North Yorkshire Moors Railway

The North Yorkshire Moors Railway (NYMR) is a heritage railway in North Yorkshire, England, that runs through the North York Moors National Park. First opened in 1836 as the Whitby and Pickering Railway, the railway was planned in 1831 by George Stephenson as a means of opening up trade routes inland from the then important seaport of Whitby. The line between Grosmont and Rillington was closed in 1965 and the section between Grosmont and Pickering was reopened in 1973 by the North York Moors Historical Railway Trust Ltd. The preserved line is now a tourist attraction and has been awarded several industry accolades.

North Yorkshire Moors Railway
Three LNER Class A4 locomotives at Grosmont loco shed.
LocaleNorth Yorkshire
TerminusWhitby and Pickering
ConnectionsNetwork Rail (at Grosmont)
Commercial operations
NameNorth Eastern Railway
Built byGeorge Stephenson
Original gauge4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Preserved operations
Operated byNorth Yorkshire Moors Railway Enterprises Plc
Stations6
Length18 miles (29 km)
Preserved gauge4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Commercial history
Opened1836
Closed1965
Preservation history
1967NYMR Preservation Society formed
1 May 1973NYMR reopened
1975Pickering re-opened officially
1981Newton Dale halt opened to the Public
2007Services extended (via National Network metals) to Whitby
2012Pickering railway station re-roofed (station roof re-instated) for the first time in 60 years.
HeadquartersPickering, North Yorkshire
Website
www.nymr.co.uk

In 2007, the railway started to run regular services over the 6 miles (9.7 km) section of the Esk Valley Line north of Grosmont to Whitby. In 2014, a second platform was opened at Whitby which allowed the NYMR to run an enhanced service and led to passenger numbers in the same year of nearly 350,000 people.

Overview

The NYMR carries more passengers than any other heritage railway in the UK and may be the busiest steam heritage line in the world, carrying 355,000 passengers in 2010.[1] The 18-mile (29 km)[2] railway is the third-longest standard gauge heritage line in the United Kingdom,[3] after the West Somerset Railway (22.75 miles (36.61 km)) and the Wensleydale Railway (22 miles (35 km)),[4] and runs across the North York Moors from Pickering via Levisham, Newton Dale, Goathland and terminating at Grosmont.[5]

Some heritage rail operations continue along the Network Rail tracks to Whitby. The railway is formed from the middle section of the former Whitby, Pickering and Malton Line, which was closed in 1965 as part of the Beeching cuts.[6][7]

The NYMR is owned by the North York Moors Historical Railway Trust Ltd, a Charitable Trust and Accredited Museum, and is operated by its wholly owned subsidiary North Yorkshire Moors Railway Enterprises plc. It is mostly operated and staffed by volunteers.[8]

Trains run daily from the beginning of April to the end of October, and on weekends and selected holidays during the winter, with no service from 24–27 December. Services are mostly steam-hauled; however, heritage diesel power is sometimes used. At the height of the running timetable, trains depart hourly from each station. As well as the normal passenger running, there are dining services on some evenings and weekends. The extension of steam operated services to the seaside town of Whitby has proved popular.[9][10]

History

North Yorkshire Moors Railway
Whitby
Bog Hall Junction
Ruswarp
Ruswarp Level Crossing
Sleights
Grosmont
Grosmont Level Crossing
Grosmont Tunnel (
144 yd
132 m
)
Deviation Junction
Beckhole
(closed 1914)
Beckhole Incline (closed 1865)
Goathland Bank Top
(closed 1865)
Goathland
Newton Dale Halt
Levisham Level Crossing
Levisham
Farwarth
New Bridge Level Crossing
High Mill Level Crossing
Pickering
Bridge Street Level Crossing
Mill Lane Level Crossing

The North Yorkshire Moors Railway was first opened in 1836 as the Whitby and Pickering Railway. The railway was planned in 1831 by George Stephenson as a means of opening up trade routes inland from the then important seaport of Whitby. The initial railway was designed and built to be used by horse-drawn carriages. Construction was carried out by navvies and coordinated by top engineers. Their three main achievements were cutting a 120 yards (110 m) tunnel through rock at Grosmont, constructing a rope-worked incline system at Beck Hole and traversing the marshy and deep Fen Bog using a bed of timber and sheep fleeces.[11] The tunnel is believed to be one of the oldest railway tunnels in England.[12]

In its first year of operation, the railway carried 10,000 tonnes (11,000 tons) of stone from Grosmont to Whitby, as well as 6,000 passengers, who paid a fare of 1 shilling to sit on the roof of a coach, or 1 shilling and 3 pence to sit inside.[13] It took two and a half hours to travel from Whitby to Pickering.[14]

In 1845, the railway was acquired by the York and North Midland Railway who re-engineered the line to allow the use of steam locomotives.[15] They also constructed the permanent stations and other structures along the line which still remain today. The Beck Hole Incline was re-equipped with a steam powered stationary engine and iron rope. They also added the line south from Pickering so that the line had a connection to York and beyond.[16]

In 1854 the York and North Midland Railway became part of the North Eastern Railway. Steam locomotives could not operate on the Beck Hole incline; so in the early 1860s the North Eastern Railway started construction of an alternative route which opened in 1865 – this is the route which is still in use today. The original route is now a 3.5-mile (5.6 km) rail trail named the Rail Trail.[17][18]

In 1923 the North Eastern Railway was absorbed into the London and North Eastern Railway as a result of the Railways Act 1921. In 1948 nationalisation meant that British Railways took control. During this time, little changed on the line. However, in his controversial report Dr Beeching declared that the Whitby-Pickering line was uneconomic and listed it for closure; the last passenger service ran on 6 March 1965 with freight continuing until July 1966.[19] The line was used in June 1965 to house the Royal Train for the Duke of Edinburgh's visit to the RAF Fylingdales early warning station.

In 1967, the NYMR Preservation Society was formed, and negotiations began for the purchase of the line. After running various Open Weekends and Steam Galas during the early 1970s (by permission of British Railways) the NYMRPS transformed itself into a Charitable Trust (to ensure the future of the railway) and became The North York Moors Historical Railway Trust Ltd in 1972.[20] Purchase of the line was completed and the necessary Light Railway Order obtained, giving powers to operate the railway. The railway was able to reopen for running in 1973 as the North Yorkshire Moors Railway, with much of the traction provided by the North Eastern Locomotive Preservation Group.[21]

Services to Whitby were also mooted as a possibility; one of the first was in 1987 when 92220 "Evening Star" worked a service between Pickering and Whitby. Since then, services ran sporadically with third party operators (such as the West Coast Railway Company in the early 2000s) as the NYMR were not a licensed company authorised to operate over Network Rail metals.[22] From 2007, regular trains operated over the Esk Valley Line from Grosmont to Whitby, thus providing a service over the entire length of the original Whitby and Pickering Railway.[23] Services were further improved in 2014 by the re-opening of a second platform at Whitby to enable services to increase from three out and back workings a day, to five. After a year of operation, the NMYR stated that 120,000 people had travelled over the new operating section to Whitby and that overall in 2014, the railway had attracted nearly 350,000 visitors.[24]

The preserved line is now a tourist attraction and has been awarded several tourist industry and heritage accolades.[25][26][27][28] In May 2019, the line was awarded £4.4 million of National Lottery Heritage Funding towards the renewal of iron bridges at Goathland railway station and a new carriage shed at Pickering.[29]

As of 11 January 2020, bridge 27 at Goathland was removed, and is expected to be fully replaced by the end of the same month.[30]

Stations

BR 76079 arrives in Goathland station
  • Pickering railway station is the current terminus of the railway and serves the market town of Pickering. The station has been restored to its 1937 condition with help from the Heritage Lottery Fund.[31] Original fixtures and fittings have been installed in the Booking Office and Parcels Office, as well as in the Tea Room. A park-and-ride service is provided to keep traffic out of the town during busy periods. The station is home to the railway's carriage workshops, and there is also a turntable. Originally Pickering station had an overall roof designed by the architect G.T. Andrews. This roof was removed by British Railways in 1952 due to corrosion. A replacement roof was fitted to the station between January - April 2011, as part of the NYMR's Train of Thought project.[32] Other work includes a Learning Centre and a Visitor Centre behind the down platform. Originally, the line continued south of Pickering to join the Malton to Scarborough Line at Rillington Junction but this track has since been lifted with the last trip to Malton running on 1 July 1966, the day the freight services were withdrawn.[6]
  • Farwath railway station (or Farworth)[33] was a small railway halt located between both Pickering and Levisham, however the halt was subsequently closed and demolished. Railway-built cottages still exist in this location. There is some doubt as to whether or not there were actually any station buildings here. There was a signal box, which closed when the line was singled between Levisham and Pickering in the First World War. Additionally, there was a public delivery siding, but mapping from 1913 does not list Farworth as being a station, though it does show a gravel siding.[34][35][36][37]
  • Levisham railway station is a small countryside station set in the Newton Dale valley. The location of the station is notable, as it is nearly two miles (3.2 km) from the village which it serves, and whose name it takes. The area is used for walking and a variety of wildlife and flowers can be found within a short distance of the station.[38] Levisham Station has been renovated and preserved to represent a small NER country station, c.1912. The station has a traditional camping coach, which is let for holidays. Since 2007, the North Yorkshire Moors Railway's Artist in Residence, Christopher Ware, has used a studio at the station.[39][40]
  • Newton Dale Halt is a remote walkers' request stop in Cropton Forest. There are forest walks of varying lengths.[41][42]
  • Goathland railway station is almost unchanged since its construction in 1865. The station has been restored to represent an NER country station post First World War c.1922. The station is popular with tourists due to its appearances in Yorkshire TV's Heartbeat and the first of the Harry Potter films (see below). The station has a newly refurbished tea room which is inside a goods warehouse. The station also has a traditional camping coach, which is let for holidays.
  • Grosmont railway station was the railway's permanent northern terminus until 2007, when trains began operating into Whitby on a regular basis. The locomotive sheds are situated here, just south of the tunnel through which trains run en route for Goathland and beyond. The station itself has been restored to the British Railways style c.1952. It has full facilities including a shop, café serving cooked meals, toilets including disabled, a ticket office and a waiting room. The shed area has facilities to provide water and coal for the engines, as well as stabling. The 'running shed' is usually open to public access at one end, where stationary engines can be viewed. These are usually either operational but not in service that day, or undergoing light repair work. Also open to the public is the 'deviation shed' which houses locomotives and stock owned by NELPG as well as a small display about the history of the organisation. A number of other sheds not available for public access are used for the maintenance and overhaul of the engines. At Grosmont, the line connects with the Network Rail operated Esk Valley Line, where passengers may change trains to travel to the coast at Whitby, or inland to Middlesbrough and the rest of the national network. Thus, platform one of the station is served by Northern Rail services, whilst platforms two, three and four are used by the NYMR.
  • Whitby railway station is, on many operating days, the railway's northern terminus. All but two of the various timetables see steam trains operating through from Pickering, including daily throughout July and August except on Sundays. When NYMR trains terminate at Grosmont rather than Whitby at off-peak times, connecting trains with Northern Rail are usually available at Grosmont, allowing passengers to begin their journey at Whitby and board a steam-hauled train at Grosmont through to Goathland or Pickering. Facilities available at Whitby station include Ticket office and shop. National Rail tickets & Railcards are also available to purchase. In August 2014 a second platform was opened at the station to cater for the railway's trains.[43]

Locomotives

Future and possibility of expansion

The possibility of reopening the 'missing "8-mile (13 km)" section' between Malton via Rillington Junction (on the York – Malton – Scarborough Line) and Pickering has often been discussed. It is included in a list of rail lines, where campaigns exist for reopening, issued by the Campaign for Better Transport.[44][45]

This might allow the running of steam services from York to Whitby again. To achieve this would require considerable engineering work, as the former trackbed has been built upon with houses and a supermarket.[46]

Reinstating this missing rail link was adopted as a policy objective by the North Yorkshire County Council some years ago; the NYMHRT board agreed to support this policy in principle, whilst having reservations about its implementation as they believed the necessary upgrade works were costly and that it would harm their business stating that they had concerns about "the effect on the railway".[47]

Hopes for this have been dampened as of October 2014 with reports that the Managing Director of the NYMR stating that they did not support any trains running along their tracks.[48][49]

Bridge & Wheels Appeal

In March 2009, the railway announced that bridge 30 over the Eller Beck at Darnholme near Goathland needed to be repaired/replaced over the winter of late-2009/early-2010, otherwise the railway would be forced to close. The railway therefore launched an appeal to raise £1 million to cover the costs of the bridge work with any excess raised going towards the restoration of locomotive 80135. £610,000 was raised in time,[50] and the bridge was replaced over the winter-Christmas/new year period of late-2009/early-2010, with the first trains crossing over the new bridge in March 2010. The bridge was formally opened by Pete Waterman on 27 March 2010.[51]

Yorkshire's Magnificent Journey Appeal

During 2017, the NYMR announced it was applying to the Heritage Lottery Fund, as part of a new appeal to keep the whole preserved railway running for the next 50 years. The bid attracted £4.4 million in HLF funding and the appeal also donations from other funding streams such as the Rural Payments Agency, who donated £1.97 million.[52]

The aim of this appeal includes a series of individual projects such as,

  1. The renewal and repair of a total of three bridges around Goathland.
  2. Provide fuss free access for accommodation aboard every passenger train.
  3. The construction of a carriage shed (accommodating up to 40 carriages) at Pickering.
  4. A dedicated education carriage at Goathland.
  5. The creation of a new volunteer hostel at Grosmont.
  6. A Volunteering Development Programme, recruiting new generations of volunteers in the foreseeable future.
  7. Railway Apprenticeship Schemes, with offers of training in engineering.
  8. A Lineside Conservation Initiative, raising the awareness of conservation issues.[53]

Special events

The NYMR runs several special events through the year, usually revolving around a particular theme.

War-Time Weekend
  • Steam and Diesel Galas are weekend events (sometimes extended to Friday and/or Monday) popular with heritage railway enthusiasts. On these days, a full timetabled service is run alongside extra trains, such as local shuttle services and demonstration freight trains. The LNER Gala in April 2008 (which featured all three of the UK's operational Gresley A4 pacifics) attracted thousands of visitors.[54]
  • The War-Time Weekend is a demonstration of the operation of railways in the UK during the Second World War. The stations are decorated to appear as they would in war time: sandbags are used around entrances, windows are taped up and station names are covered. Many period re-enactors attend in military or civilian costume to add to the authenticity. Periodic entertainment takes place, and there are events such as mock air-raids. Usually a period dance and a military parade will take place; also a wreath is laid in memory of those railwaymen who have died in service as a result of war. Levisham railway station is rechristened as Le Visham, a fictional town in occupied France.[55]
  • Santa Special trains are run in the Christmas period, complete with Elves, Santa's Grotto, presents and mince pies. The winter scenery of the North York Moors National Park adds to the charm of these events.[56]

Other special events include a Vintage Vehicle Weekend, Music on the Moors and a Wizard Weekend.

Television and film appearances

The railway has been seen both on television and in film. Michael Palin hosted/produced an episode of the first series of Great Railway Journeys of the World, titled 'Confessions of a Train Spotter'. Filmed during late July/early August 1980, it featured a 15-minute segment filmed as he travelled the entire railway and visited the repair shops. Goathland station has been used as Hogsmeade in the Harry Potter films,[57] the 2016 Dad's Army film [58] and Aidensfield in the sixties drama Heartbeat.[59] Pickering station was used in the films Possession, Keeping Mum and Downton Abbey.[60] Other appearances include Casualty, Brideshead Revisited, All Creatures Great and Small, The Royal, Poirot, the Sherlock Holmes television series,[61] and the films Testament of Youth, Phantom Thread[62] and The Runaways.[63]

The railway has also featured in the documentary Yorkshire Steam, which ran for two series on local television; in the second series of Great British Railway Journeys; and in the Channel 5 documentary The Yorkshire Steam Railway, with series 3 being aired during February and March 2020.[64] Goathland station features in the 1985 music video for Simply Red's Holding Back the Years, along with BR Standard Class 4MT Tank No. 80135. The railway has also appeared in a series of 'Thomas and Friends' learning segments, with LNER Class A4 60007 Sir Nigel Gresley.

Accidents and incidents

On 21 May 2012, a steam locomotive pushing carriages was accidentally started in the wrong direction and killed a volunteer guard, Bob Lund, who was uncoupling carriages.[65]

Awards

  • 1990 Ian Allan Railway Heritage Awards, Commendation for the wooden Waiting Room / Booking Office, re-located from Sleights to the extended down platform at Grosmont.
  • 1995 Visitor Attraction of the Year (Yorkshire and Humberside Tourist Board)
  • 1999 National Railway Heritage Awards, Railway World category, Commendation for the renovation, almost amounting to rebuilding, of Levisham waiting and ladies room, including the provision of a completely new ‘period’ interior with in-style ladies toilets
  • 2000 National Railway Heritage Awards, Ian Allan Publishing Award, for the renovation of the Goods Shed and the coal and lime cells at Goathland in 1999, including the conversion of the Goods Shed into a café using restored open wagons to provide seating.
  • 2001 National Railway Heritage Awards, Westinghouse Signalling Award, for the new signal box at Grosmont built to an 1870s design.
  • 2006 National Railway Heritage Award, for the provision of staff, public and disabled toilet facilities adjacent to Goathland Goods Shed in a converted goods van; thus providing these essential facilities in a manner that blended in with their surroundings.[25]
  • 2007 Best Visitor Attraction of 2007 (in the '50,000 visitors and over’ category), awarded by the Yorkshire Moors & Coast Tourism Partnership – a consortium of tourism expertise from across the districts of Hambleton, Ryedale and Scarborough. 'what really impressed the judges was the consistently high standard of customer service which was in evidence when his Members carried out ‘mystery shopping’ visits during the year'.[66]
  • 2007 Large Railway of the Year, awarded by members of the Heritage Railway Association, the umbrella body for over 250 heritage railways and museums from across the United Kingdom. 'The association praised NYMR for the way in which it successfully pioneered the operation of regular steam-hauled services on Network Rail’s Esk Valley route between Grosmont and Whitby, using volunteer crews. The judges also acknowledged the contribution (in excess of £15,000) made by the Railway following the holding of a Gala in support of the Severn Valley Railway following their devastating flood damage, especially as the NYMR also suffered from flooding but not to the same degree'.[66]
  • 2009 Best Visitor Attraction of 2009 (in the '50,000 visitors and over’ category), awarded by the Yorkshire Moors & Coast Tourism Partnership – a consortium of tourism expertise from across the districts of Hambleton, Ryedale and Scarborough. This award was jointly won by the NYMR and Eden Camp.[67]
  • 2010 Marketing Campaign of the Year awarded by Visit York.[68]
  • 2014 National Railway Heritage Awards, Best Small Project Award, for renovating the lamp room at Levisham station which burnt down in the 1960s.[28]
  • 2015 National Railway Heritage Awards, Siemens Signalling Award, Grosmont north end signalling.[26]
  • 2015 National Railway Heritage Awards, Modern Traction Award, awarded to the railway after keeping its diesel fleet active during a shortage of steam locomotives.[69]

References

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  2. "About Us". =North Yorkshire Moors Railway. Retrieved 20 July 2011.
  3. Behrens, David (1 March 2017). "Across the moors to Whitby, a revamp for a classic rail route". The Yorkshire Post. Retrieved 2 May 2019.
  4. Brailsford, Martyn, ed. (2016). Railway Track Diagrams Book 2: Eastern (4 ed.). Frome: Trackmaps. 20D. ISBN 978-0-9549866-8-1.
  5. Winn, Christopher (2010). I never knew that about Yorkshire. London: Ebury. p. 92. ISBN 978-0-09-193313-5.
  6. Suggitt 2007, p. 89.
  7. Hoole, Ken (1974). A regional history of the railways of Great Britain. Vol. 4, North East England (2 ed.). Newton Abbot: David & Charles. p. 92. ISBN 0-7153-6439-1.
  8. "£5m grant for heritage steam railway". BBC News. 8 August 2017. Retrieved 2 May 2019.
  9. Devereux, Nigel (21 August 2017). "Moors' heart as a new beat". railwaymagazine.co.uk. Retrieved 24 March 2019.
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  11. Potter, G.W.J. (1969) [1906]. A History of the Whitby and Pickering Railway (2nd ed.). East Ardsley: SR Publisher. p. 25. OCLC 931366101.
  12. Rennison, R.W., ed. (1996). Civil engineering heritage (2nd ed.). London: T. Telford. pp. 139–140. ISBN 07277-2518-1.
  13. Tomlinson 1915, p. 270.
  14. Suggitt 2007, p. 87.
  15. Bairstow 2008, p. 17.
  16. Chapman, Stephen (2008). York to Scarborough, Whitby & Ryedale. Todmorden: Bellcode Books. p. 4. ISBN 9781871233193.
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  20. Vanns 2017, p. 8.
  21. Vanns 2017, p. 60.
  22. Bairstow 2008, p. 103.
  23. Bairstow 2008, p. 104.
  24. "Full steam ahead as new platform sees major increase in passengers". infoweb.newsbank.com. 1 September 2015. Retrieved 20 June 2019.
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  26. "Winners 2015". National Railway Heritage Awards. Retrieved 2 May 2019.
  27. "Tourism Awards Ceremony - Yorkshire Coast Oscars". The Scarborough News. 19 November 2007. Archived from the original on 2 May 2019. Retrieved 2 May 2019.
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  29. Bickerdyke, Paul, ed. (June 2019). "NYMR wins lottery grant". Rail Express. No. 277. Horncastle: Mortons Media. p. 8. ISSN 1362-234X.
  30. nymrfootage (12 January 2020). Bridge 27 removal at Goathland Station on the North Yorkshire Moors Railway (Update 3). YouTube.
  31. "Pickering Station Trail". North York Moors Historical Railway Trust - NYMR. Retrieved 22 February 2020.
  32. "The Train of Thought". Archived from the original on 14 September 2009. Retrieved 22 February 2020.
  33. Jowett, Alan (2000). Jowett's nationalised railway atlas of Great Britain and Ireland. Penryn: Atlantic Publishers. 35. ISBN 0-906899-99-0.
  34. Bairstow 2008, p. 107.
  35. Cobb, M.H. (2003). The railways of Great Britain: a historical atlas at the scale of 1 inch to 1 mile. Shepperton: Ian Allan. p. 426. ISBN 0-7110-3003-0.
  36. The Railway Clearing House handbook of railway stations, 1904 (1st ed.). Newton Abbot: David & Charles. 1970. p. 197. ISBN 0-7153-5120-6.
  37. Benham, Phillip (2008). An illustrated history of the North Yorkshire Moors Railway. Hersham: Ian Allan. pp. 22, 23, 110. ISBN 978-0-86093-622-0.
  38. Bagshaw, Mike (2010). Go slow Yorkshire dales & moors : local, characterful guides to Britain's special places (1st ed.). Chalfont-St-Peter: Bradt Travel Guides. pp. 192–193. ISBN 978-1-84162-323-8.
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  40. Holland & Spaven 2015, p. 178.
  41. Beadle, Brian (4 June 2009). "Let the train take the strain on moors walk". Gazette & Herald. Retrieved 24 March 2019.
  42. "Newtondale: North York Moors National Park". North York Moors National Park. Retrieved 24 March 2019.
  43. "North Yorkshire Moors Railway's new platform opens". BBC News. BBC. 16 August 2014. Retrieved 17 August 2014.
  44. "Re-opening rail lines". Campaign For Better Transport. Retrieved 28 November 2016.
  45. Howell, Rhys (12 September 2014). "Campaign aims to restore rail link". Whitby Gazette. Archived from the original on 12 December 2014. Retrieved 7 December 2014.
  46. "Link would endanger historic railway". The Whitby Gazette. 12 December 2012. Archived from the original on 29 June 2019. Retrieved 29 June 2019.
  47. Catton, Richard (12 December 2012). "Petition calls for Ryedale rail link to reopen". York Press. Retrieved 29 June 2019.
  48. "Businessman David Reall backs reopening of Pickering to Rillington rail link". Northern Echo. Retrieved 9 November 2014.
  49. Howell, Rhys (10 October 2014). "End of the line for rail link campaign?". Whitby Gazette. Archived from the original on 12 December 2014. Retrieved 7 December 2014.
  50. "Grants for railway bridge appeal". BBC News York & North Yorkshire. BBC. 28 November 2009. Retrieved 8 December 2014.
  51. "Pete Waterman opens railway bridge on North York Moors". BBC News York & North Yorkshire. BBC. 19 April 2010. Retrieved 8 December 2014.
  52. White, Andrew (4 May 2019). "Heritage railway's future safeguarded by £4.4m National Lottery grant". The Northern Echo. Retrieved 20 June 2019.
  53. Boyd-Hope, Gary (June 2019). "Major lottery award for North Yorkshire Moors". The Railway Magazine. Vol. 165 no. 1, 419. Horncastle: Mortons Media. p. 70. ISSN 0033-8923.
  54. "Chuffed to Bits". infoweb.newsbank.com. The York Press. 31 March 2008. Retrieved 20 June 2019.
  55. "German WW2 re-enactors told to stay away". BBC News. 5 April 2018. Retrieved 20 June 2019.
  56. Suggitt 2007, p. 92.
  57. "Harry Potter And The Locations Of Filming". Archived from the original on 20 October 2011. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  58. "Dad's Army movie to be filmed on historic railway". The Scarborough News. 9 October 2014. Archived from the original on 26 March 2016. Retrieved 28 November 2016.
  59. "Film Locations - TV Locations". Beautifulbritain.co.uk. Retrieved 28 November 2016.
  60. Newton, Grace (24 June 2019). "These Yorkshire locations will appear in the new Downton Abbey film". The Yorkshire Post. Retrieved 29 June 2019.
  61. "Hull & Barnsley Railway Stock Fund - preserved wagons and coaches". www.hullandbarnsleyrailway.org.uk. Retrieved 23 March 2020.
  62. "Heritage railway awarded £4.4m grant". BBC News. 4 May 2019. Retrieved 2 June 2019.
  63. Flanagan, Emily (11 September 2017). "Stars Mark Addy and Tara Fitzgerald filming in Whitby for latest production attracted to region". The Northern Echo. Retrieved 24 March 2019.
  64. Welford, Joanne (12 February 2020). "All aboard as North Yorkshire Moors Railway returns to television". gazettelive. Retrieved 22 February 2020.
  65. "Family sues over steam rail death". BBC-21279819. 31 January 2013. Retrieved 25 November 2019.
  66. NYMR (21 November 2007). "details of 2007 awards" (Press release).
  67. "Railway shortlisted for 'Best Visitor Attraction 2009′ Award". NYMR. 9 November 2009. Archived from the original on 25 November 2009.
  68. "Visit York's Annual Tourism Awards – Winners Announced". Visit York. 23 April 2010. Archived from the original on 17 January 2016. Retrieved 20 May 2010.
  69. Bickerdyke, Paul (December 2015). "Modern Traction Award for North Yorkshire Moors". Rail Express. No. 235. Horncastle: Mortons Media. p. 9. ISSN 1362-234X.

Sources

  • Bairstow, Martin (2008). Railways Around Whitby; Volume One (2nd ed.). Farsley: Bairstow. ISBN 978-1-871944-34-1.
  • Holland, Julian; Spaven, David (2015). Britain's Best Railways; Exploring the Country by Rail From Cornwall to The Highlands. Glasgow: The Times Books. ISBN 978-0-00-796596-0.
  • Suggitt, Gordon (2007). Lost Railways of North & East Yorkshire. Newbury: Countryside Books. ISBN 978-1-85306-918-5.
  • Tomlinson, William Weaver (1915). The North Eastern Railway, its rise and development. Newcastle-Upon-Tyne: A Reid & Co. OCLC 854595777 via archive.org.
  • Vanns, Michael A. (2017). The North Yorkshire Moors Railway. Barnsley: Pen & Sword. ISBN 9781473892088.

Further reading

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