Cockermouth, Keswick and Penrith Railway

Cockermouth, Keswick and Penrith Railway
1920 map of the railway
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm)
Length30 miles 65 chains (49.6 km) (1919)[1]
Track length49 miles 15.5 chains (79.17 km) (1919)[1]
Route map
Cockermouth, Keswick
& Penrith Railway
Cockermouth goods station
(formerly C&W railway station)
Cockermouth
Embleton
Bassenthwaite Lake
Braithwaite
Keswick
Briery Siding Halt
unadvertised halt for workmen 1922-1958
Threlkeld
Highgate Platform
unadvertised halt for schoolchildren
Troutbeck
Penruddock
Blencow
Penrith
West Coast Main Line
 

The Cockermouth, Keswick and Penrith Railway (CK&PR) was an English railway company incorporated by act of Parliament on 1 August 1861, to build a line connecting the town of Cockermouth with the London and North Western Railway (LNWR) West Coast Main Line at Penrith. Arrangements for the use of the stations at either end (Cockermouth was already served by the Cockermouth and Workington Railway (C&WR)) were included. Passenger and goods traffic was worked by the LNWR and mineral traffic by the North Eastern Railway, both of whom had shares in the company (the NER inheriting its holding from the Stockton and Darlington Railway, which had encouraged the promotion of the line). The line was 31+12 miles (50.7 km) in length, and had eight intermediate stations.

  1. ^ a b The Railway Year Book for 1920. London: The Railway Publishing Company Limited. 1920. p. 246.