FAR NORTH LINE


The 'Far North Line' is a rural railway line entirely within the Highland area of Scotland, extending from Inverness to Thurso and Wick.

Contents
Route
Service provision
Connections to other services
Provided by First ScotRail (from 2005)
Towns and villages
History
Footnotes
External links

Route


Like the A9 road north of Inverness the Far North Line follows generally the line of the east-facing Moray-Firth coast. Much of the population of the far north of Scotland is concentrated in coastal areas and, in places, the railway is almost on the shore, the track running along the raised beaches left behind as land rebounded following the end of the last Ice Age.
The railway links many of the same places as the road. Many more places were served by both the railway and the road before three new road bridges were built: across the Moray Firth (between Inverness and the Black Isle), the Cromarty Firth and the Dornoch Firth. The railway is now, in many places, a long way inland from the route of the A9.
Also, the railway loops inland from Tain to Lairg, which has never been on the A9, a deliberate diversion intended upon construction to open the centre of Sutherland to trade. The route then returns to the coast at Golspie. For many years there have been proposals to bypass this ''Lairg loop''[1] with a line across the Dornoch Firth, linking Tain (via Dornoch[2]) more directly with Golspie. This would involve building a new bridge over the Firth, or making dual-purpose the bridge[3] which now carries just the A9. At present there seems to be little real prospect of such plans being implemented.

Service provision


Connections to other services

At Inverness the line connects with the Highland Main Line, which links Inverness and Perth, and a line to Aberdeen (the Aberdeen-Inverness Line).
===Provided by BR Scottish Region (1948 to 1997)

Provided by Scotrail (1997 to 2005)===
The service provided by Scotrail replicated by that provided in the latter years of BR Scottish Region.
Provided by First ScotRail (from 2005)

Passenger trains on the line are operated by First ScotRail. Along the full length of the line there are three services each way Monday – Saturday, a fourth service south in the morning allowing a connection from the Orkney ferry and one service each way on Sundays. Also, Kyle of Lochalsh services run between Inverness and Dingwall. First Scotrail also operates a number of commuter services on the line to and from Inverness, Invergordon, Tain and Ardgay, providing workers in Inverness with a means to get to their work without having to face the A9.

Towns and villages


Towns and villages (and other places) linked by passenger services (Ordnance Survey grid references are for stations, unless otherwise indicated):
Places Grid references Other Notes
Inverness
Beauly
Muir of Ord
Dingwall The Kyle of Lochalsh Line diverges at Dingwall.
Alness
Invergordon
Fearn This small village (full name ''Hill of Fearn'', ) is about two kilometres (one mile) east of the station. This station also benefits the Seaboard Villages.
Tain
Ardgay When first built, and for many years afterwards, Ardgay station was named for the nearby village of Bonar Bridge.
Culrain
Invershin
Lairg Lairg station is over two kilometres (one mile) south of this small town ().
Rogart
Golspie
Dunrobin Castle
Brora
Helmsdale
Kildonan
Kinbrace
Forsinard
Altnabreac
Scotscalder
Georgemas Junction In the past, passenger services divided at Georgemas Junction, part of the train going to Thurso, the other to Wick. In the 1990s this practice was changed. Trains now run to Georgemas, reverse to reach Thurso, and then return through Georgemas a second time before continuing to Wick.
Thurso
Wick

History


The line was built in several stages:-

Inverness and Ross-shire Railway - Opened 11 June 1862 between Inverness and Ardgay

Sutherland Railway - Opened 13 April 1868 between Ardgay and Golspie

Duke of Sutherland's Railway - Opened 1 November 1870 between Golspie and Helmsdale

Sutherland and Caithness Railway - Opened 28 July 1874 between Helmsdale and Wick / Thurso
Much of the work was done by the Inverness-based Highland Railway company or, when completed, taken over by that company. In 1923 the Highland Railway was grouped into the London, Midland and Scottish Railway, under the Railways Act of 1921.
Like railway lines generally in Britain the line was not a product of any strategic plan, but was an ad hoc development, facilitated by Private Acts of Parliament (which were themselves a significant expense for developers) and dependent on cooperation between companies and individuals, each with their own private vested interests. The line did become strategically important during World War I and World War II as part of a supply route for Scapa Flow, Orkney: Jellicoe's Express linked Thurso directly with London (Euston) and Portsmouth.
That the line extends beyond Ardgay in the county of Ross and Cromarty is due, to a large extent, to the railway enthusiasm (some might say madness) of the 3rd Duke of Sutherland. The duke did realise his dream of being able to run his own private train to and from his own station at Dunrobin Castle.
The duke's enthusiasm took the line as far as Gartymore, a little south of Helmsdale, in the county of Sutherland, but this development was more of a financial liability than an asset: the long-term viability of the line then depended on a Caithness willingness, not least from the 17th Earl of Caithness, to link the line to the population centres of Wick and Thurso.
North of Helsmdale the line was built by the Sutherland and Caithness Railway. Turning inland it reaches Forsinard in the Flow Country. The building of the line through the Flow Country - one of the least densely populated parts of Scotland - was to avoid the Berriedale Braes. North of Helmsdale as far as Lybster, it would have been impractical to have built a railway without massive civil engineering projects. Thus coastal villages such as Latheron and Lybster are not served by the line.
In 1902, under the provisions of the Light Railways Act of 1896, the standard gauge Wick and Lybster Railway was built along the east coast of Caithness, running south from Wick to Lybster.[4] This line was never profitable, and it closed in 1944.
Historic branch lines also served Dornoch and the Black Isle.

Footnotes


1. The Lairg loop serves Ardgay, Culrain, Invershin and Rogart as well as Lairg.
2. Ordnance Survey grid reference for Dornoch: .
3. Grid reference for Dornoch Firth road bridge: .
4. Grid reference for Lybster: .

External links



Friends of the Far North Line

Invernet- suburban rail network for Inverness

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

psst.. try this: add to faves