Croft Viaduct Explained

Croft Viaduct
Os Grid Reference:NZ290092
Qid:Q26424331
Carries:East Coast Main Line
Crosses:River Tees
Locale:Croft-on-Tees, North Yorkshire, England
Other Name:Tees Railway Bridge
Owner:Network Rail
Number Spans:4
Num Track:2
Electrification:Overhead catenary (1990s)
Begin:1837
Opened:1841

Croft Viaduct is a railway bridge carrying the East Coast Main Line between and in Northern England. The viaduct crosses the River Tees, the border between North Yorkshire and County Durham. Although it was an early example of a stone viaduct in the railway system, it is not the first true railway viaduct, however, it was the first railway viaduct in the United Kingdom to have been built with an oblique arch (or skew-arch). It was grade II listed in 1988, and had overhead line equipment installed in the early 1990s.

History

The viaduct was designed by Henry Welsh, and built by Deas and Hogg, for the Great North of England Railway (GNER) between 1837 and 1840, costing £14,481 .[1] [2] Digging for the foundations started on 25 November 1837, and the formation of the line northwards from the viaduct would go on to use the trackbed of the old Croft branch of the Stockton & Darlington Railway.[3] The trackbed was later purchased by the Great North of England Railway. The viaduct is long, (according to Trackmaps[4]), above the water of the River Tees, and each of the four arches is across, (if the 49 degree skew of the arches is taken into consideration).[5] The height of the viaduct from the normal water level to the top of the stone parapets is and the width of the bridge is .[6]

Croft Viaduct crosses the River Tees about 0.5miles east of Croft Bridge (which carries the A167), and curves slightly to the south east.[7] The viaduct is the most significant engineering structure built on the section of line between York and Darlington, and was opened to traffic in 1841.

During construction, the building of the viaduct was beset by labour disputes, with the engineer being authorised to hire more men to complete the building phase at the contractors' expense.[8] It is one of the oldest viaducts on the railway network, and was the first railway viaduct in the United Kingdom to be built with a skew-arch.[9] [10] Apart from some re-inforced concrete, the viaduct is largely composed of the original stone; dressed ashlar cream sandstone, with late 20th century parapet railings.[11]

A tradition of newly-appointed bishops arriving into County Durham being presented with a falchion which slayed the Sockburn Worm, is normally associated with the road bridge at Croft-on-Tees, which in railway terms, is upstream.[12] However, in 1860, Henry Montagu Villiers arrived by train, and so the locomotive was stopped on Croft Viaduct to allow the ceremony to take place.[13] [14]

The viaduct is registered with Historic England as a grade II listed structure. It had overhead line equipment installed in the early 1990s, with the first electric train north from York, reaching Edinburgh in June 1991. As Croft Viaduct was listed as Grade II in 1988, consent had to be sought from the local authority to alter the structure with the catenary.[15] Historic England list the name of the bridge as being "Tees Railway Bridge".

The original Croft Branch of the Stockton & Darlington Railway had a proposal to cross the Tees to venture 1miles into Yorkshire, but the cost of building a bridge was found to have been prohibitive. The Croft Branch was also further north (upstream) of the position of Croft Viaduct.[16]

See also

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Book: Simmons . Jack . Biddle . Gordon . The Oxford companion to British railway history from 1603 to the 1990s . 2003 . Oxford University Press . Oxford . 0-1986-6238-6 . 47, 192.
  2. Book: Hoole . Kenneth . The North East . 1986 . David & Charles . Newton Abbot . 0-9465-3731-3 . 94 . 3.
  3. Web site: Disused Stations: Croft Station . disused-stations.org.uk . 2 July 2024.
  4. Book: Kelman . Leanne . Railway Track Diagrams Book 2: Eastern . 2020 . Trackmaps . Frome . 978-1-9996271-3-3. 20.
  5. Web site: Genuki: Croft On Tees Parish information from Bulmers' 1890., Yorkshire (North Riding) . genuki.org.uk . 25 June 2024.
  6. Book: Tomlinson . William Weaver . Tomlinson's North Eastern Railway : Its rise and development . 1967. 1914 . David & Charles . Newton Abbot . 359. 872328861.
  7. Book: Tomlinson . William Weaver . Tomlinson's North Eastern Railway : Its rise and development . 1967. 1914 . David & Charles . Newton Abbot . 295. 872328861.
  8. Book: Hoole . Kenneth . The North East . 1986 . David & Charles . Newton Abbot . 0-9465-3731-3 . 94–95 . 3.
  9. Web site: Betteney . Alan . Crossing the Tees . teesarchaeology.com . Cleveland Industrial Archaeology Society & Tees Archaeology . 19 June 2024 . 15 . 2019.
  10. Book: Maciver . P. S. . The growth of the railway system : a lecture . 1885 . Railway Review . London . 8. 1051487361.
  11. Book: Biddle . Gordon . Britain's historic railway buildings: an Oxford gazetteer of structures and sites . 2003 . Oxford University Press . Oxford . 0198662475 . 409.
  12. Book: Whishaw . Francis . Analysis of railways: consisting of a series of reports on the twelve hundred miles of projected railways in England and Wales, now before Parliament . 1837 . J. Weale . London . 88. 14920595.
  13. Web site: Croft Railway Bridge . bridgesonthetyne.co.uk . 19 June 2024.
  14. News: Lloyd . Chris . Mr Cheese spreads the word, but gets into a bit of a pickle . 19 June 2024 . The Northern Echo . 16 December 2009.
  15. News: ECML: Electrification as it used to be . 2 July 2024 . Rail Engineer . 27 November 2017.
  16. Web site: Georeferenced Maps - Map images - National Library of Scotland . maps.nls.uk . 25 June 2024 . Use the slider on the bottom left (named "Change transparency of overlay") to toggle between old mapping and modern-day satellite imagery.