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Masham branch

Masham branch
Former station site, Masham - geograph.org.uk - 615602.jpg
Former station site, Masham
Overview
Type Heavy rail
Status Closed
Locale North Yorkshire
Termini Melmerby station (Leeds-Northallerton railway)
Masham station
Stations 2
Operation
Opened 9 June 1875
Closed 1 January 1931 (passengers)
11 November 1963 (completely)
Operator(s) North Eastern Railway
London North Eastern Railway
British Rail
Technical
Line length 7.75 miles (12.47 km)
Number of tracks 1
Track gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)
Masham branch
Masham
Tanfield
Leeds-Northallerton Railway
Melmerby
Leeds-Northallerton Railway

The Masham branch was a 7 34-mile (12.5 km) long North Eastern Railway built single track branch railway line that ran between a junction on the Harrogate to Northallerton line at Melmerby to Masham, North Yorkshire, via one intermediate station, Tanfield.

After a number of abortive attempts to link the market town of Masham, Wensleydale, the branch line was authorised by an Act of Parliament in 1871 and construction started in 1873. The branch line opened on 9 June 1875 and services started the following day.

The line was poorly used from the start. Passing to the London and North Eastern Railway in the 1923 grouping, the line continued to suffer from light traffic apart from a period during the Second World War when the local area was used for munition storage in the area around Tanfield station.

Both Tanfield and Masham stations had been provided with goods facilities in the station area. Tanfield had a passing loop in the station, but was only constructed with one platform. Masham had a goods yard directly next to the station platforms, but was also provided with a transhipment goods yard north of the station and across the Masham to Melmerby road (now the A6108 road) for the narrow gauge railway supplying the reservoir building further west.

A passenger train derailed between Tanfield and Masham on the 5 April 1926. 30 people were aboard the train and despite the train leaving the rails, there were no injuries. The cause was later attributed to newly laid rail on a bed of ash (instead of being properly ballasted) that had buckled in unseasonably hot weather.

A 6-mile (9.7 km) 2-foot (0.61 m) railway was built between Masham and the Leighton Wood area (just north of Masham Moor). This line was used to transport equipment and materials to the building of a reservoir at Roundhill for the Harrogate Corporation and the line was also used by the Leeds Corporation to build their reservoir at Leighton immediately downstream. The line opened in 1905 and was closed in 1930, some time after completion of both reservoirs.


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