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This
was the quintessential Stephens' light railway and was always the
heart of his empire. Conceived as the Rother Valley railway, it
opened from Robertsbridge to Tenterden in 1900. Despite detailed
and legally authorised extensions over much of the Kent Weald to
Maidstone, Rye and Cranbrook, lack of capital meant that only the
extension to Headcorn was to be opened in 1905. Built as a model
light railway, expediency and lack of capital had forced it to become
the make-do and mend railway so beloved of railway enthusiasts.
It served a deeply rural area it was initially profitable but suffered
severe road competion fromthe early 1920s. Only track relaying and
imported motive power during World War II and at nationalisation
in 1948 saved it.
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