The Leamside Line Pelaw Junction to Usworth as at October 2012

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  • čas přidán 2. 04. 2013
  • With Network Rail removing the track (apparently some of the rails were to go to the Weardale Railway and the concrete sleepers to the Borders Rail Link in Scotland) it seemed a goog time to video the line.
    * As at the 2nd April 2013 the track was still in place in the Wardley area.

Komentáře • 56

  • @servicecrew6813
    @servicecrew6813 Před 4 lety +4

    I've loved disused railways since the early 70s.... to find one with lines in situe is very exciting... well done
    .

    • @ALANSVIDS1
      @ALANSVIDS1  Před 4 lety +1

      Thanks, apart from a short stretch of track approaching Pelaw Jct all the track has now been removed.

  • @john-of-the-north
    @john-of-the-north Před 5 lety +3

    I recall being diverted along this route in the late 1980s. Being a bit of an enthusiast (understatement) I made sure I caught the right train. Unfortunately my experience of the journey, being sealed into a Mk3 coach in an HST, was that it was over quite quickly and I didn’t see that much. I contrast that to some front passenger seat journeys in first generation DMUs on other lines, which tend to reveal much more of the character of a line.

  • @jonc4686
    @jonc4686 Před 3 lety +1

    Remember travelling this route a few times in the 80`s (Sunday Diversions) going to work with my Dad (he was a guard), strange to say but just gone under one of the bridges today on the A690. As my mother lives to the east of Durham, it is not uncommon for me to go over it and under it many times in a week. Brings back good memories though. Nice video.

  • @kevinbaird7277
    @kevinbaird7277 Před 3 lety +2

    I used to drive trains in and out of Wardley in the early 1990's, It makes me sick to see this, but yesterday was a long time ago.

    • @ALANSVIDS1
      @ALANSVIDS1  Před 3 lety +1

      Lots of talk for years now regarding reopening but......

    • @winco68
      @winco68 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ALANSVIDS1 Yes I seriously doubt we’ll ever see it reopened as a heavy rail through route. The investment in upgrading the Durham Coast Route put paid to that. Freight can be kept off the ECML more easily now and for a greater stretch between Northallerton and Gateshead. There may be a future for some of the route as part of the much talked of Metro extension? But as has already been said lots of talking and no action. There seems to be a lack of willingness to invest in infrastructure in the North East and with the current pandemic and political climate I can’t imagine that will change any time soon.
      However should the Metro be extended there is the possibility of a loop via South Hylton, Penshaw and Washington to Pelaw as well as extending South to Fencehouses or Even Belmont to link with the Durham P+R scheme.

  • @DSM9
    @DSM9 Před 10 měsíci

    Been up there lately, more than a decade later (2023), and nature is well and truly taking its course with that stretch of disused line now very much overgrown.

  • @mscangliarail
    @mscangliarail Před 6 lety +2

    Just come across your video brought back memories i was S&T linenman at Pelaw i coverved Wardley up to Follingsby xing and to Felling in 1964

    • @ALANSVIDS1
      @ALANSVIDS1  Před 6 lety

      Most of the track in the video has now been pulled up including Follingsby LC, just the bit from Wardley to Pelaw remains now.

  • @DieselDudeRailway
    @DieselDudeRailway Před 6 lety +2

    Excellent video. Very well made.

    • @ALANSVIDS1
      @ALANSVIDS1  Před 6 lety +1

      Thanks, I did not realise it was 5 years since my walk along the line, I think its time for another visit.

  • @ALANSVIDS1
    @ALANSVIDS1  Před 11 lety +3

    As far as I am aware NR plan to remove the track in 2 phases, the first Ferryhill to Fencehouses has been done, the second from Fencehouses to Pelaw has not begun yet, so all the track shown in the video still exists at the moment.

  • @ianhelps3749
    @ianhelps3749 Před 5 lety +2

    I remember the line was open when I lived in Durham in the 1980s. Sometimes it was used as a diversion route for passenger trains. With the ECML getting busier, surely it would be worth reopening, along with the Ferryhill to Stockton line.

    • @ALANSVIDS1
      @ALANSVIDS1  Před 5 lety

      It would make a lot of sense but this is North East England, bottom of the table for investment in the railways. Reopening has been mooted for years, including extending the metro from Pelaw to Washington. I think the trackbed is protected from being built on.

    • @scorchx3000
      @scorchx3000 Před 5 lety

      I walked up the track a year or so ago, between Barmston and the viaduct, they've cut across the track with a cycle path and blocked access with spiked fences. I had to do a 10 minute detour to get by. The viaducts been fenced off too, but someone had kicked the fences down so i was able to cross to Penshaw.

    • @neildahlgaard-sigsworth3819
      @neildahlgaard-sigsworth3819 Před 4 lety

      Ian Helps it would be simpler and cheaper to use the coastal route via Sunderland.

  • @lucypawpaw
    @lucypawpaw Před 7 lety +2

    Great video, and thanks for sharing. It seems such a shame to see it in this state. I have been taking pictures around South Wales, of disused tracks. It's always good to record or takes pictures, before things are gone completely.

    • @ALANSVIDS1
      @ALANSVIDS1  Před 7 lety

      Most of the track in the video has now been removed, a short stretch through Wardley approaching the Newcastle to Sunderland line at Pelaw is all thats left.

    • @lucypawpaw
      @lucypawpaw Před 7 lety

      That's a real shame, but a sign of the times I guess.

  • @john-of-the-north
    @john-of-the-north Před 5 lety +2

    A great record, on a sad subject. Thanks for making this film for posterity.

    • @ALANSVIDS1
      @ALANSVIDS1  Před 5 lety +2

      Thanks, I think its time for a follow up trip.

  • @ALANSVIDS1
    @ALANSVIDS1  Před 11 lety

    It only opened in 1990 and lasted until 2005. It was built to replace the Swalwell disposal point which was on land needed for the Metro Centre. Aparently their are plans (in the early stages) to build some sort of waste recycling plant on the site by a firm called Peel Enviromental. If it will be rail served if it does go ahead ?

  • @lewisner
    @lewisner Před 6 lety +1

    I can't believe the amount of trees at Usworth it was always a fairly barren place.

  • @frenchsteam7356
    @frenchsteam7356 Před 6 lety +7

    Should never have been closed!

  • @coltmanneil
    @coltmanneil Před 3 lety

    When did the wardley disposal site close , I remember watching trains going to and from here but when I have no idea . I can also recall further over on follingsbury park was once a freightliner terminal think that was the 70s , great video thanks .

  • @angelsone-five7912
    @angelsone-five7912 Před 6 lety +1

    Excellent record and worth doing cos, as they say, when it`s gone - it`s GONE!

  • @hornbytrains125
    @hornbytrains125 Před 11 lety

    Any updates on the situation of the track?

  • @StaffsTransport
    @StaffsTransport Před 6 lety +1

    wonderful film of a ghostly railway

    • @ALANSVIDS1
      @ALANSVIDS1  Před 6 lety

      Thanks, lets hope it becomes a bit less ghostly and reopens as a modern railway sometime in the future.

  • @mcsquare77
    @mcsquare77 Před 8 lety +1

    If the Tyne and Wear Metro expansion goes ahead. The old lines or at least the route could be used to extend the Metro through to Washington!

    • @ALANSVIDS1
      @ALANSVIDS1  Před 8 lety

      They have been talking about reopening the Leamside Line for years now and it seems very unlikely in the near future. Appears to be more chance of the Blyth and Ashington lines being reopened.

    • @mcsquare77
      @mcsquare77 Před 8 lety

      Very True!

    • @lewisner
      @lewisner Před 6 lety

      The Metro is a retrograde step. The extension to Sunderland negates any possibility of 25Kv electrification and the slowness of the trains hampers heavy rail trains.

  • @yuwonoabu5556
    @yuwonoabu5556 Před 4 lety +1

    The track is death
    Really i'm so sad watching video maybe sometimes can be used again.
    Greating from Indonesia.

  • @owenevans83
    @owenevans83 Před 6 lety +1

    Good footage.

    • @ALANSVIDS1
      @ALANSVIDS1  Před 6 lety

      Thanks, i think another visit is due.

  • @kevanhubbard9673
    @kevanhubbard9673 Před 3 lety

    In a sorry state and it needs relaying and put into action along with the Stillington for a fast Middlesbrough Newcastle service without changing in Darlington or the slow crawl up the Durham Coast line with it's single platform bottleneck in Hartlepool and shared Tyne and Wear Metro from Sunderland to Heworth.

  • @stephenyoung2752
    @stephenyoung2752 Před 2 lety

    shame its all gone now, just like the riverside line

    • @ALANSVIDS1
      @ALANSVIDS1  Před 2 lety +1

      At least the trackbed has been protected from building on, so their is still a small amount of hope for the future.

  • @MiLLwallpaul231258
    @MiLLwallpaul231258 Před 6 lety

    bit of a silly question...... but has it all gone now?

    • @ALANSVIDS1
      @ALANSVIDS1  Před 6 lety +1

      Most of the track has been pulled up apart from a stretch from Wardley to the main line at Pelaw Junction. I believe that the actual trackbed is protected so that no development is allowed that would block it.

  • @TheFifaFootballChannel
    @TheFifaFootballChannel Před 2 lety +1

    I travel regularly on the Ecml past Tursdale Junction. Bizzarely, the line side signals are still operating at the leamside turnout as the points and frames haven't been isolated. It's insane that these signals have been in full use for 30 years because network rail etc can't be bothered to do their job and isolate the junction. I travel frequently and this scenario is repeated in a myriad of locations. It must be wasting so much taxpayers money. Network rail are an absolute disgrace.

    • @ALANSVIDS1
      @ALANSVIDS1  Před 2 lety

      I might be wrong but I suspect that assuming Network Rail have no other use for the signals themselves, then the cost of modifying the signalling circuitry would be much more expensive than leaving the unwanted signals in place and still lit, until the time comes when the track/signals in the area are due to be renewed.

    • @majorpygge-phartt2643
      @majorpygge-phartt2643 Před rokem

      Dead right there, they'll quite happily spend countless MILLIONS on putting up overhead lines and turning big city stations into dirty great greenhouses which heat up inside to insane temperatures in the summer sun making them ultra-EXclusive but they won't replace old long outdated footbridges which are total barriers to anyone with wheelchairs or mobility scooters etc. or sort out any of the countless stations which still have stepped access only.

  • @TheFifaFootballChannel

    Very sad. I travelled this line on a HST when diverted. Only in the UK would we mothball lines, trap them in time. Its totally insane.
    Incidentally, the line around tursdale was recovered as criminal gangs were actually stealing the lines. This line won't be reopening.

    • @majorpygge-phartt2643
      @majorpygge-phartt2643 Před rokem

      The same thing happened on another line near me, which was waiting to be reopened by a preservation group, some of the rails got nicked, but I can never understand how anyone can steal the rails when they're 60 foot long weigh about a TON each! They must have some means of cutting them but how without getting caught when it makes so much noise, unless they stick to remote areas out in the sticks away from prying eyes.

  • @manmeetsinghmahajan6183

    Good one.

  • @garymcteer7620
    @garymcteer7620 Před rokem

    Wardley signalbox was plunged into darkness when they built the dual carriageway over it, a dreadfully dire place in its latter days 🤢

  • @TheAudiostud
    @TheAudiostud Před 11 lety +1

    Forgive my ignorance, but was this all part of the coaling merry go round system before Thatcherism

    • @lewisner
      @lewisner Před 6 lety

      I think this was after Thatcher or at the latter end of her thrall. Most of the coastal collieries such as Dawdon had MGR facilities built in the late eighties and they only saw a few years use before being demolished.

  • @richardchadwick4028
    @richardchadwick4028 Před 5 lety +1

    What a waste ...

    • @ALANSVIDS1
      @ALANSVIDS1  Před 5 lety +1

      Quite agree, there are probably dozens of similar disused routes all over the country which could be reopened but for the lack of funding, yet we can still find money for HS2 !

    • @neildahlgaard-sigsworth3819
      @neildahlgaard-sigsworth3819 Před 4 lety +1

      ALANSVIDS1 HS2 serves places were the jobs and money are. Lines like this don't always do that, or like the Bramley Line to Wisbech would require significant structures, a bridge to replace the originsl level crossing on the A47.