Edinburgh–Bathgate line

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The Edinburgh–Bathgate line is a railway line in East Central Scotland. It is also known as the Bathgate branch and was originally operated by the Edinburgh and Bathgate Railway. Except for the short section at the original Bathgate terminus, the main line is still in use, with a frequent passenger train service operated by ScotRail.

Edinburgh–Bathgate line
Overview
OwnerNetwork Rail
LocaleEdinburgh
Scotland
Service
SystemNational Rail
Operator(s)ScotRail
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm)
Bathgate Line
Bathgate
(1986)
Bathgate
(2010)
Livingston North
Uphall
Edinburgh Park Edinburgh Trams
Haymarket Edinburgh Trams
Edinburgh Waverley Edinburgh Trams

Extension to Airdrie and Glasgow

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In 2005, the Scottish Executive declared that in line with plans to upgrade the unfinished part of the A8 to motorway standard, public transport links between Glasgow and Edinburgh must also be improved.

The closed section of the Bathgate and Coatbridge Railway between the 1989 Drumgelloch station and Bathgate was rebuilt and electrified, connecting with the North Clyde Line at Drumgelloch. This opened up an important fourth railway link between Glasgow and Edinburgh, giving many towns in West Lothian better connections to the Greater Glasgow conurbation.

From 12 December 2010, the Edinburgh to Bathgate service was absorbed into the North Clyde Line with services from Helensburgh Central and Milngavie via Airdrie.[1] All work on the extension was completed by 8 March 2011.[2]

History

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The Edinburgh and Bathgate Railway was opened from a junction near Ratho to Bathgate, in 1849. The owning company immediately leased the line to the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway. From the following year, shale oil was extracted in the area, and the line became very successful from that traffic. Other railways joined at Bathgate and the line later became part of a through route from Edinburgh to Glasgow via Airdrie. In 1956 the passenger service was withdrawn, but it was reinstated from Edinburgh to Bathgate in 1986. In 2010 the through route to Airdrie and Glasgow was reopened and electrified, and the line continues in heavy passenger use at the present day.

Authorisation and opening

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Edinburgh and Bathgate Railway Act 1846
Act of Parliament
 
Long titleAn Act for making a Railway from the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway to Bathgate, with Branches, to be called "The Edinburgh and Bathgate Railway."
Citation9 & 10 Vict. c. cccxxxii
Dates
Royal assent3 August 1846
Edinburgh and Bathgate Railway (Deviation and Amendment) Act 1847
Act of Parliament
 
Citation10 & 11 Vict. c. ccxlvi
Dates
Royal assent22 July 1847
Text of statute as originally enacted
Edinburgh and Bathgate Railway (Extension and Deviation) Act 1848
Act of Parliament
 
Long titleAn Act to enable the Edinburgh and Bathgate Railway Company to extend their Whitburn Branch, and to alter or deviate their Uphall and Binnie Branch.
Citation11 & 12 Vict. c. cxvi
Dates
Royal assent14 August 1848
Text of statute as originally enacted
 
System map of the Edinburgh and Bathgate Railway

The Edinburgh and Bathgate Railway (E&BR) was authorised by the Edinburgh and Bathgate Railway Act 1846 (9 & 10 Vict. c. cccxxxii) on 3 August 1846. The main line of 11 miles (17 km) was to run to Bathgate, then an important manufacturing town, from a junction near Ratho on the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway main line.[note 1][page needed] In addition there were to be branches to Midcalder, to Binny Quarries, from Barrack to Whitburn, and a loop from Whitburn to Bathgate, though in fact only one of these was built by the E&BR. The authorised capital was £250,000.[3][page needed][4][page needed][5][page needed] Two subsequent acts of Parliament, the Edinburgh and Bathgate Railway (Deviation and Amendment) Act 1847 (10 & 11 Vict. c. ccxlvi) and the Edinburgh and Bathgate Railway (Extension and Deviation) Act 1848 (11 & 12 Vict. c. cxvi), authorised deviations.[6]

The engineer for the work was Thomas Grainger.[7]

The only branch that was built by the E&BR was to Uphall, and from there a mineral railway extension ran to the Binny Quarry, near Ecclesmachan. The main line to Bathgate was opened on 12 November 1849. The company had been encouraged by the E&GR, and the E&BR leased its line to the E&GR for 999 years from the date of opening. The lease charge was 4% of the capital cost of the line plus a proportion of receipts.[note 2][note 3][6]

As a shell company the E&BR Company remained in existence until the grouping of the railways in 1923 (see below).[8][page needed]

The initial stations from Bathgate Junction (near Ratho) were Broxburn, Houston, and Bathgate.[9][page needed]

Developments at Bathgate

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Bathgate was an established centre of traditional industries when the line was proposed, but the situation was revolutionised when James Young, an industrial chemist, had developed an industrial process of manufacturing paraffin from torbanite, a type of oil shale. He had obtained a patent for the process in October 1850, and the torbanite had been discovered on the Torbanehill estate, about halfway between Bathgate and Whitburn. Young joined in partnership with Edward William Binney and Edward Meldrum and the Bathgate Works started operations in February 1851. This was the first commercial oil works in the world.[10][page needed][11][page needed] When the torbanite was exhausted, shale rocks were exploited, at Bathgate and elsewhere in the locality, and although they had an inferior oil content they were nonetheless commercially desirable. The Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway built a branch line from the E&BR line to Blackhall, connecting Young's oil processing plant; the line opened in 1850 and diverged from the E&BR immediately east of the Bathgate station.

The Monkland Railways too wished to reach the area and they extended their line eastward from Blackstone Junction (on the former Slamannan Railway) and from Armadale, both routes reaching Bathgate in 1855, and connecting the town to Airdrie and Coatbridge, via the rope-worked Ballochney Railway section of the Monkland Railways. The rope worked sections were by-passed by the "new line" by 1859, but it was not until 1871 that a direct NBR line between Coatbridge and Glasgow was available.

Numerous mineral branches were built from the E&BR line to nearby points of extraction.[12][page needed]

The North British Railway

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The Edinburgh and Glasgow was absorbed by the North British Railway on 1 August 1865; the E&GR had itself absorbed the Monkland Railways the previous day.[10][page needed][12][page needed]

In 1866 the E&BR Company was opposing NBR Bills for direct access to certain mineral sites, which would reduce NBR dependency on the E&BR. The NBR board set about a scheme to purchase the E&BR company outright, and agreed terms of 5% on capital for seven years, then rising to 5.5%, as well as accepting all of the E&BR's debenture debt. However a shareholders' meeting threw out the scheme. At the E&BR half-yearly meeting on 10 August 1866 the E&BR chairman regretted the loss of the arrangement, blaming factions within the NBR.[12][page needed]

In 1869 the NBR built a branch to Pumpherston Oil Works and Camps brickworks (from Houston) and in 1875 to Seafield Oil Works (from West Calder Branch Junction).[9][page needed]

In 1897 the NBR opened the chord at Bathgate allowing through running from north (Blackstone) to east (towards Edinburgh).[12][page needed]

Passenger services

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In 1895 there were seven passenger trains daily on the line, with two more on Saturdays; some of these were semi-fast, running through from Edinburgh to Glasgow.[13][page needed]

Bangour Private Railway

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In June 1904 the first patients were admitted to Bangour Village Hospital, a mental hospital near Dechmont. The road network in the district was inadequate, and the large premises would require a considerable volume of general stores as well as coal. A private branch railway was opened to the public on 19 June 1905 from the E&BR line, authorised by the Edinburgh and District Lunacy Board Act, 30 July 1900. (The line may have been used before the official opening date in connection with construction of the hospital.) It was worked by the North British Railway, and there was an intermediate station at Dechmont, available to the general public, and many of the staff lived at Dechmont and used the railway for travel to the hospital. Bangour station was considered private, and tickets issued to and from it were marked "Bangour (Private)".

The terms of operation by the NBR required the hospital to guarantee an income of £1,500 annually to the NBR. It was estimated that the actual income was £300 a year, so that the subsidy amounted to £1,200.[12][page needed]

The hospital was extensively used during World War I for treatment of wounded soldiers, and the road network was correspondingly improved. After the war, the necessity for the railway was diminished and it was closed on 1 August 1921, although passenger services probably ceased on 4 May 1921.[8][page needed][14][page needed][15][page needed]

The twentieth century

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The Edinburgh and Bathgate line in 1906

In the first decades of the twentieth century, the shale oil industry was at its height, and numerous mineral lines were connected to the Bathgate line serving shale pits and oil works, where the oil was extracted from the mineral.

However the availability of cheaper liquid oil supplies from the Middle East and elsewhere reduced the demand for shale oil, and the industry declined sharply by 1918.

In 1923 the North British Railway became a constituent of the new London and North Eastern Railway following the Railways Act 1921, and the government again reorganised the railways in 1948, when the Scottish Region of the nationally owned British Railways took charge.

Bathgate remained a manufacturing base, as the former Albion Motors plant was now operated by Leyland Motors, but passenger use of the line had declined heavily and on 8 January 1956 the passenger service was withdrawn.[8][page needed] A sporadic goods service continued, but the line was sustained by the motor vehicle manufacturing activity. Some passenger use of the line for seasonal trains continued until 1960.[14][page needed]

Mid-century developments

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The road traffic congestion in Edinburgh became increasingly difficult in the 1970s and 1980s. In addition, Livingston New Town had now developed considerably from a slow start,[note 4] and a scheme was prepared to reopen the E&BR line as a branch from the Edinburgh and Glasgow main line to Bathgate, following the original E&BR main line.

Reopening

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Having only carried freight traffic to and from Bathgate (mainly automotive traffic) since passenger services ceased over the line in 1956, the line was reopened to passenger services on 24 March 1986 by British Rail. Lothian Regional Council provided substantial funding toward the project, which was intended to help ease commuting difficulties to and from Edinburgh as road congestion worsened in the mid 1980s, and to alleviate some of the hardship caused by West Lothian's industrial decline. (Since passenger services had ceased in 1956, the remaining shale oil industry became extinct, coal mining was virtually ended in 1984–1986 by the Thatcher government, and the Bathgate plant of British Leyland was slated for closure.)

Economies were made in the project delivery - specifically three miles of railway were removed and between Cawburn Jn and Carmondean Jn, a single line was provided, serving Uphall railway station and Livingston North railway station. The passenger line continued to the terminus at Bathgate while a freight only line (the former Down line) ran between Carmondean Jn and Bathgate yard.

The line succeeded in respect of patronage; usage was well above predictions and over the years, Sunday trains were introduced, and the basic weekday service doubled from hourly to every thirty minutes each way during peak hours.

From the lines reopening in 1986 by British Rail until electrification, passenger train services were operated by diesel multiple units (at first mainly Class 101s, then from 1987 mainly Class 150s and then (2008–9) Class 158 or Class 170s.)

Following completion of the Airdrie–Bathgate rail link and electrification of the route resulting in the incorporation of the service into the North Clyde Line timetable, services has been operated by Class 334 electric multiple units. Delay in the delivery and commissioning of the Class 380 resulted in diesel services operating initially between Edinburgh and Bathgate. In 2011, a half-hourly service between Edinburgh Waverley and Helensburgh Central was introduced.[16]

Topography

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  • Bathgate Junction; divergence from Edinburgh to Glasgow main line; now known as Newbridge Junction;
  • Broxburn; opened 12 November 1849; renamed Drumshoreland May 1870; closed 18 June 1951; there was a Broxburn station on the E&GR main line until 1849;
  • Pumpherston branch junction; Pumpherston Oil Works 1869–1961 and Camps Brick Works 1869–1959;
  • Houston; opened 12 November 1849; renamed Uphall 1 August 1865; closed 9 January 1956; reopened 24 March 1986;
  • Bangour Branch Junction; divergence of Uphall and Bangour Asylum Railway 1905–1921;
  • Dechmont; opened October 1850, with trains calling on Wednesdays only; closed December 1861; there was later a Dechmont station on the Bangour branch;
  • Livingstone; opened 12 November 1849; sometimes also spelt Livingston;[note 5] closed 1 November 1948; a new station known as Livingston North was opened on 24 March 1986 0.80-mile (1.29 km) to the east;
  • Bathgate Junction; divergence of connection to Monkland Railways route;
  • Bathgate; opened 12 November 1849; renamed Bathgate Upper 1856; closed 9 January 1956; reopened 24 March 1986; closed 12 December 2010 when new station on through line opened.[9][page needed][13][14][page needed][15][page needed][17][page needed][18][page needed]

References

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  1. ^ "National Rail Timetable 226; December 2010" (PDF). Retrieved 17 November 2010.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ "News - Airdrie Bathgate Rail Link project". Archived from the original on 18 July 2011. Retrieved 18 March 2011.
  3. ^ Carter, E.F. (1959). An Historical Geography of the Railways of the British Isles. London: Cassell.
  4. ^ Awdry, Christopher (1990). Encyclopaedia of British Railway Companies. Wellingborough: Patrick Stephens Limited. ISBN 1-85260-049-7.
  5. ^ Slaughter, Mihill (1849). Railway intelligence. London: W.H. Smith and Son.
  6. ^ a b Fordyce, Geo. Dingwall, ed. (1863). The Scottish Jurist: Being Reports of Cases Decided in the Courts of Scotland. Vol. XXX. Edinburgh: Thomas Constable and Co. p. 344.
  7. ^ Skempton, Professor Sir Alec (2002). Biographical Dictionary of Engineers, volume 1: 1500 to 1830. London: Thomas Telford Publishing. p. 264. ISBN 0-7277-2939-X.
  8. ^ a b c Thomas, John (1984). A Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain: Volume 6, Scotland, the Lowlands and the Borders. revised by J.S. Paterson. Newton Abbot: David and Charles. ISBN 0-946537-12-7.
  9. ^ a b c Cobb, Col M.H. (2003). The Railways of Great Britain – A Historical Atlas. Shepperton: Ian Allan Publishing Limited. ISBN 07110-3003-0.
  10. ^ a b Martin, Don (1995). The Monkland and Kirkintilloch and Associated Railways. Kirkintilloch: Strathkelvin Public Libraries. ISBN 0-904966-41-0.
  11. ^ Turnock, David (1982). The Historical Geography of Scotland Since 1707. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-24453-6.
  12. ^ a b c d e Ross, David (2014). The North British Railway: A History. Catrine: Stenlake Publishing Limited. ISBN 978-1-84033-647-4.
  13. ^ a b Bradshaw's General Steam Navigation and Railway Guide (reprint ed.). Midhurst: Middleton Press. 2011 [December 1895]. ISBN 978-1-908174-11-6.
  14. ^ a b c Stansfield, Gordon (2003). Lost Railways of the Lothians. Catrine: Stenlake Publishing. ISBN 1-84033-2700.
  15. ^ a b Quick, M.E. (2002). Railway Passenger Stations in England Scotland and Wales—A Chronology. The Railway and Canal Historical Society.
  16. ^ "We've added something new to Central Scotland". Archived from the original on 11 January 2011.
  17. ^ British Railways Scottish Region (1960). Sectional Appendix to the Working Timetables and Books of Rules and Regulations: Section 2: West. Glasgow.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  18. ^ Network Rail (2013). Scotland Route Sectional Appendix.

Notes

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  1. ^ Awdry says on the Slamannan Railway, but that is wrong; the Slamannan came no nearer than Manuel.
  2. ^ The lease charge was complex; the E&GR were to pay to the E&BR "an annual fixed rent ... equal to four per cent. on [the cost of constructing the line, and also] a further fluctuating and contingent rent, or consideration, equal to one-half of the whole receipts ... after deducting the said fixed rent of four per cent., and a sum equal to 33 per cent. on such gross receipts in respect of the expense of maintaining and working the [line]".
  3. ^ Some sources are unclear about the status of the company. Ross says (page 72) that it was "vested" in the E&GR for 999 years from 31 July 1852, and it "passed into the NBR embrace in 1865". In fact the Edinburgh and Bathgate Railway Company remained in existence until 1922, but the physical line was leased to the E&GR, and the lease passed to the NBR when it took over the E&GR in 1865.
  4. ^ Livingston was designated as a new town in 1962, although the intention was first declared in 1946. The growth of the urban area eventually filled the space between the former E&BR line and the Shotts line to Edinburgh. A new station opened on the latter line on 6 October 1984.
  5. ^ The 1895 "Bradshaw" uses Livingstone. The signal box at the site was named Livingstone in the 1960 Sectional Appendix issued by British Railways Scottish Region.