CROUCH VALLEY LINE


|}
The 'Crouch Valley Line' is a branch line from Wickford to Southminster in Essex. It is usually called the 'Southminster Branch' [1] by users of the line, although that is no longer its official name. The majority of the line is formed by 'Network Rail route EA 1060'; the short (11 ch.) length between Wickford Junction and Wickford Station is a small section of Network Rail route EA 1050[2].
Places served by the line are:

Wickford

Battlesbridge

South Woodham Ferrers

North Fambridge

Althorne

Burnham-on-Crouch


★ for Mangapps Railway Museum

Southminster
The line diverges from the Shenfield-Southend Victoria line at Wickford. It is single track throughout, with a passing loop at North Fambridge station (which is the mid-point of the line to allow trains in opposite directions to pass).
The 16.5-mile route was first opened to goods traffic on 1 June 1889, and passengers on 1 July 1889[3]. The line was electrified at 25 kV AC overhead in 1986
The number of trains on the Crouch Valley Line is normally restricted to two trains per hour (one train in each direction), with additional trains during the rush-hour. This is due to the limited track space available when the line was drastically cut back by Dr. Beeching to one track in the 60's as part of the Beeching Axe railway closures. The line still takes overnight waste and fuel rods from Bradwell's decommissioned power station to another part of the country during the night.
As the line is deemed minor, it often gets the oldest rolling stock of trains in operation by the current operators, whereas the mainline trains and even the Southend line trains get more up-to-date stock. That said, some of the very oldest stock used on the Southminster line was scrapped in 2004.
Passenger services are currently operated by 'one'. They replaced the previous operator, First Great Eastern, on 1 April 2004, when all the operators in East Anglia were merged into one new franchise. Services are formed using Class 315 or Class 321 electrical multiple units.
The map has been produced using data from Trackmaps[4].

Contents
References
External links

References


1. Southminster Branch Line
2. Rules of the Plan 2007
3. Southminster Survivor Celebrates 100
4. QUAIL Railway Track Diagrams by Trackmaps

External links



The Crouch Valley Line (unofficial site)

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves