This photograph was taken from Woodborough Road in Winscombe.
It is of the last passenger train from Winscombe to Sandford, passing over
Winscombe Railway Bridge on September 7th 1963.
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| The branch line
from Yatton, via. Cheddar, to Wells was built in 1869-70 by the Bristol and
Exeter Railway Company. The Great Western Railway soon took over and the line
became an important passenger and freight line carrying dairy produce,
limestone from the Quarries and paper making materials. But, it was the Cheddar
Strawberries that ensured the lines success and gave the line the name
"The Strawberry Line". In the Parish there were two stations.
One was at Sandford, now 'Sandford Stone'. The station is wonderfully preserved
in the Great Western colours and is worth a visit: a cafe is open next to the
original station and local stone pots and garden furniture can be bought. A
smaller wooden chalet station, later to be replaced by a brick one, was built
at Woodborough. This was shortly after renamed 'Winscombe' to avoid confusion
with another station elsewhere. The village, then Woodborough but later to
become known as 'Winscombe' grew around the station and around the original
village green. The site of the old station can still be visited as it is now
the Millenium Green. |
| The line was busy for
nearly a hundred years before being closed as part of the "Beeching
Cuts". Several of its railway bridges where blown up, including the one at
Sandford, but not the Woodborough bridge, which has still survived - see
photograph. After closure, in 1963-4, local residents used part of the route
for unofficial walks. In 1978, some of these residents formed the Cheddar
Valley Railway Walk Society, which persuaded Woodspring District Council to buy
much of the line and lease it to the Society as a walk and nature
reserve. |
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The 'Strawberry Line' is now a well used path
for walkers, (both two and four legged), cyclists and athletes. Disabled access
is available to the cycleway. There are many wild flowers, birds, butterflies
and a whole host of other animals including glow worms. Badgers, foxes and deer
use the line as a nature corridor. One of the most interesting aspects of the
railway is its tunnel, one of the few open in the country. If you take with you
a torch, you can see cave spiders, calcite formations and Victorian brickwork.
The Strawberry line certainly deserves its status as a local nature reserve and
has preserved many old railway features. For more information contact: the
Cheddar Valley Railway Walk Society c/o 67 The Lynch, Winscombe. B25 1AR
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