Swansea The Mount railway station
Swansea The Mount | |
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Location | |
Place | Swansea |
Coordinates | 51°37′05″N 3°56′18″W / 51.6180°N 3.9383°WCoordinates: 51°37′05″N 3°56′18″W / 51.6180°N 3.9383°W |
Operations | |
Original company | Oystermouth Railway |
Pre-grouping | Swansea and Mumbles Railway |
History | |
Disused railway stations in the United Kingdom | |
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UK Railways portal |
The Mount, which was located in Swansea on the Oystermouth Railway and which first opened to passengers in 1807, was the world's first recorded railway station.[1] It operated as the Swansea terminus of the Oystermouth Railway, which opened the first fare-paying passenger railway service on 25 March 1807.[2] The station's physical form is not known, but its location was at the front of the current site of Swansea Museum.[1]
History
In 1804 the British Parliament approved the laying of a railway line between Swansea and Oystermouth in South Wales, for transportation of quarried materials to and from the Swansea Canal and the harbour at the mouth of the River Tawe. and in the autumn of that year the first tracks were laid. At this stage, the railway was known as the Oystermouth Railway and controlled by the Committee of the Company of Proprietors of the Oystermouth Railway or Tramroad Company, which included many prominent citizens of Swansea, including the copper and coal magnate John Morris (later Sir John Morris, Bart.). In later years it became known as the Swansea and Mumbles Railway.
There was no road link between Swansea and Oystermouth at the beginning of the nineteenth century and the original purpose of the railway was to transport coal, iron ore and limestone. Construction seems to have been completed in 1806 and operations began without formal ceremony, using horse-drawn vehicles. As constructed, the line ran from the Brewery Bank adjacent to the Swansea Canal in Swansea, around the wide sweep of Swansea Bay to a terminus at Castle Hill (near the present-day Clements Quarry) in the tiny isolated fishing village of Oystermouth.
In 1807, approval was given to carry passengers along the line, when one of the original proprietors, Benjamin French, offered to pay the company the sum of twenty pounds for the right to do so for twelve months from 25 March 1807. This is usually cited as the date when the first regular service carrying passengers between Swansea and Oystermouth began, thus giving the railway the claim of being the first passenger railway in the world. Passenger services operated from The Mount, the world's first recorded railway station.[1]
References
- 1 2 3 Hughes, Stephen (1990), The Archaeology of an Early Railway System: The Brecon Forest Tramroads, Royal Commission on Ancient and Historical Monuments in Wales, p. 333, ISBN 1871184053, retrieved 2014-02-09
- ↑ Carradice, Phil (2011-03-24), The Mumbles Railway, BBC Wales, retrieved 2014-02-09