Title: Hythe Pier Railway Post by: grahame on November 02, 2017, 20:57:40 From The BBC (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-hampshire-41654145)
Not sure whether to post under "heritage", "campaign for improvement" "south western" or "wider picture". This ferry service and pier, old and in need of TLC though it is, is very much part of a good commuter route from Southampton across the water. Quote The 100th anniversary of the locomotives on an electric pier railway is being marked by the community group hoping to save the structure. The locomotives on Hythe Pier on Southampton Water were originally built for a mustard gas factory in 1917. The Save Hythe Pier community group is hoping to take over the pier from which the ferry service to Southampton operates. Title: Re: Hythe Pier Railway Post by: froome on November 02, 2017, 21:27:32 I've used this ferry and the pier is distinctly ropy. I walked the length of it when dropped off by the ferry, and was never sure whether I'd make it to the landward end before the whole thing fell down!
Title: Re: Hythe Pier Railway Post by: grahame on January 27, 2018, 06:07:14 More on the Hythe Pier Railway from Atlas Obscura (https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/hythe-pier-railway) including some lovely pictures
Quote The world's oldest operational public pier railway has shuttled seagoing commuters from ship to shore since 1909. The longest-operating public pier railway on the globe chugs along a thin wooden strip on the English coast. It shuffles tourists and locals alike across an estuary, adding a nostalgic 20th-century twist to their modern-day commutes. Once driven by hand, the rickety carriages of this 2,100-foot-long pier railroad are currently pulled by two miniature electric locomotives, which began their relentless rattlings along the wooden boardwalk in 1922. Though endearing, these dinky narrow-gauge trains have a dark side to their history. They were built for a World War I mustard gas factory in 1917, then moved to the Hythe Pier when the war ended. The pier, the country’s seventh longest, was built in 1881. Unlike many pleasure piers beloved of the British seaside scene, it still has a very practical purpose as the embarkation point for a short ferry service to Southampton. It protrudes over the muddy estuary shallows into deeper waters, allowing the boat to berth in all tidal conditions. [etc] The geography of the area means - with the deep inlet of Southampton Water - means that commutes from roosts in Fawley, Hythe, Dibden and Marchwood to daytime haunts in Southampton are short for crows, and seagulls too. But commutes are long or complicated for us humans. If we go "direct across" , there is the requirement to change from land transport to railway, railway to boat, then boat to onward land transport unless we live or work very near the boat. By road, it's long and congested - by car it can take a while, and the bus does not have a reputation for speed either. Map shows the pier (red), ferry (magenta), current operating passenger railways (black) and the freight line to the gates of Fawley oil refinery (blue). The rail routes are a little diagrammatic (I don't have the mapping skills of other members here ...) - in other words they may be a few hundred yards out in places. Background is Open Map Data. (http://www.wellho.net/pix/solentrail.jpg) Title: Re: Hythe Pier Railway Post by: CyclingSid on January 29, 2018, 09:13:09 Could also add, bicycles not being your thing Graham, National Cycle Route 2 from Hythe Pier to the Beaulieu Road and then forestry tracks to Brockenhurst. Also route 236 from Ashurst to Lindhurst.
Don't know if they have any number of cycle commuters. Probably miniscule compared with the Gosport Ferry. This page is printed from the "Coffee Shop" forum at http://gwr.passenger.chat which is provided by a customer of Great Western Railway. Views expressed are those of the individual posters concerned. Visit www.gwr.com for the official Great Western Railway website. Please contact the administrators of this site if you feel that content provided contravenes our posting rules ( see http://railcustomer.info/1761 ). The forum is hosted by Well House Consultants - http://www.wellho.net |