Mid-Norfolk Railway | |
---|---|
Locale | England |
Connections | Network Rail (at Wymondham South Junction) |
Commercial operations | |
Name | The Mid-Norfolk Railway |
Built by | Samuel Morton Peto |
Original gauge | 4 ft 8+1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge |
Preserved operations | |
Operated by | Mid-Norfolk Railway Preservation Trust |
Stations | 5 |
Length | 17 miles 40 chains (28.2 km)[1][2][3] 15 mi (24 km) operational |
Preserved gauge | 4 ft 8+1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge |
Commercial history | |
Opened | 1845 |
Closed to passengers | 6 October 1969 |
Closed | Between 1980 and 1989 |
Preservation history | |
1974 | Wymondham, Dereham and Fakenham Rail Action Committee formed |
1978 | Fakenham & Dereham Society formed |
1995 | Dereham Rash's Green to Yaxham re-opens to passengers |
1997 | Dereham railway station re-opens to passengers |
1998 | Dereham to Wymondham section re-opens to goods |
1999 | Dereham to Wymondham section re-opens to passengers |
2013 | First passenger train to Hoe |
2018 | First passenger train to Worthing |
Headquarters | Dereham |
Website | |
www |
The Mid-Norfolk Railway (MNR) is a 17+1⁄2 miles (28.2 km) preserved standard gauge heritage railway, one of the longest in Great Britain.[4] Preservation efforts began in 1974, but the line re-opened to passengers only in the mid-1990s as part of the "new generation" of heritage railways.[5] The MNR owns and operates most of the former Wymondham-Fakenham branch line of the Norfolk Railway. The branch opened in 1847, was closed to passengers in stages from 1964 to 1969 as part of the Beeching cuts, and was finally fully closed to goods traffic in 1989. (The northern section of this line, to Wells, was built by the Wells and Fakenham Railway and part of this has been operated by the Wells and Walsingham Light Railway since 1982.)
Regular steam and diesel services run 11+1⁄2 miles (18.5 km) through the centre of Norfolk between the market towns of Wymondham and Dereham via Yaxham, Thuxton and Kimberley Park, and occasional sightseer services continue north of Dereham passing the nearby village of Hoe, where there is no station, to the limit of the operational line at Worthing.[6][7] The line is periodically used for commercial freight operations and staff instruction for mainline railway companies.[8][9] The company owns the line to a point just beyond County School railway station, which will make it the third longest heritage railway in England once restoration is complete.
The MNR is owned and operated by the Mid-Norfolk Railway Preservation Trust (MNRPT, a charitable company limited by guarantee[10]), and is mostly operated and staffed by volunteers. The railway is listed as exempt from the UK Railways (Interoperability) Regulations 2000.[11]