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Lancaster and Carlisle Railway


 

The Lancaster and Carlisle Railway (L&CR) was a British railway company authorised on 6 June 1844 to build a line between Lancaster and Carlisle in NW England. The first sod was cut at Shap Summit (the highest point on the planned route: 914ft above sea level) in July 1844. The original intention was to build a single line, but in January the following year it was announced that the line would be double track.

Related Topics:
Lancaster - Carlisle - NW England - Shap

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The railways opened in two sections:

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  • 22 September 1846 Lancaster to Oxenholme, 20 miles. On the same day a branch line from Oxenholme to Kendal was opened, part of the Kendal and Windermere Railway (KWR). The latter was completed to Windermere station on 21 April 1847
  • 17 December 1846 Oxenholme to Carlisle.
  • The line was built by Joseph Locke who had been surveying the possible routes between the two cities since 1836. George Stephenson had already surveyed other possible routes in 1835: one was to skirt the Cumberland coast. The main engineering features of the Railway are the bridge at Lancaster; three substantial viaducts; and a high embankment between Grayrigg and Low Gill. The embankment south of Tebay was laid in the bed of the River Lune, which had been diverted from its course.

    Related Topics:
    Joseph Locke - George Stephenson - Cumberland - Grayrigg - Low Gill - Tebay - River Lune

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    The cutting at Shap Summit was cut through rock, is about 0.5 mile in length, and is between 50-60 feet in depth. The approach from the south, thirty miles away at Carnforth is in two sections:

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  • Carnforth to Grayrigg, 20 miles, the final five miles being at 1 in 131/1 in 106
  • Grayrigg to Shap Summit: the first five miles to Tebay relatively level, followed by five miles at 1 in 75
  • The approach from the north is again of thirty miles:

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  • Carlisle to beyond Penrith, twenty miles at varying gradients between 1 in 131/1 in 228
  • thence to Shap Summit, ten miles mainly at 1 in 125
  • The L&CR was connected to the south with the Lancaster and Preston Junction Railway a mile to the south of the town; the new station Lancaster Castle. In the north, trains ran into Carlisle (Citadel), opened on 1 September 1847.

    Related Topics:
    Lancaster and Preston Junction Railway - Lancaster Castle - Carlisle (Citadel)

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    In 1859 the L&CR was leased to the London and North Western Railway; it became part of the latter in 1879; after 1923 the LMSR. It now forms part of the West Coast Main Line.

    Related Topics:
    London and North Western Railway - LMSR - West Coast Main Line

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