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Oxford Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway

214 bytes added, 17:59, 13 November 2020
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[[File:OWW map.jpg|thumb|300px|right|Map showing the line still named "Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton" under GWR ownership in 1905]]
The '''Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway '' (OW&W, OWW, or OWWR) was an independent railway company that was formed to build a railway between its three named cities, authorised on 4 August 1845<ref>[http://www.historywebsite.co.uk/articles/railways/GWR.htm Rails In Wolverhampton - The Early Years - The Great Western Railway]</ref>. It began at Wolvercot Junction, near Oxford, from which it ran North-West through Honeybourne and Evesham to [[Worcester]]. It then proceeded towards [[Wolverhampton]] via Droitwich Spa, [[Hartlebury]], [[Kidderminster]], Stourbridge and Dudley. Due to its overall poor management, the company is sometimes referred to using its derisive nickname, "The Old Worse and Worse".
== History ==
The company suffered from financial mismanagement early on, and ran out of funds in 1849, before any major part of the line was opened. A protracted legal battle then began as the [[Great Western Railway|GWR]] refused to complete the line (a condition of the act Act of parliamentParliament), before realising that its competitors, the Midland Railway and LNWR, were also interested in the line - the GWR finally agreed to lease the line in 1851. The line was eventually completed, still as an independent company, in July 1853, being opened throughout on 1 December 1853<ref>[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxford,_Worcester_and_Wolverhampton_Railway Wikipedia - Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway]</ref>. The contractors for the Oxford to Worcester and Tipton to Wolverhampton sections were [[Peto, Brassey and Betts | Peto and Betts]] who in partnership with [[Peto, Brassey and Betts | Thomas Brassey]] would later be the contractors for construction of the Severn Valley Railway.
The company's first Locomotive Superintendent, David Joy, was appointed in 1852.<ref>[[Bibliography#Other References|Boynton (2002)]] p. 21.</ref> He was succeeded in February 1856 by Frederick Hayward.<ref>[[Bibliography#Other References|Boynton (2002)]] p. 30.</ref>
==Present day==
The majority of the original OW&W route remains open, between Oxford and Stourbridge Junction, via Worcester Shrub Hill, [[Hartlebury]] and [[Kidderminster]]. North of Stourbridge, the line is used for freight services for a short distance, although beyond Round Oak (now the location of the Merry Hill Shopping Centre) it has been variously mothballed or closedand will form part of the Wednesbury to Brierley Hill Metro Extension. <ref>[https://metroalliance.co.uk/projects/wednesbury-to-brierley-hill-extension/ Midland Metro Alliance] (Retrieved 13 November 2020)</ref> Passenger services to Birmingham Snow Hill and beyond continue via the former GWR line which bears to the right a short distance north of Stourbridge Junction.
== References ==
<references />
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