GNR Halifax - Queensbury - Keighley. The Alpine Route. Yorkshires Lost Railway.

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  • Опубликовано: 28 сен 2024

Комментарии • 85

  • @McMieke
    @McMieke 7 месяцев назад +3

    Such a shame the tunnels and bridges didn't survive. Nice to see what survives but it's sad they didn't turn the whole thing into a cycle trail. Another great video. Thank you

  • @HenrysAdventures
    @HenrysAdventures 8 месяцев назад +2

    Very interesting video. It would be a useful and scenic railway if it was still open. Happy New Year!

  • @abeonthehill166
    @abeonthehill166 Месяц назад +1

    Thanks for sharing !

  • @franciscranfield2051
    @franciscranfield2051 Год назад +2

    Absolutely BRILLIANT video. Thank you for going out and making this - your efforts are greatly appreciated!

  • @edenviews
    @edenviews 2 года назад +3

    A tremendous job, doing the whole route, thanks😁

  • @davidharwood6209
    @davidharwood6209 Год назад +2

    Why are dissused railways so magical..one of the best books I ever owned was called passengers no more by Ian Allen,this book showed every line and station which had closed..

  • @SuperAnthonymartin
    @SuperAnthonymartin 2 месяца назад +1

    You’re a character? Love the determination to go ahead? Ur just like me mate? Love your accent ! Keep up the great work

  • @simonfunwithtrains1572
    @simonfunwithtrains1572 2 года назад +1

    Excellent film, I have often see bits of this line. I will now be able to spot more of it on my travels well done.

  • @krisle90
    @krisle90 2 года назад +2

    Very interesting. Thanks for the video 👍

  • @suesmith4366
    @suesmith4366 2 года назад +1

    Fantastic a great revelation, I did explore Denholme station when the wood yard was there. Loved the whole explore, looking forward to more.😎

  • @MM0IMC
    @MM0IMC 3 года назад +2

    It was good to see Keighley again, as I was last there in 1992!

  • @dylansheppardmymodelrailway
    @dylansheppardmymodelrailway 2 года назад +1

    I'm from Queensbury what a fantastic video thanks for sharing

  • @fromyorkshire9727
    @fromyorkshire9727 3 года назад +3

    Great video, nice to see more of the trackbed. Just a few points, the portal to the second tunnel you tried to find is definately under the road, the galvanised can at 21:56 is what is used in loco sheds to fill up sanders on engines, possibly other things too. At 39 you were looking at the foundations of 'Keighley G. N Junction' signal box, the name boards are in the Vintage Carriage Trust Museum at Ingrow. Oh and you somehow managed to miss the orignal Cullingworth concrete station nameboard that is propped up outside Cullingworth school adjacent to the disused site you entered through the fence. Great video, thanks for filming.

  • @arthurbaldwin1804
    @arthurbaldwin1804 2 года назад +13

    What a shame all this was destroyed at a whim.
    This line as a heritage railway would bring a lot of much needed cash into the area.
    The Line having some spectacular viaducts from Queensbury , the Thornton viaduct into the Denholme tunnel then the Shorter Cullingworth, and the beautiful curved Hewden viaduct all of which are still standing today.

    • @geraiswaiya2347
      @geraiswaiya2347 2 года назад +1

      I'm sure that with larger populations & much stronger rolling stock, some passenger services might be viable.

  • @neilbirch3412
    @neilbirch3412 Год назад +1

    Abersoley brilliant video! Thanks for your hard work

  • @yorksman9868
    @yorksman9868 Год назад +1

    Thanks for the video and the effort that you put in to cover the route. I first became aware of it back in the early 70s as a boy when my father took me on a walk along the old track bed from Damens to the Lees moor tunnel entrance. Back then it still looked like a railway route as it wasn't that overgrown, there was no caravan park and there was still a lot of ballast there. I have since then always been fascinated by it and wish at least some of it had been saved as so much engineering went into it with all the tunnels and viaducts. I do actually have the route on MSTS on an old computer which is very basic but still gives a good idea of the layout.

  • @sjaakmcd1804
    @sjaakmcd1804 2 года назад +1

    There is a saying, "All roads lead to Rome". No roads lead to Keighley, one road leaves it in 2 directions. Great video, cheers.

  • @iangadsby780
    @iangadsby780 3 года назад +3

    Brilliant-brought back many memories of the line thank you.

  • @iansmith3527
    @iansmith3527 3 года назад +2

    Brilliant video. Just like to add that although wilsden station is no longer there the goods shed is. The goods yard has been owned by a plant hire firm since 1970 and the goods shed was extended and half is a house and the other half a garage. I know this because I work there and my place of work is right inside the original goods shed. Even the original sliding door is still inside although it's not visible from the outside. Also the the goods office building is still very much used as storage and a meeting room.

  • @chrisb3830
    @chrisb3830 3 года назад +2

    Great video!!

  • @warrenmcclintoch4232
    @warrenmcclintoch4232 2 года назад +1

    The wooden base at the junction with the Worth Valley Railway was the site of Keighley GN Junction signal box

  • @barrythedieselelectricstea5217
    @barrythedieselelectricstea5217 2 года назад +1

    excellent video well done in doing this trip👍 shame that some of it remains some don't i wonder it would be successful today it's gone beyond making it a railway again built on in some places very sad this happened

  • @srfurley
    @srfurley 3 года назад +5

    The bridge abutments between the branch junction and Ingrow can be seen from a passing K&WVR train.
    Are you going to do the section between Queensbury and Bradford Exchange sometime?

    • @onemanc
      @onemanc  3 года назад +3

      Watch this space Stephen....

    • @dizzydevil547
      @dizzydevil547 Год назад

      @@onemanc I hope you do! ( i know I'm replying 2 yrs later so will check lol) as I have mentioned in a comment above THIS is I think the 1st time I have seen someone do the bit from Halifax to Queensbury ( but I may be wrong) as I only follow a few of you on YT that do disused lines (and as I said adventure me is great on YT if you want to look him up as he gets access / special permission to stuff others dont!) BY the way i'm from your next-door neighbor town Ashton Under Lyne BUT have Lived in Bristol for the past 18 yrs ......If you ever get a chance to be down this way the old Bristol Temple meads to Bath green park station old midland railway route is a good one to do ..its NOW a Sustrans cycleway for most of it BUT there are still bits you can pick up at the start and end that you can do by foot (ain't they all these days?) But it has a LOT of preserved stuff and demolished station ruins including a fully opened tunnel! PLUS part of it is the Avon and Somerset railway heritage line so some surviving stations and as a bonus the cycle track runs parallel to the heritage railway! www.sustrans.org.uk/find-a-route-on-the-national-cycle-network/bristol-and-bath-railway-path/

  • @darrelmcgibbon6872
    @darrelmcgibbon6872 2 года назад +1

    I grew up near them first 2 tunnels in Halifax and I used to walk through them 25 years ago as a kid. We used to call it tramps tunnel.

  • @mickd6942
    @mickd6942 3 года назад +1

    Excellent

  • @alantraish3368
    @alantraish3368 3 года назад +2

    Went to “The Queensbury Lines” in 2000 with my late brother after reading about them in Steam Days magazine 1990. Did all the tunnels except Parkwood Street ( to Keighley goods yard) Old Lane and Lea bank. Check out the books : Great Northern outpost vols 1
    ,2 &3 by Jan Rapecz and Alan Whitaker . Fabulous pictures and text in them. These lines always fascinated me. Oh also did Wheatley Tunnel & viaduct on the Pelion branch

  • @evelynjepson5955
    @evelynjepson5955 2 года назад +1

    my dad was from Middlesborough, when I started working had a chap giving me a hard time, He came off with a line...From Hell, Hull and Halifax, lord god deliver us.

  • @familylife3624
    @familylife3624 2 года назад +1

    I used to work at Taylors yard at Denholme in about 99

  • @justintime-x4f
    @justintime-x4f 3 года назад +3

    A correction, the last tunnel before Keighley, you called Ingrow Tunnel, is actually Lee’s Moor Tunnel. Sorry for being pedantic…😁

  • @BradfordThroughTheLens
    @BradfordThroughTheLens 2 года назад

    Great video

  • @majorpygge-phartt2643
    @majorpygge-phartt2643 3 года назад +1

    The triangular station is far from unique, there's one still active in west yorkshire at shipley, and there's another elsewhere at dinting, and there's a grand viaduct there still in use.

  • @alg6576
    @alg6576 3 года назад +1

    Thanks, was at Wilsden the other day and going back to check that (made navigating the Cullingworth area easier).

  • @Mandalorian_Goblinslayer
    @Mandalorian_Goblinslayer 2 года назад

    Isn’t that Tunnel near Ovenden bus station restricted?

  • @monkimusic4813
    @monkimusic4813 2 года назад

    is that: Keighley with 3 F's???

  • @DeanJuvenal
    @DeanJuvenal Год назад

    Rather a lot of panning and bumping around of your camera made me feel sea sick😮 However, I watched your great film in bite sized bits.

  • @neiloflongbeck5705
    @neiloflongbeck5705 Год назад

    Queensbury station wasn't that unusual as Shipley was exactly the same.

    • @srfurley
      @srfurley 7 месяцев назад

      Not at the same time. Shipley did not originally have platforms on the Leeds - Skipton side. First one platform was added on this side, and then the other, but neither of these platforms existed when Queensbury station existed.
      At Queensbury the inner platforms met an the corners while at Shipley the new platforms on the Leeds - Skipton are some distance from the original station, across the car park. There is now only one platform and track on the Bradford - Skipton side. I think the reason for the singling of this section was to somewhat reduce the very tight curve, and therefore the gap between platform and train.
      With triangular stations being so rare it’s strange that two should have been as close as Shipley and Queensbury.

  • @TrevorHarris-qs5us
    @TrevorHarris-qs5us Год назад

    GWRTOTNES TORQUAY TREVOR HARRIS

  • @rogersmith4500
    @rogersmith4500 3 года назад +7

    The yard at Denholme was a timber importers and merchants, [C R Taylor] and I worked for them upto the 'crash' in 2009. The old railway goods buildings were still there then and used as part of the mill complex. The address was known as Station Road !. The old abutment for the footbridges were still also in situ. Following the closure of the company and a subsequent fire, the whole site has now been cleared for housing.

  • @nigelkthomas9501
    @nigelkthomas9501 3 года назад +7

    If only it had never closed! Such a shocking waste!

    • @neiloflongbeck5705
      @neiloflongbeck5705 Год назад

      A line so useful that the passenger service didn't even get to face the Beeching Axe. Queensbury station was a mile from the village along a dimly lit path, no wonder people went by bus.

  • @rosewhite---
    @rosewhite--- 10 месяцев назад +2

    Denholme grew around the great mills that finally shut down about 10 years ago.
    There were three huge mills connected by overhead walkways.
    Station site was a timber company last time I was there.

  • @willswheels283
    @willswheels283 Год назад +5

    Great interesting video, I had no idea there was a line between Halifax and Keighley, Britain really was like a web of railways at one time, many of which have now vanished into a distant memory.
    Love the look of that Steam railway at Keighley, looks a proper visit to the railways heyday.
    Thanks again.

    • @dizzydevil547
      @dizzydevil547 Год назад

      this line actually branched off at Queensbury station to Keighly AND Bradford so was a major junction to change trains or GET A DIRECT train between Halifax, Keighly, and Bradford at the time!
      Now sadly NO direct route between the 3 of them, you have to travel from Halifax through Bradford and onto Keighley whereas in the past you could get a train to Keighley from Halifax bypassing Bradford now you have to go to all 3 towns, not sure if journey times were quicker (being the age of steam) but it surely must have been?

    • @davidanderson1639
      @davidanderson1639 4 месяца назад +1

      There are two books called ‘Great Northern Outpost’ by Alan Whitaker & Jan Rapacz. Part 1 covers the Bradford - Thornton Railway & Part 2 the Halifax - Thornton - Keighley line. Well worth getting, as they are both packed with photos during & after the lines operational life.

  • @DeanJuvenal
    @DeanJuvenal Год назад +3

    A great addition to the history of the Railway building mania.

  • @rosewhite---
    @rosewhite--- 10 месяцев назад +1

    9>04 the old Ovenden station was where Mixenden teenagers would get the train into Halifax for a night boozing and chasing the girls back in the 50's/60's.

  • @Bahamas-rd8le
    @Bahamas-rd8le 3 года назад +3

    Brilliant video. I’ve walked from the cullingworth end up to the point of 23:21 (the leaves got too much up to the tunnels!!) really fascinating, didn’t know if you knew this, but around the point of 24:30, there’s an abandoned quarry bearish to where you were. Unfortunately lots of people dive in it however it used to have a few sidings for stone until 1965 when road traffic took over

  • @davidanderson1639
    @davidanderson1639 4 месяца назад +1

    There are two books called ‘Great Northern Outpost’ by Alan Whitaker & Jan Rapacz. Part 1 covers the Bradford - Thornton Railway & Part 2 the Halifax - Thornton - Keighley line. Well worth getting, as they are both packed with photos during & after the lines operational life.

  • @theBusManiac
    @theBusManiac 2 года назад +3

    Well done for stating where the actual filled in tunnel portal is for the goods line, lots of people think it went under the road. The tunnel at approx 19.00 is well heads tunnel, too many tunnels in Denholme your right. The big impressive viaduct is Hewenden Viaduct and is truly amazing! Like someone else pointed out is Lees Moor Tunnel not Ingrow. It's built on a constant curve so you entered heading south and left heading east going Halifax bound. The Keighley portal used to be used to store caravans. Well done for finding the Cullingworth portal!

  • @rosewhite---
    @rosewhite--- 10 месяцев назад +1

    the mill at 6:56 has a preservation order after it was decided it had architectural merit.
    It's been derelict 20 years or so.

  • @dansterland1824
    @dansterland1824 Год назад +1

    Can remember my first trip to the worth valley railway bloody enjoyed me self was big jim on front of train even had photo in cab going again in about a weeks time cant wait 😁😁😁😁

  • @flanflinger37
    @flanflinger37 2 года назад +2

    Very interesting video. I live close to the Ovenden station. Well done for getting to such seemingly inaccessible places.

  • @MisstPersianPrincess
    @MisstPersianPrincess 3 года назад +2

    Very interesting I am watching you from halifax

  • @majorpygge-phartt2643
    @majorpygge-phartt2643 3 года назад +2

    Good to see someone's cleared up halifax station, the last time I went there on a train it was a dreadful decaying mess. And is this the line which passed through the filled in bridges in the pellon lane area? Or is that another one, or a branch off it?

  • @scrapwomblecreatives6944
    @scrapwomblecreatives6944 2 года назад +2

    its so sad all them places i remember

  • @seany84uk
    @seany84uk 3 года назад +2

    From being born in oldham and now living in halifax its great to see these lost routes being covered :) i live next to the old high level line too.

  • @scrapwomblecreatives6944
    @scrapwomblecreatives6944 2 года назад +2

    enjoyed thankyou

  • @neiloflongbeck5705
    @neiloflongbeck5705 Год назад +1

    That bridge served the Thornton Fireclay Works. A good source of information is the National Library of Scotland's online collection of maps.

  • @rosewhite---
    @rosewhite--- 10 месяцев назад

    Thornton had coal mines and fireclay works and the textile mills to provide trade for the railways.

  • @srfurley
    @srfurley 3 года назад +2

    You didn’t show the old coal drops at Halifax which were still there the last time I looked, a couple of years ago.
    There’s a campaign to have Queensbury Tunnel opened up for cyclists.

    • @hoppinonabronzeleg9477
      @hoppinonabronzeleg9477 3 года назад +1

      Go online and make your objections to the planning. You need to reject the plan to abandon it.

    • @lioncrunch9098
      @lioncrunch9098 2 года назад

      @@hoppinonabronzeleg9477 coal drops are still there opposite Matalan, they’re a preserved monument? Probably not the correct term.

  • @danielscott6766
    @danielscott6766 2 года назад +1

    Very interesting mate.Have walked bits of this line,the Queensbury bit and over all the viaducts and down to where the Cullingworth station board is in the school.Only stayed on the cycle trail so may have missed bits of the original line.
    Near Keighley it looks like you are trackside of the main Worth Valley line.Also seen the Queensbury tunnel but only one of the portals.

  • @brookeeeandcharlieee5588
    @brookeeeandcharlieee5588 2 года назад +1

    Superb Allen keep them coming the tunnel brings back memories used to drive through it from Keighley end and tip waste to fill cutting at cullingworth end early 90s

  • @TheDAT9
    @TheDAT9 2 месяца назад

    One of the biggest crimes/frauds was perpetrated on the British people, was closing these railways. They could have been so useful today

  • @darleytransportandtravel6353
    @darleytransportandtravel6353 2 года назад +1

    Fantastic video. Well done! Really enjoyed it.

  • @MetalboxJ
    @MetalboxJ Год назад

    If you do this again take me. My brain is scrambled trying to picture. I'll buy you some dinner and a pint.

  • @angelsone-five7912
    @angelsone-five7912 Год назад +1

    Excellent explore, I like your enthusiasm.

  • @mickd6942
    @mickd6942 3 года назад +1

    23.22 brick chimney stack for a wooden plate layers hut

  • @WalkWithArlene
    @WalkWithArlene 3 года назад +1

    Cool interesting am learning here.

  • @daffyduk77
    @daffyduk77 Год назад +1

    brilliant video thanks!

  • @tonystack7375
    @tonystack7375 9 месяцев назад

    There were 6 stations in Halifax at one time.

  • @johntyjp
    @johntyjp 2 года назад

    The amazing stonework still there, which nowadays would be concrete ! 🤔

  • @jamesdawson3780
    @jamesdawson3780 2 года назад

    Fabulous ....👏👏👏

  • @ThatCoalSoul
    @ThatCoalSoul 2 года назад

    So there are two Thorntons! I've come here from your Fleetwood video.

    • @onemanc
      @onemanc  2 года назад

      Yes I think they changed the Blackpool one to Thornton for Cleveleys when they all merged…

  • @majorpygge-phartt2643
    @majorpygge-phartt2643 3 года назад

    Where did they find an american steam loco that fits within the UK loading gauge? So many american loco's are far bigger than ours and won't fit through the clearances on our lines.

    • @Bahamas-rd8le
      @Bahamas-rd8le 3 года назад +1

      That loco was built for D-Day, first arrived In the Uk which is why it fits out loading gauge

    • @ThatCoalSoul
      @ThatCoalSoul 2 года назад +1

      I'm enough of a nerd that I know what is considered American narrow gauge is our standard gauge. So an American would think the Ffestinog's gauge really small.