West Wales lines
The West Wales lines are a group of railway lines from Swansea through Carmarthenshire to Pembrokeshire, West Wales. The main part runs from Swansea to Carmarthen and Whitland, where it becomes three branches to Fishguard, Milford Haven and Pembroke Dock.
Before the rail cuts of the 1960s, there were routes to Cardigan, Newcastle Emlyn, Llandysul, and via Lampeter, cross-country from Carmarthen to Aberystwyth.
History
The railway to west Wales was first projected in 1844, and the proposal was for a line to run from the Great Western Railway near Gloucester to Fishguard, with a branch from Whitland to Pembroke. The railway was called the South Wales Railway, and although it was in theory independent of the GWR, in practice it was very closely linked. This was shown by the fact that Isambard Kingdom Brunel was the engineer, and the line was laid to the broad gauge.Construction began in 1847, but the company ran into financial difficulties. In addition, the Irish potato famine reduced the prospective revenue from Anglo-Irish traffic. As a result, instead of completing the line to the proposed port at Fishguard, the Haverfordwest branch was extended to Neyland, where a harbour could be provided more cheaply.
The line from Swansea opened as far as Carmarthen on 11 October 1852; then to Haverfordwest on 2 January 1854; and finally to its terminus at Neyland on 15 April 1856. At first, the railway was leased to the GWR, but in 1863 the two companies were amalgamated.
The original powers for the branch to Pembroke lapsed, and so in 1859 the Pembroke and Tenby Railway was authorised to build a, standard gauge, line from Pembroke Dock to Tenby. The line opened from Tenby to Pembroke on 30 July 1863, and to Pembroke Dock on 8 August 1864. The extension from Tenby to the GWR line at Whitland opened on 4 September 1866. There were two adjoining stations at Whitland with no physical connection between the two lines because they operated on different gauges.
The line was engineered by Sir James Szlumper. It had its own police force until 1897, due to the high-security of the Naval Dockyard at Pembroke Dock, and the munitions transported.
The Pembroke & Tenby Company obtained powers in 1866 to extend their standard-gauge line from Whitland to Carmarthen. This would have enabled the Pembroke & Tenby to link up with the standard-gauge network through the Llanelly Railway, the Vale of Towy Railway and the Central Wales line. Through a series of inter-company working agreements, this would have had the effect of giving the London & North Western Railway unrestricted access to west Wales. Within the Act for the extension to Carmarthen was a Schedule which allowed either party to request the Great Western for running powers to the Pembroke company. In doing this the cost of adding a rail to mix the gauge and installing the necessary junctions at Whitland and Carmarthen was £20,000 to be paid to the Great Western within 18 months of the request. The request was made by the Pembroke company and consequently the Great Western converted the up line to standard gauge leaving the down line purely as broad. This was not what the Pembroke company was wanting but had to live with it. The Great Western maintained a crossing loop at St Clears for the broad gauge and this caused some hindrance to the Pembroke company. The conversion is noted as the first pure broad to standard gauge for the Great Western.
The Pembroke & Tenby ran the first goods trains to Carmarthen on 1 June 1868, and passenger services in August 1869. The G.W.R began leasing the line on 1 July 1896 before finally amalgamated it a year later.
In 1895, the Rosebush line was opened from to Letterston along the old Maenclochog line, and construction started on extending it to Goodwick and the proposed new harbour at Fishguard. A Bill was approved by Parliament for the railway to extend eastwards to Carmarthen, although this was stopped when the line was bought out by the Great Western Railway in 1898. In 1906, the railway was extended from Letterston to followed in 1909 with.
The Rosebush line was closed during World War I because its rails were shipped to the Western Front in 1917 for use by the British Army. In 1923 the line was relaid. However, passenger services ceased in 1937. The entire line was closed in 1949.
Passenger services stopped on the Whitland and Cardigan branch in 1962, followed by freight in 1963. The line to followed in 1964. Pembrokeshire escaped lightly from the 1963 Beeching Report as none of the remaining three branches – to Fishguard, Milford Haven, and Pembroke Dock via Tenby – were proposed for closure. The Pembroke Dock branch survived a later closure proposal in the late 1960s.
The first freight line to the Oil Refineries was built in 1960 when Esso opened their first refinery in Milford Haven.
Current services
Until 2013, train services on the West Wales line were compromised, by the existence of a stretch of single track on the otherwise double-track main line. This stretch of single track is between Cockett West Junction in the western suburbs of Swansea and Duffryn West Junction to the east of Llanelli. Within this section the River Loughor was crossed on a viaduct which required significant works to accommodate two tracks. Plans were advanced to replace the viaduct and restore double track, expected to be complete in 2013.One intermediate station, Gowerton, also lies on this single-track stretch, with just the former Down platform in use for trains in either direction. The disused former Up platform is still in existence. Less than half of all trains passing through Gowerton can be scheduled to make stops owing to pathing limitations. Additionally, this tight pathing compromised route performance which can amplify delays and hence impact connections into and out of the long-distance Intercity services between Swansea, Cardiff and London. This is important since there are many interchange passengers from the Pembroke Dock line for Cardiff and English destinations.
The double tracking work between Cockett and Dyffryn was completed by July 2013 with a revamped Gowerton railway station having the disused platform brought back into use. This resulted in Gowerton railway station having an additional 95 trains stopping there every week.
Additional problems are also found on the Single Lead Junction at Swansea Loop East junction, which causes conflict between trains from west of Swansea and the eastbound mainline High Speed Train services. There are two passenger companies operating; Transport for Wales Rail and Great Western Railway.
Arriva Trains Wales, Iarnród Éireann and Stena Line promotes SailRail using the Fishguard Harbour to Rosslare Europort service which links with the Iarnród Éireann trains to Dublin Connolly on the Dublin–Rosslare railway line.
Route
The cities, towns and villages served by the route are listed below. Towns in italics are served by InterCity express services.Swansea to Whitland
- Swansea
- * connection with South Wales Main Line
- Gowerton
- Llanelli
- * connection with Heart of Wales line and Swansea District line
- Pembrey and Burry Port
- Kidwelly
- Ferryside
- Carmarthen
- Whitland
Pembroke Dock branch
- Narberth
- Kilgetty
- Saundersfoot
- Tenby
- Penally
- Manorbier
- Lamphey
- Pembroke
- Pembroke Dock
Whitland to Clarbeston Road
- Clunderwen. Former junction for the North Pembrokeshire and Fishguard Railway.
- Clarbeston Road
Milford Haven branch
- Haverfordwest
- Johnston
- Milford Haven
Fishguard branch
- former connection with the North Pembrokeshire and Fishguard Railway. It closed in May 1949.
- Fishguard and Goodwick
- Fishguard Harbour
Services
Great Western Railway
;Regular servicesGreat Western Railway operate the following services:
- Monday to Saturday, one morning High Speed Train from to, stopping at and
- Monday to Saturday, one evening High Speed Train from to, stopping at and
- Saturdays, one morning High Speed Train from to
- Sundays, three morning/afternoon High Speed Trains from to, stopping at and
- Sundays, three afternoon/evening High Speed Trains from to, stopping at and
- Additional daily services are provided between and.
The following services previously operated by Great Western Railway no longer operate:
- Daily services from to.
- Daily night time service from to, stopping only at, and
- Daily daytime service from to, stopping only at and, and also operating express to/from London stopping only at. This train was noted for its non-stop through-service to principal stations like, and
- Daily sleeper service from to London
Transport for Wales
- to via – every two hours
- to – every two hours
- * A standard repeating departure time trial results in a 58-minute layover at, with trains passing each other at, the only passing loop between and Pembroke Dock
- to via – every two hours
- * Together with the Milford Haven–Manchester service this makes Carmarthen to Manchester hourly
Other services
- to – one train per night, connecting with the night ferry to Rosslare Europort, Ireland
- to avoiding – one train per day, connecting with daytime conventional ferry to Rosslare Europort, Ireland
- Heart of Wales Line services between and travel over the Swansea to Llanelli section of the West Wales Lines.
- Irregular local trains to and from which started on 12 September 2011, after a petition organised by two 15-year-olds. Funding will be provided by the Welsh Assembly Government at the cost of £1.4m per annum. One of these extra trains in each direction was expected to connect with the summer-only Stena Lynx fast ferry to Rosslare Europort, Ireland in summer 2012, however Stena line then sold the Lynx fastcraft which means the summer 2012 Lynx service will no longer operate.
Freight
- One of the oil refineries near Milford Haven generates daily long distance freight trains.
- The Tata Trostre tinplate works generates some freight traffic
Developments & upgrades
In December 2008 the Welsh Assembly announced it had secured funding from the European Fund for Strategic Investments to upgrade sections of the line between Gowerton and Loughor. The work, which was completed by 8 July 2013, included the replacement of the wooden Loughor Rail Viaduct with a concrete/steel structure across the River Loughor, the subsequent redoubling of the line between and and the reopening on the old platform at Gowerton railway station. The improvement work has allowed more trains to stop at Gowerton while decreasing overall travel times, and an increase in the frequency of services between Swansea and Llanelli. In 2015, Network Rail made the proposal to reopen in its annual Strategic Business Plan.
In 2018 community campaigning began to improve services and facilities at.