Keith and Dufftown Railway

Keith and Dufftown Railway
The Whisky Line
Class 108 diesel multiple unit "Spirit of Speyside".
LocaleKeith, Moray
TerminusDufftown railway station
Commercial operations
Built byKeith and Dufftown Railway (GNoSR)
Original gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Preserved operations
Owned byThe Keith & Dufftown Railway Association
Stations3
Length11 miles (18 km)
Preserved gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)
Preservation history
1998Transferred from Railtrack to Keith & Dufftown Railway Association
June 2000Reopened to traffic
Keith and Dufftown
Railway
Dufftown
Mortlach Branch
Drummuir Curlers' Platform
Drummuir
Towiemore Halt
Auchindachy
Keith Town
Strathisla Mills
Keith

The Keith and Dufftown Railway ("The Whisky Line") is a heritage railway in Scotland, running for 11 miles (18 km) from Keith Town, Keith (Ordnance Survey grid reference NJ429508) to Dufftown (NJ322414) via Drummuir (NJ378442) and Auchindachy.

Originally the former Great North of Scotland Railway's Keith and Dufftown Railway, which was part of the link Aberdeen with Elgin (with the Strathspey Railway and Morayshire Railway), the line was latterly a freight-only branch for British Rail then truncated at Dufftown and serving the distillery there. Regular passenger services had been withdrawn in May 1968, but in later years it hosted a series of Northern Belle summer Sunday lunch specials from Aberdeen. These ceased in 1991 and after several years disuse, the line passed into the hands of the current operator in 1998; regular heritage trains then began running in 2000.[1]

The line is open, and a regular service runs throughout the railway's operating season from March to September. Special events are also run, including Santa Specials and Scots Nights. These services are run on the Class 108 DMUs.

Dufftown is the main centre of operation of the railway, and has a booking office, a waiting room and a café called the Sidings Café, which is open March to November. There are two headshunts and a loop. Work is being undertaken to install a new loop at Dufftown so that there can be two tracks going into the new engine shed.

At Keith Town station, there is a booking office and a shop which sells railway memorabilia, books, Thomas the Tank Engine items and model railway items which are sold by members of the association. This shop too is also only open during the operating season.

At present there is no connection to the main line: there are two 60 ft sections of track uplifted (these were removed in 1998 when the line was handed over). However, there are long-term plans to reconnect to the mainline; there were discussions about this between the K&DRA, the local MSP Richard Lochhead and Transport Scotland in the autumn of 2015.[2]

  1. ^ Moray Speyside Tourism - Keith and Dufftown RailwayMoray Speyside Tourism website; Retrieved 19 August 2016
  2. ^ "Campaign to reconnect whisky railway to main lines" Robertson, John The Press and Journal news article 9 October 2015; Retrieved 19 August 2016