Articles
about the Dummy Railway
This must have been written
around the time of the opening of the Kelburne
cinema
from the Canadian National Railway's
magazine in 1955
A Railway that Never Carried a
Passenger.
More than the usual interest is being taken in
the announcement that a new picture house is to
be erected at Paisley, says a newspaper report
will be erected on the site of the disused
Paisley East Railway Station which , for years
has been a garage, teresting history is recalled
regarding a
Spanning the main Glasgow road before Paisley
is entered is a railway bridge, which, although
it was opened for traffic over 26 years ago, has
never been crossed by train or engine. Beneath as
the cause, the tramcar; and further along the
line but a short distance lie the remains of
another form of transport for whose death the
railway itself was responsible. For "Paisley
East" that was to have been is now a garage,
and it is now giving way for a picture house.
Round the bend,
where lie the Anchor Mills,the railway crossed
one of the two surviving links of the ill-fated
canal that was to have linked Ardrossan to
Glasgow by water and only got as far as
Johnstone. Now the canal, taken over by the
former Glasgow and Southwestern Railway, is
practically a railway, and on the line that was
to have carried the Barrhead workers to and from
Paisley is in ruins. There are now no signal
posts and no signal wires. The two or three
signal-boxes scattered along the line are boarded
up. That is the condition of the line between
Paisley East and Barrhead. On the short distance
the other way, from Paisley East to where it
ought to have joined the main Caledonian line to
Glasgow, there are no rails and no no sleepers
left.
A bridge that ought to have carried the line
over a roadway at whitehaugh
is gone, and the permanent way stops just
short of the main line. The explanation of all is
that when the line was all but completed in 1903,
the advent of the the trams knocked all
consideration of running a train service out of
court. But by Board of Trade regulation the
Caledonian Company were under an obligation , if
they completed the line to run a certain minimum
number of trains per day. In order not to be
under that necessity they purposely left the line
unfinished. But what a sum of money must have
gone with that decision. The line, from the main
Glasgow line to Barrhead, is a little short of
four miles. It was a double line, with two
stations Paisley East and Dykebar. The
construction necessitated at least fifteen
bridges and several deep cuttings and at one
point,they had not only to make a bridge but to
run the road beneath it, the public authority
being dissatisfied with the idea of a level
crossing. A two-room and kitchen house has been
made out of Dykebar station. Paisley East became
a garage.
It would be difficult for the original
designers of Paisley East station to recognize
their handiwork. No phantom trains draw into its
platforms, no ghostly passengers stand waiting
for the shrill whistle that should be heard at
midnight, no spectral porters call the last
train. The Paisley-Barrhead line is that last of
all abandoned things, a human work that has never
been used. Station was boarded up with sheets ?
corrugated completely at one end and partially at
the other. The garage was on the platform level
and served a good purpose for a number of years.
Over the site of the station will rise the latest
in picture houses, where soon the Paisley folk
will be enjoying the latest from the film world.
*******************
A Regional
History of the Railways of Great Britain
In 1902 the Caledonian took over the affairs
of the Paisley & Barrhead District Railway, a
local venture that had been authorised on 6
August 1897 to exploit the supposed riches of
Barrhead and the Gleniffer Braes. The line was to
form a wide circle beginning on the Gourock line
at St James west of Paisley, sweep in a circle
south and east to pass across the face of of the
Braes and south of Barrhead and turning north
drop down the Braes to a junction with the
Glasgow & Paisley Joint line at Greenlaw east
of Gilmour Street station. From the top of the
circle a line was to cut into Barrhead (where
there would be two new stations, South and New)
and then climb into the hills to join the
Lanarkshire & Ayrshire at Lyoncross.The
planned new lines opened up exciting
possibilities for the Caledonian.
A circular service covering Paisley, Barrhead
and intermediate stations would rival the G &
sw service. Like the G & sw circle trains the
Caledonian trains would have to reverse in
Barrhead. The Caledonian trains on the circle
would join the coast line at St James, pass
through Gilmour Street and regain the circle line
at Greenlaw Junction. By introducing certain
spurs still wider circuits could be accomplished.
For instance trains could be run from Glasgow to
Barrhead via Greenlaw and return via St James. An
even wider circle would be possible if trains
were sent out over the Lanarkshire & Ayrshire
to Lyoncross and then down the new line through
Barrhead to Paisley. Construction of the line
began on 15 August 1898, and the Caledonian
forthwith embarked on the Battle of the Braes.
Almost immediately the Paisley & Barrhead
board received an imposing petition from the
merchants and manufacturers of Johnstone asking
that a branch be run their town.The petition was
rejected, but on 9 August 1899 the Paisley &
Barrhead decided to double the portion of their
line lying between the Lanarkshire & Ayrshire
and the Glasgow & Paisley Joint Line in
anticipation of of heavy coal traffic from the L
& A.
The line was run without difficulty round the
western outskirts of Paisley and up the Braes
towards Barrhead. Stations were built at
Ferguslie, Stanley and Glenfield. The line was
then taken into Barrhead (New) station (on the
way being linked with the G & sw line at
Blackbyres Junction) and over the town on a
massive stone viaduct. Then followed a stiff
climb up the slopes to the junction with the L
& A at Lyon-cross. From Blackbyres Junction
the eastern half of the circle ran back down the
Braes to Greenlaw on the Glasgow-Paisley line.
The Caledonian and the o & sw came into
direct conflict at the approaches to Barrhead.
The G & sw so planned the Barrhead extension
to its Potterhill branch that the Caledonian was
forced to make an alteration in its levels, an
embankment becoming necessary where none had been
planned.
Charles Forman, the engineer, complained that
the Potterhill-Barrhead line 'has evidently been
laid out to interfere with and hem in this
company's line 'as much as possible'. However,
the Caledonian forced the G & sw to pay the
cost of the materials for the embankment. The
Battle of the Braes ended in farce. Both the
Caledonian and the G & sw were driven from
the field by the electric tram. The Caledonian
admitted defeat when its line was nearing
completion. Passenger stations, some of them
almost ready for service, were abandoned before
they had issued a single ticket. ... The
ill-fated Paisley railways left the district, and
especially Barrhead, , with ugly, decaying
railway properties. The town centre of Barrhead
was a clutter of mouldering stations, rusty
abandoned bridges and weed-covered embankments,
memorials to the suburban service that never
was.In the end the local council dumped the town
refuse on the abandoned railway site. While the
Caledonian and Glasgow & South Western were
squabbling over routes to Barrhead they were
jointly (as proprietors of the Glasgow &
Paisley Joint Line), pushing a new railway into
Renfrew.
|