The Chronicle

End of the line down by the Riverside

TYNESIDE RAIL ROUTE WAS SET FOR CLOSURE 45 YEARS AGO

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FORTY-FIVE years ago - and the Riverside Branch was approachin­g the end of the line.

The suburban railway route dated back to 1879, a time when the shipyards and industry of the Tyne were developing rapidly.

Opened by North Eastern Railway along the Northern bank of the river, the line’s seven stops between Byker and Willngton Quay served the ever-growing industries and communitie­s there.

The line was actually a loop added to the main NewcastleC­oast route, which had opened in 1839.

Rail expert and photograph­er Trevor Ermel explains: “The Riverside Branch - as it was known by British Rail and by enthusiast­s deviated from the suburban line which ran from Newcastle to the Coast via Wallsend .

“It left the main line just after it crossed the Ouseburn Viaduct at Byker and followed the course of the Tyne, mainly serving shipyard workers.

“It rejoined the main line at Percy Main. The stations on it were Byker, St Peter’s, St Anthony’s, Walker, Carville, Point Pleasant and Willington Quay.”

Described as “for the most part, tunnels, bridges, cuttings, retaining-walls, and embankment­s”, the building of the Riverside Line was a major engineerin­g challenge and had been eight years in the planning and constructi­on when it opened on May 1, 1879.

Originally a steam service, the trains on the line were electrifie­d in 1904, becoming diesel in 1967.

Running a regular hourly service for decades as shipbuildi­ng boomed on the River Tyne, things began to slacken off in the post-war years mirroring the slowdown in the industry.

Passenger numbers began to dwindle and St Anthony’s station closed in 1960, while Byker station had closed six years earlier.

The Beeching Report of 1963 recommende­d the Riverside Line should close, only for it to be reprieved a year later.

Come the early 1970s, however, there were again calls for its closure. The line cost around £100,000 a year to run, but made only £15,000. Meanwhile, a road had been built linking some of the locations that would be affected.

Our images were taken on April 18, 1973, the day after it was finally decided the line would be axed.

The last passenger trains would run on July 23, 1973, with the final goods trains five years later.

Today, a popular walk and cycle way lines much of the route where the trains of the old Riverside Branch used to run.

 ??  ?? Disused Carville railway station, Wallsend, on the Riverside line, April 18, 1973
Disused Carville railway station, Wallsend, on the Riverside line, April 18, 1973
 ??  ?? Derelict Willington Quay railway station, on the Riverside line, April 18, 1973
Derelict Willington Quay railway station, on the Riverside line, April 18, 1973
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 ??  ?? The disused Walker railway station, Newcastle, on the Riverside line, April 18, 1973
The disused Walker railway station, Newcastle, on the Riverside line, April 18, 1973

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