(Redirected from Beeching axe)
Many railway lines were closed as a result of the Beeching Axe
The 'Beeching Axe' is an informal name for the
British Government's attempt in the
1960s to reduce the cost of running the
British railway system. The name derives from the main author of the report ''The Reshaping of British Railways'', Dr.
Richard Beeching. Although this report also proposed the development of new modes of freight service and the modernisation of trunk passenger routes, it is best remembered for recommending the wholesale closure of what it considered to be little-used and unprofitable
railway lines, and the removal of stopping passenger trains and closure of local stations on other lines.
The report was a reaction to the significant losses which had begun in the
1950s as the expansion in road transport began to abstract significant passenger and goods traffic from the railways; losses which continued to bedevil British Railways despite the introduction of the railway modernisation plan of
1955 [1]. Beeching proposed that only drastic action would save the railways from increasing losses in the future.
However, successive governments were more keen on the cost-saving elements of the report rather than those elements requiring investment. Over 4,000 miles of railway and 3,000 stations were closed in the decade following the report, being a reduction of 25% of route miles and 50% in the number of stations. To this day in railway circles and amongst older people, particularly in those parts of the country that suffered most from the cuts, Beeching's name is still synonymous with the mass closure of railways and consequent loss of many local services.
Background

A
timetable from
1963 showing the closure of a
branch line and the suggested replacement bus service. This was the start of the Axe; the peak year followed in
1964.
In tune with the mood of the early 1960s, the transport minister in
Harold Macmillan's
Conservative government was
Ernest Marples, the director of a major road-construction company (his two-thirds shareholding were divested to his wife whilst he was a minister).
[2][3] Marples believed that the future of transport lay with roads, and that railways were a dead-end relic of the
Victorian past.
An advisory group known as the Stedeford Committee (after its chairman, Sir
Ivan Stedeford) was set up to report on the state of British transport and provide recommendations. Also on the Committee was Richard Beeching, who at the time was the Technical Director of ICI. He was later, in 1961, appointed Chairman of the newly formed
British Railways Board. Both Stedeford and Beeching clashed on a number of issues related to the latter's proposals to drastically prune the rail infrastructure. In spite of questions being asked in Parliament, Sir Ivan's report was never published and the proposals for the future of the railways that came to be known as the "Beeching Plan" were adopted by the Government, resulting in the closure of a third of the rail network and the scrapping of a third of a million freight wagons.
Beeching believed the railway system should be run like a business and not a public service, and that if parts of the railway system did not pay their way—like some rural branch lines—they should be closed. His reasoning was that once these were closed, the remaining core of the system would be restored to profitability.
When Beeching was Chairman of
British Railways he initiated a study of traffic flows on all the railway lines in the country. This study took place during the week ending
23 April 1962 , two weeks after Easter, and concluded that 80% of the traffic was carried on just 20% of the network, with much of the rest of the system operating at a loss. The "The Reshaping of British Railways" report
[4] (or Beeching I report) of
27 March,
1963 proposed that out of Britain's then 18,000 miles (29 000 km) of railway, some 6,000 miles (9 700 km) of mostly rural branch and cross-country lines should be closed. Furthermore, many other rail lines should lose their passenger services and be kept open for freight only, and many of the lesser-used stations should close on lines that were to be kept open. The report was accepted by the Government.
At the time, the highly controversial report was called the "Beeching Bombshell" or the "Beeching Axe" by the press. It sparked an outcry from many communities that would lose their rail services, many of which (especially in the case of rural communities) had no other means of public transport.
The government argued that many rail services could be provided more cheaply by
buses, and in a policy known as "
bustitution" (a
portmanteau of "bus" and "substitution"), promised that abandoned rail services would have their places taken by replacement bus services.
A significant part of the report also proposed that British Rail electrify some major main lines and adopt containerized freight traffic instead of outdated and uneconomic wagon-load traffic. In general,
politicians jumped at the money-saving parts of the plan but were less enthusiastic about those parts that required expenditures. Some of those plans were eventually adopted, however, such as the creation of the
Freightliner concept and further electrification of the
West Coast Main Line from
Crewe to
Glasgow in
1974. Additionally the staff terms and conditions were improved over a period of time.
Rail closures by year
At its peak in
1950, the mileage of the British Railway's system was around 21,000 miles (33 800 km) and 6000 stations. By
1975, the system had shrunk to 12,000 miles (19 300 km) of track and 2000 stations, roughly the same size it was in
2003.
Contrary to popular belief, Beeching did not start the rail closures, as a number of rail closures had occurred during the
1950s and certainly earlier
[5]. In reality he was continuing a trend, as the Branchline Committee of
BR had already closed a number of unremunerative lines between 1950 and
1963. Indeed, approximately 3000 miles (4800 km) of line had already been closed. After the publication of the first report, the closure process was accelerated.
★ 'Branchline Committee closures'
★
★ '1950'....150 miles (240 km) closed
★
★ '1951'....275 miles (440 km) closed
★
★ '1952'....300 miles (480 km) closed
★
★ '1953'....275 miles (440 km) closed
★
★ '1954' to '1957'....500 miles (800 km) closed
★
★ '1958'....150 miles (240 km) closed
★
★ '1959'....350 miles (560 km) closed
★
★ '1960'....175 miles (280 km) closed
★
★ '1961'....150 miles (240 km) closed
★
★ '1962'....780 miles (1 260 km) closed
★ 'Beeching closures'
★
★ '1963'....324 miles (521 km) closed
★
★ '1964'....1058 miles (1702 km) closed
★
★ '1965'....600 miles (965 km) closed
★
★ '1966'....750 miles (1 207 km) closed
★
★ '1967'....300 miles (480 km) closed
★
★ '1968'....400 miles (640 km) closed
★
★ '1969'....250 miles (400 km) closed
★
★ '1970'....275 miles (440 km) closed
★
★ '1971'....23 miles (37 km) closed
★
★ '1972'....50 miles (80 km) closed
★
★ '1973'....35 miles (56 km) closed
★
★ '1974'....0 miles (0 km) closed
Not all of the recommendations for railway line closures were implemented; a number of lines were kept open for a variety of reasons, including political maneuvering. For example, the railway lines through the
Scottish Highlands, although they were seen as not very cost-efficient by Beeching's definition, were kept open, in part because of pressure from the powerful Highland lobby. It has also been suggested that other lines may have been kept open because they passed through marginal constituencies. In addition, some lines that were listed for closure were kept open because the local roads were quite incapable of absorbing the resulting extra traffic.
Others were kept open simply because they provided vital links between towns. The
Marshlink line connecting
Hastings and
Ashford in South-east England escaped closure as it made up the southern half of what was effectively a triangle of railways between
Kent and
Sussex. Its closure would have meant a hugely increased journey length - all the way up to
Tonbridge - for anyone wanting to travel by rail between the towns. It is still open today although the majority of it is not electrified.
On the other hand, some routes that Beeching proposed to keep as major trunk routes, for example the
Woodhead route, were eventually closed in favour of keeping alternative politically-sensitive routes open.
Overall, 2128 stations were closed on lines that were kept open.
There are two mistaken beliefs regarding the Beeching report that persist to this day. First, that the Beeching report was mainly concerned with (and proposed the closure of) little-used rural branch-lines. This is not correct. As the maps and text show, as well as a some minor railway lines, many of Beeching's closures were to be of lines in populated industrial areas (including the electric commuter lines from Liverpool to Southport and Bury to Manchester - which in the end were both reprieved, though others were not), cross country routes linking large towns and cities, and included some major inter-city railway lines , where it was deemed that these lines were duplicates of other main-lines. The most notable of these was the former
Great Central Railway, which linked
London to the
Midlands and north of
England. The often overlooked truth of the Beeching report that its main effect was to deprive substantial towns such as
Mansfield (since reopened),
Corby, and Leigh (Lancashire) (these three towns alone in 2007 having a total population of around a quarter of a million) of their railways rather than solely concentrating on little used rural routes. A further example is the service from
Bury to
Bacup in Lancashire which at closure (in 1966) had a service every of at least every thirty minutes(and was a well used service) - this was not a line running empty trains, but a busy commuter line. Careful inspection of the passenger usage map in Beeching's report
( http://www.joyce.whitchurch.btinternet.co.uk/maps/density.jpg ) shows that a number of high usage lines were proposed for closure and were in fact closed. Beeching's published report itself gives few details of the lines to be closed (rather it gives a few "examples," mainly of lines which indeed were carrying very few passengers); it certainly gives NO details for those well-used lines which he proposed for closure. One example which was not a "no-hoper" line did "slip through" Beeching's public relations exercise: the direct line from
Hull to
York. The line's trains carried an AVERAGE of 43 passengers each, hardly a insignificant loading (compared with just eight for another example: the line from
Thetford to
Swaffham).
The second mistaken belief is that increased car ownership leads not only to less use rail use but to 'terminal decline'; in 2007 car ownership in the UK is at its highest, yet passenger rail usage is also at at a fifty year high. (see: http://www.rail-reg.gov.uk/server/show/nav.1528 )
Since 1974, there have been few passenger railway closures in the UK (examples include
March to
Spalding in 1982, and some branch lines including
Maiden Newton to
Bridport in 1974,
Alston to
Haltwhistle in 1976 and
Tunbridge Wells to
Eridge in 1985). Indeed there have been some re-openings, usually on lines that had lost their passenger service due to Beeching, but had been left open for freight services, therefore reinstatement of passenger services came at a relatively low cost. However, in the 1970s and 1980s there was a large scale closure of such latterly freight-only lines, the demolition of structures and disposal of permanent way, which has made many such re-openings less likely in future, thus effectively making the Beeching legacy permanent.

This is what the BR network would have looked like if Beeching's (II) plans had been implemented (all lines except those bolded would have been closed
Beeching II
In
1964, Dr. Beeching issued a second, less well-known, report "The Development of the Major Railway Trunk Routes"
[6], widely known as "Beeching II", which went even further than the first report. The report singled out lines that were believed to be worthy of continued large-scale investment.
Essentially, it proposed that all railway lines other than major inter-city routes and important commuter lines around big cities had little future and should eventually close. If the report had been implemented, the railway system would have been cut to just 7000 miles (11 260 km), leaving Britain with little more than a skeletal railway system, with large parts of the country entirely devoid of railways.
The report was rejected by the then
Labour government and Dr. Beeching resigned in
1965. Although politicians were ultimately responsible for the rail closures, Dr. Beeching's name has become synonymous with them ever since.
Changing attitudes and policies
It was in 1964, that a Labour government was elected under
Prime Minister Harold Wilson. During the election campaign, Labour promised to halt the rail closures if elected. Once elected, however, they quickly backtracked on this promise, and the closures continued, at a faster rate than under the previous administration and until the end of the decade.
In 1965,
Barbara Castle was appointed transport minister, and she began to look at the country's transport problems as a whole. Mrs. Castle decided that at least 11,000 route miles (17 700 km) of "basic railway" would be needed for the foreseeable future and that the railway system should be stabilised at around this size.
However, towards the end of the 1960s it became increasingly clear that rail closures were not producing the promised savings or bringing the rail system out of deficit, and were unlikely ever to do so. Mrs. Castle also stipulated that some rail services that could not pay their way but had a valuable social role should be subsidised. However, by the time the legislation allowing this was introduced into the
1968 Transport Act, Section 39 of this Act made provision for a subsidy to be paid by the Treasury for a three year period. There were a number of services and railway lines that would have qualified and benefited from these subsidies, but a number had already been closed or removed, thus lessening the impact of the legislation. Nevertheless, a number of branch lines were saved by this legislation.
Overview
The closures failed in their main purpose of trying to restore the railways to profitability, with the promised savings failing to materialise. By closing almost a third of the rail network, Beeching managed to achieve a saving of just £7 million, whilst overall losses were running in excess of £100 million. These losses were mainly because the branch lines acted as feeders to the main lines, this feeder traffic was lost when the branches closed — in turn meaning less traffic for, and a worsening of the finances of the main lines, and the increasing vulnerability of the main line. The assumption at the time was that
car owners would drive to the nearest railhead (which was usually the junction where the closed branch line would otherwise have taken them) and continue their journey onwards by train, but in practice having once left home in their cars, they used them for the whole journey. Another reason for Beeching plan's not achieving any great savings is that(perhaps ironically) the busiest commuter routes have always lost the greatest amount of money. Some of the worst performing rural lines in 1962 (for example Thetford to Swaffham) had costs so low that axing their services saved just a few hundred pounds, whilst millions were being lost on busy London commuter lines, which even Beeching realised would be a political and practical "disaster" to close.
The use of
light railway concepts, already in use on some branch lines at the time of the report, was ignored by Beeching. Such concepts have since been successfully utilised by British Rail and its successors on lesser-used lines that survived the axe (such as the line from Ipswich to Lowestoft which survives as a "basic railway").
The "
bustitution" policy which replaced rail services with buses also failed. In many cases the replacement bus services were far slower and less convenient than the train services they were meant to replace, resulting in them being extremely unpopular with the public. As a consequence of this, most of the replacement bus services only lasted a few years before they were removed due to a lack of patronage, thus effectively leaving large parts of the country without any means of public transport. In practice, this policy proved unsuccessful, as the travelling public never saw a bus service as a suitable replacement for a rail service.
The closures were brought to a halt in the early
1970s when it became apparent that they were not useful, that the benefit of the small amount of money saved by closing railways was outweighed by the
congestion and
pollution caused by increasing reliance on cars which followed, and also by the general public's hatred of the cuts.
One of the last major railway closures (and possibly one of the most controversial) resulting from the Beeching Axe was of the 98-mile-long (158 km)
Waverley Route main line between
Carlisle, Hawick, and
Edinburgh, in
1969; plans have since been made in 2006 with the approval of the
Scottish Parliament to re-open a significant section of this line. With a few exceptions, after the early 1970s proposals to close other lines were met with vociferous public opposition and were quietly shelved; this opposition stemmed from the public's experience of the many line closures during the main years of the cuts in the mid and late 1960s. Today, Britain's railways, like nearly every other railway system in the world, still require a subsidy and run at a deficit.
One of the major criticisms made of the Beeching report was that it failed to take into account future trends such as
population growth and the greater demand for travel. The population of many of the towns which had their railways closed in the 1960s has now grown significantly since, leaving these towns more in need of rail transport. Unfortunately much of the land of railways closed during the Axe has since been sold off and built over, making the railways prohibitively expensive to re-open. This is as much a criticism of the policy since the Beeching closures of the wholesale disposal of former railway land rather than the protection of trackbeds using a system similar to the US
Rail Bank scheme for possible future use.
In the early
1980s, under the government of
Margaret Thatcher, the possibility of more Beeching-style cuts was raised again briefly. In
1983 Sir David Serpell, a civil servant who had worked with Dr Beeching, compiled what became known as the
Serpell Report[7] which called for more rail closures. The report was met with fierce resistance from many quarters, and was quickly abandoned.
Reopenings
Since the Beeching cuts of the 1960s, traffic levels have grown significantly and in some areas this has become close to gridlock. In recent years there have been record levels of passengers on the railways. A modest number of the railway closures have therefore been reversed. Notable amongst these is the
Robin Hood Line in
Nottinghamshire, between
Nottingham and
Worksop via
Mansfield, which reopened in the early
1990s. Previously Mansfield had been the largest town in Britain without a rail link.
In the
West Midlands a new
Birmingham Snow Hill station was opened in
1987 to replace the earlier Snow Hill station. The tunnel underneath
Birmingham city centre that served the station was also reopened, along with the line towards
Kidderminster and
Worcester. This introduced a new service between Birmingham and London, terminating at
Marylebone. The former line from Snow Hill to
Wolverhampton has been reopened as the
Midland Metro tram system. The line from
Coventry to Nuneaton was reopened to passengers in
1988. Despite the successful and potential re-opening of many rail routes as light-rail and metro lines, the concept is still under-threat due to the varying popularity of these schemes with successive governments (see
Darling Axe).
Beeching saw
South Wales as a declining industrial region. As a result, it lost the majority of its network. Since 1983 it has experienced a major rail revival, with 32 new stations, and three lines reopened within 20 miles (32 km) of each other:
Abercynon–
Aberdare,
Barry–
Bridgend, and Bridgend–
Maesteg. The
Ebbw Valley Line is also scheduled to be re-opened.
In
Scotland, a 35-mile (56 km) stretch of the former
Waverley Route between
Edinburgh and
Galashiels is expected to be reopened in
2011 now that funding has been approved. The closure of the line in
1969 left the
Scottish Borders area without any rail links. The Edinburgh-
Bathgate line, reopening in
1985, was the first success of a new policy introduced by the Thatcher government of experimental reopenings that would become permanent only if well-used. It was and did.
Plans are now in hand to reopen the section between Bathgate and Drumgelloch. More recently, a four-mile (6.4 km) section of the
Argyle Line was reopened in December
2005, serving
Chatelherault, Merryton and
Larkhall for the first time since 1968.
Also, after several years of 'false' promises dating to the 1980s, the railway from Stirling to Alloa and Kincardine is currently being rejuvenated, and will open in 2007, providing a passenger (and freight) route once again.
In addition a small but significant number of closed stations have reopened, and passenger services been restored on lines where they had been removed. Many of these were in the urban
metropolitan counties where
Passenger Transport Executives have a role in promoting local passenger rail use. Several lines have also reopened as
heritage railways; see
List of British heritage and private railways.
One effect of the Beeching closures which was not always immediately obvious was the single tracking of some formerly double track sections of line. In some cases - e.g.
Princes Risborough (at one time the junction of four separate lines and an important railway town, after the closure of the
GCR it was reduced to a single platform station) to
Bicester singling was done but the line was re-doubled by Chiltern Railways in the early part of the 21st century. Another line which was singled was the line from
Inverness to
Dingwall which is now the major barrier to increasing the number of trains on the Far North Line from Inverness to
Thurso and
Wick. The
West of England Main Line formerly an express route from London to the South-West, was singled and effectively reduced to a cross-country line, since at national level it was viewed as duplicating the
Great Western Main Line. Traffic on the single-tracked
Golden Valley Line between
Cheltenham and
Swindon has also increased to a point where redoubling is being considered.
Notwithstanding the positive environmental implications of a reopening, many of the areas along these routes have expanded and grown over the last 40 years. Where some lines were not profitable in 1963 (on a backdrop of falling passenger numbers and a rise in car use on uncongested roads) they could well be profitable now, or at least could have a desirable and impact on reducing road congestion, pollution and congestion on the railway lines that have remained open, and thus be worth operating with a government subsidy. However in many instances it would be prohibitively expensive for lines closed by the Beeching Axe to be reopened; although it was not stipulated in the report, since Beeching there has been a policy of disposing of surplus-to-requirements railway land. Therefore many bridges, cuttings and embankments have been removed and the land sold off for development; closed station buildings on remaining lines have often been either demolished or sold.
References
1. http://www.railwaysarchive.co.uk/docSummary.php?docID=23
2. http://www.bilderberg.org/railways.htm
3. http://www.rodneyb.demon.co.uk/marples_trading_companies.htm
4. http://www.railwaysarchive.co.uk/docSummary.php?docID=13
5. ''Passengers No More'': by G.Daniels & L.A.Dench Ian Allan(1975) ISBN 0-7110-0438-2
6. http://www.railwaysarchive.co.uk/docSummary.php?docID=14
7. http://www.railwaysarchive.co.uk/docSummary.php?docID=29
See also
★
List of closed railway stations in Britain
★
List of British towns with no railway station
Further reading
★ ''Forgotten Railways'': by H.P. White (1986) ISBN 0-946537-13-5.
★ ''The Great Railway Conspiracy'': by David Henshaw (1994) ISBN 0-948135-48-4.
★ ''British Railways after Beeching'': by G. Freeman Allen, Ian Allan.(1966) (No ISBN)
★ ''BR 1948 - 1973'': by T.R.Gourvish Cambridge.(1974)
External links
★
Petition calling for line re-openings
★
Website about Beeching cuts in more detail
★
Railway maps before and after cuts
★
Extensive before and after photo collection of closed stations, with commentaries
★
History of the closed Guildford to Horsham branch line
★
download the Beeching Report Part 1
★
download the Beeching Report Part 2 (maps)