Swanage Railway

Swanage Railway
The Purbeck Line
56XX Tank No.6695 on the Swanage Railway viewed from Corfe Castle
TerminusWareham
Norden
Swanage
Commercial operations
Built bySwanage Railway Company
Original gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Preserved operations
Stations5
Length9.5 miles (15.3 km)
Preserved gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Commercial history
Opened20 May 1885
Closed1 January 1972
Preservation history
1979Line re-opened at/alongside King George's playing fields
1980Steam returns to the Swanage Line, officially
1982Swanage station re-opens officially
1984Herston Halt opens to the public
1988Swanage Line extends to Harman's Cross
1989Harman's Cross opened officially
1993Corfe Castle and Norden Park and Ride extension completed
2009Swanage Line sees first public through passenger service between London Victoria via Wareham and Swanage since closure
2014Lease signed for entire line from Swanage to Worgret Junction
2017Regular passenger service on entire line from Swanage to Wareham
HeadquartersSwanage
Swanage station is decorated with railway memorabilia.
Swanage station

The Swanage Railway is a railway branch line from near Wareham, Dorset to Swanage, Dorset, England, opened in 1885 and now operated as a heritage railway.

The independent company which built it was amalgamated with the larger London and South Western Railway in 1886. The passenger service was withdrawn in 1972, leaving a residual freight service over part of the line handling mineral traffic.

After the passenger closure, a heritage railway group revived part of the line; it too used the name Swanage Railway and now operates a 9.5-mile (15.3 km) line which follows the route of the former line from Wareham to Swanage with stops at Norden, Corfe Castle, Harman's Cross and Herston Halt. It provides a regular park-and-ride service, normally steam-hauled, from Norden to the sea at Swanage including Corfe Castle village and ruins of Corfe Castle. In 2023, regular trains ran through from Wareham (with National Rail connections) to Swanage.