so that the point blades could be on the same side of the bridge as the rest of the interlocking, even though the divergence was on the other side. [There have been swing bridges where the signal wire "pull" actually got transmitted across the bridge to a signal on the far side. A neat mechanical solution.] -- Clive D.W. Feather | Home: Tel: +44 20 8495 6138 (work) | Web: http://www.davros.org Fax: +44 870 051 9937 | Work: Please reply to the Reply-To address, which is: |
#35
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![]() "Henry" wrote in message ... "Peter Heather" wrote Also, there are two very obvious remanants of the Croydon Canal in the form of the original reservoir (now South Norwood Lake) and the length of canal now preserved in a park just off Anerley Hill (I think that's its name) There is a bridge parapet in Croydon which I recollect is reckoned to date back to the canal. It is over the W. Croydon rail line and is in either Sydenham Road or Gloucester Road, I can't remember which. There is a notch on the south side of Greenland Dock which seems to line up with the point where the canal came in. You can see it on the Multimap aerial photo. I believe also that the loop of road from Regina Road to Albert Road in S. Norwood follows the line of a meander which formed after the canal was closed. Not sure in what manner the closed canal was flowing to form a meander though! I am going from memory of having read a book on the subject, but that was quite a while ago. Having rechecked my source, the parapet is in Gloucester Road and the idea of the meander was complete imagination on my part, the loop of roads roughly follows the line of the canal itself. |
#36
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Peter Masson wrote:
"R.C. Payne" wrote in message ... If you allow reused infrastructure from older transport forms incorporated into new ones, then the Higham and Strood tunnels must count, as they were dug for the Thames & Medway canal in 17xx. 1819-24 Peter Are they really that new? I had always assumed they were older than that, but a quick google confirms these dates. Robin |
#37
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--- Matthew Church said:
Quite a nice link for the SIR: "In 1803, the Surrey Iron Railway was opened in Mitcham. It was the first public railway to be sanctioned by Parliament and made Mitcham the first place in the world to be served by a public railway. It used horse drawn wagons to carry coal from the Thames at Wandsworth as far as Croydon. On the way back from Croydon to Wandsworth, these wagons carried flour, copper, paper and the town's most famous product - Mitcham Lavender. The Georgian station at Mitcham is still in use, and is one of the oldest railway stations in the world." http://tinyurl.com/3rgo4 If this is the answer to the original posted question, I am not sure it is correct. The building was built as a house and only adapted as a station in the 1850's when the SIR was replaced by the 'conventional' railway. There is no evidence that I know of to suggest it was anything other than a private house when the SIR was built. The SIR didn't have stations in the accepted sense as it served various wharves and sidings etc for goods only. There was a loop and sidings for a coal merchant here but it was on the south side of the line and not where the station building is. The web site quoted is a bit misleading here. Also, Mitcham was hardly the first place to be served by a public railway. It was simply near the route of the line that went to Croydon (much more important) and intended to go on to Portsmouth. Peter Heather |
#39
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#40
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On 3 Nov 2004 06:44:34 -0800, (Peter
Heather) wrote: Also, there are two very obvious remanants of the Croydon Canal in the form of the original reservoir (now South Norwood Lake) and the length of canal now preserved in a park just off Anerley Hill (I think that's its name) The park is called Betts Park. PRAR -- http://www.i.am/prar/ As long as people will accept crap, it will be financially profitable to dispense it. Dick Cavett Please reply to the newsgroup. That is why it exists. NB Anti-spam measures in force - If you must email me use the Reply to address and not |
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