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Stopped at Llanymynech
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A look at the inter–railway politics that led the Shropshire
and Montgomeryshire to be starved of traffic at its Western end.
When it ceased operations in 1880 the Potteries, Shrewsbury and North
Wales Railway (the ’Potts’)* left a mess. Over the next thirty
years its prolonged death throes left a scattering of, mostly derelict,
railways, unused formations, unused construction powers and an inheritance
of uncertain user rights over a large swath of border country stretching
from Shrewsbury to the Berwyn Mountains. As a latecomer in this saga
Holman F Stephens was able for a time to produce a useful, and for 20
years profitable, railway from much of the old track by the creation
of the Shropshire and Montgomeryshire Light Railway (SMR). Nevertheless
the major traffic sources at the western end were to be denied him by
the machinations of the much larger, if usually impecunious, Cambrian
Railways.
Starting from Shrewsbury, the SMR followed the old Potts formation designed
for express connection to Wales. This led through deeply rural countryside
and when the new line opened in September 1911 it ended at the apparently
inconspicuous and remote country junction of Llanymynech on the Cambrian
Railways’ Oswestry to Welshpool line. This station and the village
from which it was named was in fact a prosperous place of 1000 souls
and was only six miles from the larger market and engineering town of
Oswestry. West of Llanymynech station and the Cambrian line was an area
rich in stone, lime and minerals that had been a principal destination
of the Ellesmere (later Shropshire Union) Canal promoted in the late
18th century.
So how was it that Stephens never managed to tap this traffic source
and the SMR had to make do with the pittance that a junction with the
Cambrian Railways offered? Well it was not for want of trying, but the
depths of the mess left by the old Potts and the combative attitude of
the Cambrian Railways simply defeated the smaller and weaker railway.
When built the Potts had an interchange station at Llanymynech and then
crossed the main Oswestry to Welshpool line of the Cambrian on a double
flat crossing (at some point between 1877 and 1888 converted to a double
junction) with a single connection in the south-westerly direction. The
old main line then proceeded towards the Tanat Valley and the mountains,
throwing off a branch to large quarries at Nantmawr owned by the Lilleshall
Coal and Iron Co. This short (three mile) extension probably generated
more traffic than the whole of the rest of the railway, and in fact was
to remain open after all other railways in the area were closed.
Surrounded by hostile lines and deprived of its through-line status
the Potts had struggled from its opening in 1866 and by 1870 ended its
services from Shrewsbury at Llanyblodwell on the Nantmawr branch, with
a through service to Oswestry on Market days. By 1880 it had got into
a very decrepit state and it was closed on safety grounds by the Board
of Trade. Fatally for the prosperity of companies that attempted to reopen
it the Potts asked the Cambrian to take over the Nantmawr quarry traffic
for two years. It is not clear how long this arrangement initially persisted,
if at all, for Richard France seems to have gone bankrupt at some time
in 1881. The branch certainly closed for a period. The lease of the quarry
was taken up by John Parson Smith, and he was forced by the Cambrian
to advance £800 to repair the track on the line (offset by a rate
rebate until it was repaid) and did so by an agreement dated 24th July
1885. On the same day the Cambrian signed a running powers agreement
with the Potts to maintain and use the branch till the end of 1892,
and this drifted on beyond that as an informal arrangement. Parson Smith
surrendered his lease in September 1899 and his principle customer, the
Lilleshall Co, took it up. They also signed a special rates agreement
with the Cambrian. No doubt triggered by this and the fact that since
1894 they had been also using part of the branch for their Llanfyllin
traffic, the Cambrian seem to have finally pushed for a formal agreement.
This was finally signed on 1 May 1900. It was to be fatal to the prosperity
of the yet to be born Shropshire and Montgomeryshire Light Railway.
Reopening Attempts by the Shropshire Railways
Uniquely amongst British railways the Potts main line then lay derelict
awaiting its re-awakening by Stephens. In 1888 another company, the Shropshire
Railways, had obtained take-over powers. These included reciprocal running
powers with the Cambrian to balance the powers that company had to run
to Shrewsbury and enabled the smaller company to reach Oswestry. This
attempt to resurrect the line failed as they ran out of money before
they could do anything useful.
The Cambrian had meanwhile exploited the weakness of the Shropshire
to consolidate its hold on the area. Anxious to improve its access from
Llanymynech Station to its Llanfyllyn Branch (which had to be reached
by a back shunt east of Llanymynech to pass over the Ellesmere Canal)
and to secure the Nantmawr Quarry traffic it made some astute moves.
In 1894 it negotiated full running rights on the Nantmawr Branch to a
new junction, authorised by the Shropshire Railways Act 1891, with its
Llanfyllyn Branch. It then signalled and interlocked the Nantmawr part
of Llanymynech’s double junction for its own use. Further in 1895/6
despite opposition in writing from Ullmer, the Shropshire’s secretary,
Aslett, the Cambrian manager, citing Board of Trade requirements, severed
the original Potts junction line and rebuilt Llanymynech station platforms
over it. To add insult to injury the Cambrian also built their junction
signal box on Shropshire Railways land.
In the mid to late 1890s the Tanat Valley Light Railway (independent
but soon to be worked and later absorbed by the Cambrian) had been formed
to supplant the old Potts’ and Shropshire Railways 1891 lapsed
powers to build a line up the Tanat Valley. But, with the active participation
of its solicitor Joseph Parry-Jones (who was quite co-incidentally Oswestry's
town clerk and a little later the Cambrian’s Solicitor) and a substantial
bribe of free running powers over the Cambrian into Oswestry, it had
decided by 1898 not to use the line to Llanymynech. Instead it was to
thrust east to join an older Cambrian mineral line (at Porthywaen) giving
a direct railway to Oswestry.
This caused an unholy and prolonged row with Shropshire Railways. Viscount
Newport (later to be Lord Bradford, a Shropshire Railways director and
later one of Stephens founding co-directors on the SMR) had, as a local
landowner, tried to block the Tanat’s Porthywaen connection in
favour of the earlier line. In this he was assisted by that company’s
solicitor, F C Matthews, later to be a long time associate of Stephens
and indeed co-contractor in the SMR rebuilding. These men realised that
mineral traffic was essential to Shropshire Railways revival for, as
Matthews told the Cambrian, it would ‘take out the eye’ of
the concern. In protracted and disputatious negotiations they caused
the Tanat to join the Nantmawr line. It did this for a short distance
at Llanyblodwell (renamed Blodwell Junction) station with an east facing
junction, using it for only a few yards then leaving to join the Porthywaen
line. Their pressure also ensured that a direct west-facing junction
(known contemporaneously as Lord Bradford’s loop) was authorised.
The Coming of the Shropshire and Montgomeryshire
Into this devil’s cauldron of conflicting rights stepped Stephens
with the SMR. In its Light Railway Order this railway was authorised
to reconstruct and operate Shropshire Railways and thus acquired most
of the rights, including running powers, of that company although this
continued to own the track bed etc and had a legal existence and financial
structure. After an initial and unsuccessful attempt to interest the
essentially hostile LNWR and GWR in jointly running the authorised line,
Stephens was forced to adopt his customary independence. With characteristic
energy he rebuilt the SMR with new sleepers (brought in via Aberdovey
Harbour and the Cambrian) and stock, and re-opened to Llanymynech in
March 1911. Although already in dispute over running trains further west
he cheerfully refurbished the double junction installed during the railways
dark ages. An open and clubbable character Stephens was, in Matthew’s
stated judgement, someone who did not excel as a negotiator, and in late
1911 he belatedly wrote to the Cambrian in an almost naive fashion to
discuss in particular running powers:
1 over the Tanat Valley Light Railway;
2 to Nantmawr;
3 to Oswestry via Blodwell Junction;
4 for goods to Ellesmere and interchange with the Great Central Railway.
(Stephens had earlier written to the Cambrian in connection with the
Light Railway Order ‘In view of the fact that you have running
powers over 18 miles of our line and in return …we have only 6
[over yours] we are of the opinion that we [should have more]’).
Well
the Cambrian didn’t mind the occasional market or even regular
passenger trains to Oswestry but they were not going to allow anyone
else access to the lucrative Nantmawr Quarries or the Tanat Valley, let
alone let Stephens’ trains run further.
The Cambrian losing out in the negotiations over Lord Bradford’s
loop had then ensured that it was not built. Furious though this made
the good Lord he had only been able to secure in its place, as a temporary
two year measure, a through coach connection from Llanymynech to the
Tanat Valley- Oswestry trains at Blodwell Junction. Provided by the Cambrian
one coach trundled, thrice, later twice, daily, on the back of the local
goods. Year-on-year they stalled so as not to build the loop to enable
a direct connection into the Tanat. Consequently the service carried
very little traffic and it was eventually to peter out in wartime conditions
in January 1917. In all this the Cambrian had proved thoroughly obstructive
to the Shropshire interest and now proceeded to do all in its power to
bottle up the infant SMR. They used in particular their formal and informal
agreements with the Shropshire to suggest that as they had running rights
on the Nantmawr branch no one else (the SMR) could have as well.
After characteristically pithy Stephens’ correspondence with the
Chairman and General Managers of the Cambrian, there were over the next
few years prolonged discussion and disputes. These culminated in legal
cases that finally went to the High Court. Desperate to protect the £2000
(£125K in 2004 values) they were pulling in each year for the short
haul involved the Cambrian, was, by this time deliberately stalling to
disadvantage the weaker company. It changed its stance by arguing that
running powers could only be exercised over the original junction that
they had unilaterally removed! To bring matters to a head Stephens, on
behalf of the Shropshire companies gave notice on 19th June 1913 that
he wished to work 1 goods and 2 passenger trains over the Nantmawr line
and on 7th July served formal legal notice that such services would be
implemented.
Sixty years earlier railway politics conducted like this had several
times ended with trains trying to force the junction only to be blocked
by locomotives chained to the rails. Unfortunately for our entertainment
but continuingly fortunate for lawyers pockets matters had progressed
to less physical methods. Not surprisingly, given the specific provisions
of the LRO and the Cambrian’s high-handed unilateral decision in
1895 to remove the original junction, the SMR finally won in court, on
appeal, on 27 October 1913.
Had David finally slain Goliath? Regrettably not. As we know the SMR
never terminated its passenger services in Oswestry nor got its happy
ending tapping the lucrative mineral traffic opened up by its progenitors.
The Cambrian's Counsel after its High Court defeat had written to W Kendrick
Minshall (the Company’s Solicitor) ‘…keep them [the
SMR] busy over something else’. This Machiavellian approach seems
to have worked. At one stage they even stooped to informing the Earl
of Powis, a powerful force in the Welsh Borders, one of their directors
and a debenture holder in the SMR, of likely irregularities in SMR reporting
of Debenture interest. An honourable man, he seems to have taken no action.
Agreement?
Earlier in 1913 in an attempt to end the dispute to forestall more legal
costs the SMR had appointed, with Cambrian acquiescence, a special negotiator.
This was Sir Charles Owens, the recently retired General Manager of the
LSWR, a director of that company and a debenture holder in the SMR. Stephens
was obviously by now disgusted at the whole thing and told the Cambrian
directly in early 1916 that he was leaving it to Owens. The court case
had concentrated minds but the Cambrian still dragged it out and War
came. Eventually on 19th December 1916 a formal agreement was drawn up
by Sir Charles and agreed. This provided, amongst other things
1 The Cambrian, regardless of whether Nantmawr quarry traffic went via
Porthywaen or Llanymynech, would pay tolls to the Shropshire.
2 Lord Bradford’s Loop need not be built but access would be provided
to the Tanat
3 If traffic from the Lilleshall company to its works at Hollinswood
(near Wellington) was consigned via the SMR then the Cambrian would receive
a sum equal to the rate it would have received [for Nantmawr-Oswestry]
out of the through rate paid. [This effectively reduced the SMR's take,
probably to unremunerative levels, and the Cambrian knew that the GWR
would also be obstructive, as they too would be losers]
4 The Cambrian could keep its signal box and other structures on Shropshire
land at Llanymynech and would remove the fence and move the shelter obstructing
SMR passengers’ access to its station platforms [This was carried
out and completed on 20th April 1917]
5 The Cambrian would render correct accounts and pay dues promptly (a
bone of contention for at least 30 years)
As can be seen this agreement was of little or no direct benefit to
the SMR/Shropshire interests. However given Cambrian attitudes, Sir Charles
Owens was unable to negotiate more. At least it bought some peace and
reduced legal fees.
With the railways under wartime controls none of this counted anyway.
Hostilities Resumed
The Cambrian continued in general to be unremittingly hostile. The SMR
did not help when in 1919 it attempted to gain an outlet to Potteries
markets and the friendly North Staffordshire Railway with its resurrected
Market Drayton extension, a move that directly threatened Cambrian traffics.
At this point Stephens renewed his attempts to open the Llanymynech
bottleneck and more pithy correspondence and meetings ensued. He sought
access to the quarries, a resumption of the mixed service to Llanyblodwell,
and a through coach from Oswestry to Shrewsbury (later modified to Ford!).
The Cambrian dragged matters out and Stephens, infuriated, threatened
to
try again the 1913 tactic of presenting a train from the quarry for passage
over the SMR , serving notice to that effect on 27 November 1920. Forestalled,
he wrote a fierce letter to Williamson, the Cambrian General Manager,
on 21st December which ended;
“Hope you have a merry Christmas, and that your conscience
will be clear, and that the ghost of the starving Shropshire and Montgomeryshire
Company will not haunt your, troubled, Christmas sleep”
The whole of 1921 was devoted to arguing about the S&MRs rights
to receive Nantmawr traffic including, again serving notice on of their
intention to run on the branch in 6months from 17th May 1921 . In private,
the LNWR, one of the partners in the traffic, showed signs of agreeing
with Stephens, but the Great Western and Cambrian had no qualms and suppressed
this split. Meanwhile the Cambrian threw in every delaying tactic from
quoting spurious rates to submitting unduly high costs for reinstatement
of facilities for through traffic-despite the fact that they were all
in place and in use- to simply refusing to meet or reply to letters.
This tactic worked, the Cambrian amalgamated with the Great Western on
25 March1922 and S&MRs case became hopeless as virtually the whole
route of Lilleshall's traffic was now in that company’s hands.
And anyway the GWR, unlike the Southern that was run by many of Stephens’ friends,
was by inclination hostile to any surviving small company in its territory.
Llanymynech became literally and metaphorically the end of the line.
With precious little to gain financially, thanks to the 1916 agreement,
the SMR gave up on quarry traffic and after a few more years passenger
traffic gave up on them. The Llanymynech –Blodwell Junction line
was finally closed as a through route in 1925.
Nantmawr quarry traffic, one of the principal movers in the Potts,
Shropshire and SMR promotions continued to enrich others until the line
closed in 1992, the last of the railway lines in the area.
*First promoted as the West Midlands, Shrewsbury and Coast of Wales
heading for the chimera of an Irish packet port on the Lleyn Peninsular.
This failed but the more modest West Shropshire Mineral railway was then
promoted as a line to connect the Nantmawr and Criggion area quarries
to the Welshpool - Shrewsbury line. This in turn rapidly evolved through
amendment and amalgamation into the modest potential main line the Potteries,
Shrewsbury and North Wales, a line from Market Drayton via Shrewsbury
and the Berwyns. It nearly became a creature of the Great Northern Railway,
no less, during that railway’s great competitive expansionist period.
At this early stage the Potts was very friendly with the Cambrian and
its predecessors. This changed when the Cambrian got its hands on the
Quarry traffic.
Sources
Cambrian Records at the Public Record Office, in particular RAIL 1057/1922.1924-27,
1928 and 741.
The Tanat Valley, W J Wren, D&C, 1968
Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain Volume11 North & Mid-Wales,
P E Baughan, D&C, 1980

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