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Skewen Dram Road

Coordinates: 51°40′18″N 3°50′10″W / 51.6716°N 3.8362°W / 51.6716; -3.8362
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Skewen Dram Road
Narrow gauge steam locomotive at bottom of Skewen Incline, 1897


Remains of the track, 2005
Technical
Line length3 miles (5 km)
Track gauge2 feet 7+12 inches (800 mm)
Minimum radius2 chains (40 m)
Route map

mi (km)
3 (5)
Dyffryn Colliery
Bryncoch Colliery
Skewen Incline
Loco-operated Dram Road
White Gates level crossing
0 (0)
Skewen Wharf
Jersey Canal

The Skewen Dram Road was a 3 miles (5 km) long mining railway near Skewen in Wales with a gauge of 2 feet 7+12 inches (800 mm).

Route

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Route of former Skewen Dram Road superimposed onto modern map

The railway was built to take coal from Dyffryn and Bryncoch to Skewen Wharf via the Skewen Incline.[1]

In 1871 the New Neath Abbey Coal Company, who operated the dram road across New Road, was requested to install level crossing gates. These were painted white and hence gave their name to the location, which is still known as White Gates.[2]

Ownership

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The Skewen Dram Road was owned and operated by the Main Colliery Company Limited, the successor of the Dynevor Dyffryn and Neath Abbey United Collieries Company Limited.

The New Neath Abbey Coal Company is said to have been founded in June 1819 by the Fox family, which held 7/12ths of the company's shares and Joseph T. Price, who held the remaining 5/12ths. In 1873 the company failed, and its assets were sold to Batters & Scott on behalf of the Dyffryn Main Colliery Company. In 1874 the property was sold again to the United Company, a merger of the Dynevor Dyffryn and Neath Abbey United Collieries Company, under the directorship of John Newell Moore of Cambrian Place, Swansea. The United Company ceased to operate in 1888 and was re-incorporated as the Main Colliery Company Limited with effect from 1 May 1899.[3]

Accidents

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According to a contemporary newspaper report, an accident, involving the death of three men and serious injuries to two others, occurred on the evening of 20 September 1906 on the private railway of the Main Colliery Company, by means of which coals are conveyed from Bryncoch to the wharves on Neath River. A party of ten line repairers was proceeding towards the top of the Skewen, on a repairer’s trolly[sic], and was rounding a curve when a locomotive travelling on the same rails in the opposite direction dashed into the trolly. The effect of the impact was such that three of the men were seriously hurt and died before they could be conveyed home.[4]

Locomotives

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One of the steam locomotives was built by H.H. Price at the Neath Abbey Works. It had 8 by 15 inches (200 by 380 mm) cylinders, 2 feet 4 inches (710 mm) diameter wheels at 4 foot (1,200 mm) centres, and used 8 hundredweight (0.41 t) of coal a day. It could climb-up a 1 in 40 (2.5%) gradient at a tremendous pace with 30 empty trams weighing 12 hundredweight (0.61 t) each, and rushed round a curve of certainly not more than 2 chains (40 m) radius with great velocity. Neath Abbey’s price for selling such a locomotive was above £600, as confirmed in quotation of 19 April 1864.[5]

When assets were acquired by the Main Colliery Co. Ltd. in 1889, these included four locomotives, of which two were scrapped. This company converted its narrow gauge lines to standard gauge in 1899 and advertised six locomotives for sale, of which two had been built by the Neath Abbey Ironworks, three by Pecketts and one unknown. The gauge was 2 feet 7+12 inches (800 mm). There were three 0-6-0ST with Peckett works Nos. 501/1890, 542/1890 and 602/1896, one 0-6-0T, one more saddle tank locomotive and one completely unknown locomotive.[6]

Locomotive Plymouth No 8 of the Neath Abbey Ironworks

Two similar 0-4-0T steam locomotives with a gauge of 2 feet 8+12 inches (826 mm) were supplied to the Neath Abbey Coal Company in 1858 by the company of R. & W. Hawthorn in Newcastle upon Tyne.[7] These two steam locomotives had been built in 1864 and 1870 to be exported to South America, but were stored or used at Neath Abbey Iron Company’s works.[5] They were up for sale in 1899.[6]

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References

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  1. ^ Skewen Dram Roads.
  2. ^ Carole Wilsher: The districts and streets of Skewen: "The streets echo with footsteps from the past".
  3. ^ Gwasanaeth Archifau Gorllewin Morgannwg - Main Colliery, Skewen Records.
  4. ^ Fatal Accident on a Colliery Railway. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  5. ^ a b Dean Forester: Mr. Keeling buys a locomotive. In: The Industrial Railway Record. Nos. 3 & 4, p. 58-61/64, December 1963.
  6. ^ a b The Industrial Locomotive Society: West Glamorgan.
  7. ^ Peter Johnson: Festiniog Railway: The Spooner Era and After 1830 - 1920. Pen and Sword, 2017

51°40′18″N 3°50′10″W / 51.6716°N 3.8362°W / 51.6716; -3.8362