Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway

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Oxford, Worcester and
Wolverhampton Railway
Great Western Railway
to Wellington
Wolverhampton Low Level
Wyrley and Essington Canal
Midland Metro
to Wolverhampton St George's
Priestfield
Midland Metro (former GWR)
to Birmingham Snow Hill
Bilston West
Daisy Bank
Princes End and Coseley
LNWR main line
WolverhamptonBirmingham
Birmingham Canal Navigation
Main Line
Tipton Five Ways
London & North Western Rly
to Bescot
Dudley
Blowers Green
Great Western Railway
to Rowley Regis
Parkhead Viaduct
over Dudley Canal
Harts Hill
Round Oak Steel Terminal
Round Oak
Brierley Hill
freight only branch
Dudley Canal
Brettell Lane
Great Western Railway
to Handsworth Junction
Stourbridge Town
Stourbridge Junction
Hagley
Blakedown
Kidderminster
to Bewdley and
Severn Valley Railway
Great Western Railway
(former SVR) to Shrewsbury
Hartlebury
Cutnall Green Halt
Great Western Railway
to Stoke Works
Droitwich Canal
Droitwich Spa
Fernhill Heath
Blackpole Halt
Astwood Halt
Worcester and
Birmingham Canal
Tunnel Junction
to Worcester Foregate Street
and Great Malvern
Worcester Shrub Hill
Norton Halt
Abbotswood Junction (MR)
Gloucester - Birmingham line
Stoulton
Pershore
Wyre Halt
Fladbury
River Avon
(Lower Avon Navigation)
Midland Railway to Tewkesbury
River Avon
(Lower Avon Navigation)
Evesham
Midland Railway
to Barnt Green
River Avon
(Upper Avon Navigation)
Littleton and Badsey
Honeybourne
Great Western Railway
Cheltenham Spa - Honeybourne
Birmingham line
Mickleton Halt
Campden Tunnel
Chipping Campden
Blockley
Shipston-on-Stour branch
Moreton-in-Marsh
summit
Adlestrop
Banbury and Cheltenham
Direct Railway
Kingham
Shipton
Ascott-under-Wychwood
water troughs
Charlbury
Finstock
Combe
Hanborough
Witney Railway
Yarnton
Oxford and Rugby Railway
to Banbury
Varsity Line to Bletchley
Buckinghamshire Jn Rly
Wolvercote Junction
Duke's Cut | Wolvercote Tunnel
Wolvercot Platform
Wolvercote Halt
Oxford Canal
Oxford North Junction
Port Meadow Halt
Sheepwash Channel Railway Bridge
and Rewley Road Swing Bridge
Oxford Rewley Road
Oxford General
Great Western Railway
to Didcot

The Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway was a company authorised on 4 August 1845 to build a railway line from the Oxford and Rugby Railway at Wolvercot Junction to Worcester, Stourbridge, Dudley and Wolverhampton, with a branch to the Grand Junction Railway at Bushbury. This became known as the Oxford – Worcester – Wolverhampton Line.

The line was opened in stages between 1852 and 1853, and had connections to the Great Western Railway (GWR) at both ends. In 1860 the OWW amalgamated with the Newport, Abergavenny and Hereford Railway and the Worcester and Hereford Railway to become the West Midland Railway, which in turn was amalgamated into the GWR in 1863.[1]

The track exists today as far as Dudley, with used track existing as far as the site of the old Harts Hill railway station near Dudley. North of Dudley, the trackbed has long since been replaced, and the Wolverhampton terminus at the Low Level station – has, as of January 2007, been almost totally demolished apart from its Grade II listed building to make way for redevelopment.

Development

Other branches included lines to Kingswinford and Tipton Basin. The Bill stated that the track was to be mixed gauge from Abbotswood near Worcester northwards. It also stated that if the Oxford, Worcester & Wolverhampton failed to complete the line, the Great Western Railway should either lease the line, or purchase the company and complete the line itself. The Bill also stated that Wolverhampton Low Level railway station was to be built and run jointly with two other companies: the Shrewsbury and Birmingham Railway and the Birmingham, Wolverhampton & Dudley Railway.

The Great Western Railway oversaw the project and Isambard Kingdom Brunel was chief engineer. His underestimation of the cost resulted in the Great Western increasing their shareholding to four percent. Progress was slow and by 1 June 1849 all of the available money was spent, and only the middle section of the line was anywhere near complete, so the Railway Commissioners ordered the Great Western to complete the line. They refused and a legal battle started, but meanwhile the loyalty of the Oxford, Worcester & Wolverhampton towards the Great Western was in decline and it signed an agreement with the London & North Western Railway and the Midland Railway on 21 February 1851 which allowed those companies to finish the line themselves, and then run on it. The Great Western had the agreement made void and then offered the company a similar deal on their own terms.

There was notable event during the building of Campden Tunnel near the village of Mickleton. It is called the "Battle of Campden Tunnel", and at the time Berrow's Worcester Journal called it the Mickleton Tunnel Riot.[2] The construction of the tunnel was contracted by the Great Western Railway to a builder named Robert Marchant, who claimed to be owed £34,000 by the Great Western Railway and failed to pay the construction crews. Marchant’s men downed tools and refused to work, in order to force work to resume Brunel gathered a private army of supporters to try and oust Marchant and take control of the tunnel. After three days two magistrates who had been brought in to read the Riot Act ordered Marchant’s men to resume work.[3]

The Great Western leased the line, but the Oxford, Worcester & Wolverhampton made approaches to the London & North Western with a view to connecting to Wolverhampton High Level on the Stour Valley Line instead, with a junction at Tipton. The GWR protested to Parliament who refused to sanction such a thing and threatened the company with heavy penalties unless the line reached the Low Level station and Cannock Road Junction by September 1853. The line was eventually finished in July 1853, and opened on 1 December.

On the death of the contractor, Francis Tredwell, work stopped for several years while the company entered into long litigation with his family firm over financial claims.[4] It took the intervention of Brunel before monies were released to allow his brothers to continue work in 1851.

Closures and changes

The final section of the railway between Dudley and Priestfield Junction (near Bilston) was closed to passenger trains in 1962, shortly before the publication of the Beeching Report. It remained open to goods trains until December 1967. The track was lifted shortly afterwards and parts of the line have since been built on. The grounds of the Angle Ring factory in Bloomfield Road, Tipton, were the first to swallow up part of the trackbed during the 1980s.

The section of line between the Birmingham New Road and Sedgley Road West overbridges on the Coseley-Tipton border was developed as a residential street called Oxford Way in 2002, after more than 20 years of plans for housing development on the site. The overbridges were demolished a year earlier.

The section of the railway between Stourbridge and Dudley was later absorbed into the South Staffordshire Line, which continued to Walsall after forking off eastwards from Dudley. Passenger services had all been withdrawn by 1965, but goods trains continued to serve the route until 1993, when the line north of Round Oak was mothballed. The line is still open for freight to this point to serve Round Oak Steel Terminal.

Accident

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According to L. T. C. Rolt[5] the railway was nicknamed the "Old Worse and Worse", and was a "shocking railway". On 23 August 1858 there was a serious accident between Round Oak and Brettell Lane which killed 14 people and seriously injured 50 more. A Sunday excursion train to Worcester of 45 carriages hauled by two engines suffered catastrophic failures of the couplings on two occasions, ultimately resulting in a third of the carriages running loose and being derailed.[6][7][8] Captain Tyler, the Board of Trade inspector, called it "Decidedly the worst railway accident that has ever occurred in this country".[9]

References

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See also