Ringwood, Christchurch and Bournemouth Railway

Ringwood, Christchurch and Bournemouth Railway
Legend
Southampton and Dorchester Railway
Ringwood
Avon Lodge
Hurn
Christchurch (original)
South Western Main Line

Christchurch
Pokesdown
Boscombe
Bournemouth East (original)
Bournemouth
South Western Main Line

The Ringwood, Christchurch and Bournemouth Railway was a railway company to link Christchurch and Bournemouth to the London and South Western Railway's Southampton and Dorchester line at Ringwood. The RC&BR opened in 1862 from Christchurch to Ringwood, and was extended to Bournemouth in 1870, sharing in the growing popularity of the town. However the route was circuitous, and the London and South Western Railway opened a shorter route between Brockenhurst and Christchurch via Sway in 1888, making the Ringwood to Christchurch section a branch line.

A feature of the line was that a landowner had the right to stop any train at a private station, a fact that became an embarrassment when express trains started to operate.

The section from Ringwood to Christchurch closed in 1935, but the Christchurch to Bournemouth section remains as part of the South Western Main Line.

Origins

The London and South Western Railway (LSWR) reached Southampton in 1840, and independent interests promoted the Southampton and Dorchester Railway to connect Dorchester to London. The line was built, opening in 1847, but its route took it on a northerly alignment from Brockenhurst through Ringwood and Wimborne. The line was leased to, and worked by the LSWR, and later absorbed by it. Bournemouth was not an important settlement at the time, and was left some distance from the line; it had a population in 1851 of only 1,330.[1] There was a branch serving Poole, but that was located on the south side of the Holes Bay inlet.

In the following decade, Bournemouth grew in importance and it became desirable to provide a railway connection. After a failed attempt, local interests promoted the Ringwood, Christchurch and Bournemouth Railway, a 7 34-mile (12.5 km) line from the northern margin of Christchurch to the Southampton and Dorchester line near Ringwood. As originally designed, the junction there would have faced west, towards Wimborne. The route followed the valley of the River Avon. The engineer was Captain William Moorsom.

Early LSWR opposition having been withdrawn, the railway obtained its authorising Act of Parliament on 8 August 1859, with capital of £45,000. The contractor was Thomas Brassey and the line was quickly constructed; the west facing junction at Ringwood was changed to face towards Southampton, the new line running alongside the double track of the Southampton and Dorchester line for some distance, joining it at Ringwood station. It was a single line, with sharp curves and difficult gradients.

First opening

The Ringwood Christchurch and Bournemouth Railway in 1862

The line opened on 13 November 1862; it was worked by the LSWR.[2][3][4][5]

There was one intermediate station at Herne and a private station at Avon Lodge. The latter was located on the private road to Avon Castle; the site is on Avon Castle Drive near the Junction with Windmill Lane.[note 1]

Extension to Bournemouth

Connecting Christchurch to the main line network was only a first step, and income from the line was very poor. Undaunted by the poor response to calls on shares,[note 2] the Company took powers by Act of 13 July 1863 to raise an additional £30,000 and extend the line 3 12-mile (5.6 km) to the east side of Holdenhurst Road in Bournemouth; the present-day Bournemouth station is on the west of that road. The location was criticised by a local newspaper as being too far from the town centre.[6]

On 14 March 1870 the line opened throughout, with the LSWR working the entire line for half the gross receipts. There were five trains a day at first, taking about 35 minutes for the journey to and from Ringwood, making intermediate calls at Herne and Christchurch. This immediately brought considerable passenger traffic to the line and revived its financial state; through carriages between Bournemouth and London were arranged from 1 March 1872, detached at Ringwood from Weymouth Trains, and the little company was able to pay dividends.[2][7]

With its difficult gradients—there was a 1 in 99 (1%) gradient rising from Christchurch to Bournemouth[8] — and curves, and a 25 miles per hour (40 km/h) speed limit, the line was now on the main route from London to Bournemouth.

Avon Lodge station

The private station at Avon Lodge was the result of a clause inserted into the Company's authorising Act; Williams says that the 1859 Act had required the Company to keep a "lodge" where the line crossed the road at the entrance to Avon Cottage, and the owner or occupier had a perpetual right to exhibit a red flag by day and a red lamp by night against any 'ordinary train', which was required to stop. When express trains started operating on the line this became objectionable to the Company, and a lawsuit followed; the judgement allowed the Company to refuse to stop express trains.

Evidently Avon Cottage was a considerable property: the census of 1871 calls Avon Cottage an "estate".[9] The third Earl of Malmesbury owned it at the time of the authorisation of the line, but he sold it in 1863 and it was the purchaser's grandson who pressed the issue.[2][10]

The situation was described in the Railway Magazine:

On the London and South-Western Railway's line, between Ringwood and Christchurch, there is a private station worth notice. It is about a mile and a half from Ringwood, and is on the estate of Avon Castle, which place is now a private residence, tenanted and owned by Colonel Ralph Peacock.

When the line in question was constructed the property here was owned by the late Turner Turner, Esq., and by arrangement with him certain private rights and privileges were allowed to exist by the railway company, which have obtained until to-day, and still continue. The proprietor of Avon Lodge Station has the sole right of using it either for passenger traffic or goods. The "general staff" consists of one man all told—and this man is station-master, signalman, booking-clerk, porter, etc., combined. This station is absolutely a "private" one...

There is one small room on the platform which does duty as booking-hall, waiting-room, and station master's office, besides serving

for a luggage bureau, etc. If any passenger, not being a guest or visitor to Avon Castle, however, wishes to alight at this interesting station, Col. Peacock does not usually raise any objection, and such passenger can generally have his wish gratified by informing the guard, who will specially stop the train at the platform.[11]

Sale to the LSWR

The Ringwood Christchurch and Bournemouth Railway immediately before purchase by the LSWR

On 1 January 1874, the Ringwood, Christchurch and Bournemouth Railway was purchased by the LSWR.[2]

Improvements to the route to Bournemouth

The Ringwood Christchurch and Bournemouth line in 1888

As Bournemouth grew in importance the frustration of the route deviating by way of Ringwood, and the slow progress on the route, became objectionable. Doubling the line was considered, but a new direct line from Brockenhurst to Christchurch, and doubling the line from there to Bournemouth, were obviously a better option. The Bournemouth station would be reconstructed west of Hardendale Road (actually the present location of Bournemouth station) and a new, spacious central station off Branksome Wood Road would be built. A Poole branch from Broadstone, entering from the west, had opened in 1872, and the new line was to connect with it. In fact the new construction was limited to the new line from Lymington Junction, a little west of Brockenhurst, to the Bournemouth station at Hardendale Road, which for the time being was a terminus.

The new Bournemouth station opened on 20 July 1885, and on 30 May 1886 the Christchurch to Bournemouth section was doubled, and a new station at Christchurch was opened, in preparation for the new route: the original station there was immediately east of Bargate and inconveniently aligned for the new route. On 1 July 1886 a Boscombe station was opened. A series of difficulties with the construction process meant that it was not until 5 March 1888 that the new line from Lymington Junction—usually referred to as the Sway line—opened, concurrently with the connecting line from the Bournemouth ("East") station to the West station.

From 1888 until 1935

From 1888 the London to Bournemouth route passed over the new Sway line to Christchurch and thence over the Ringwood, Christchurch and Bournemouth line to the site of the original Bournemouth station; from there the trains ran to the West station, which was a terminus. Weymouth and Bournemouth trains divided at Brockenhurst, the Weymouth portion continuing over the original Southampton and Dorchester route, and the Bournemouth portion over the new line. Trains from Bournemouth West towards Dorchester required to reverse direction at Poole Junction, later called Broadstone. It was not until 1893 that a direct route across Holes Bay was constructed. Meanwhile, the original section between Ringwood and Christchurch became a minor rural branch.

Chronology of stations

When the Bournemouth West station opened on 15 June 1974, the RC&BR station was renamed "Bournemouth East".

The Disused Stations website has photographs and further descriptive material for closed stations; see

Avon Lodge at and Hurn at

Closure north of Christchurch

The line between Ringwood and Christchurch declined in use, and the Southern Railway closed it in 1935.

Since 1935

The Christchurch to Bournemouth section remains open as part of the South Western Main Line. British Railways electrified it with direct current third rail on 10 July 1967.[13]

Notes

  1. Butt gives the opening of Avon Lodge as 3 November 1862, but this must be a mistake for 13 November.
  2. Subscribers to shares in new railway companies usually only paid a small proportion of the face value as a deposit, and subsequently there were "calls" for incremental payments as construction work proceeded. If a company was offered for subscription in optimistic times and money later became scarce, many subscribers were unwilling, or unable, to respond to the calls.
  3. Butt says that the station opened, with the line, as Herne Bridge, and was renamed Herne in 1888. Some writers spell this Hearne.

References

  1. White, HP (1961). A Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain. 2 – Southern England. London: Phoenix House. pp. 159–160.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Williams, RA (1973). The London and South Western Railway. 2: Growth and Consolidation. Newton Abbot: David & Charles. ISBN 0-7153-5940-1.
  3. Awdry, Christopher (1990). Encyclopaedia of British Railway Companies. Wellingborough: Patrick Stephens Limited. ISBN 1-85260-049-7.
  4. Cobb, Col MH (2003). The Railways of Great Britain – A Historical Atlas. Shepperton: Ian Allan Publishing Ltd. ISBN 07110-3003-0.
  5. Carter, EF (1959). An Historical Geography of the Railways of the British Isles. London: Cassell & Co.
  6. Poole and South Western Herald, 17 March 1870, quoted in Williams
  7. White, 1961, pp 160–161
  8. Gradients of the British Main-Line Railways. London: The Railway Publishing Co. 1947.
  9. Census of England and Wales: South Eastern Counties, 1871, p 78
  10. Maggs, Colin G (1997). Branch Lines of Hampshire. Stroud: Sutton Publishing Ltd. ISBN 0-7509-1297-9.
  11. George A Wade, Private Railway Stations, in the Railway Magazine, November 1903
  12. 1 2 3 Mitchell, Vic; Smith, Keith (1992). Branch Lines Around Wimborne. Midhurst: Middleton Press. ISBN 0-906520-97-5.
  13. 1 2 3 Mitchell, Vic; Smith, Keith (1987). South Coast Railways – Southampton to Bournemouth. Midhurst: Middleton Press. ISBN 0-906520-42-8.

Further reading

External links

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