Shap, both famous and infamous in railway
circles, is a market town with a population of 1264, situated in the
fells just east of the Lake District National Park boundary and 10 miles
south of Penrith.
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Shap remains an important railhead for mineral traffic today, with 3 quarries plus lime kilns producing 1/3rd of the UK’s lime output.
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One regular unadvertised working was a short
workers train from Shap Station to Shap Summit platform known as the
“Tommy”, taking quarry staff to Shap “Blue” Quarry situated just west of
the summit. The WTT shows a light engine ran from Tebay shed, picked up
stock stabled in the short siding on the Up side of the station, and
ran the 1 mile, 5 minute trip to the Summit, returning in the evening
(midday on Saturday). The stock was reportedly brought back into the
siding by rope and capstan. There is no record of the stock other than
there was a first class section for office workers, but it is fair to
assume this would have been at the historical end of the spectrum. The
train doesn’t show in the 1966 timetable, so presumably had ended by
then.
Shap “Blue” Quarry (also known as Summit Quarry)
just west of the summit produces blue granite for hardcore and the
former “Pink” Quarry produced architectural granite some 2 ½ miles
south, at Wasdale Head, linked to the blue quarry by a narrow gauge
railway, which can still be seen. Operating at 1320ft, this was narrowly
shy of Corrour station on the West Highland line. Gordon Edgar captured
this in operation - as seen HERE - and his book(Available Here) is highly recommended.
Shap Beck Quarry (sometimes known as Sweetholme)
is located around a mile north, and produces limestone for the steel
industry. The rail connection was brought in around 1942 is known as
“Harrisons Sidings” and forms a loop and spur on the down side of the
WCML before the line dives through the oblique diagonal crossing of the
A6 (the main road to Scotland until the 1970s) forming the 70 yard “Shap
Tunnel”. There was a signal box here from 1942 of the later LMS type,
which controlled the loop and also formed a block post with Thrimby
Grange, either box being able to control the intermediate block signals.
Traffic from here included workings by rail to Shapfell / Hardendale on
the shortest modern regular freight flow, being an exercise in avoiding
heavy lorry traffic through the village.
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Whilst the overlap with Stainmore in operations
is at best fleeting, I decided to include the quarry in the route, but
in its original state without the lime kilns.
Phil has previously made some quarry conveyor assets, which I have put to good use here at Shap Fell.
More Screenshots:
More Soon. . . . . . . .