Difference between revisions of "Stourport Power Station"

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==Closure==
 
==Closure==
  
By the 1970s the power station was in decline, with Stourport A being closed in 1976.<ref name = "Booth" />  Coal continued to be delivered to the power station by rail via Hartlebury until coal trains ceased in March 1979,<ref>[[Bibliography#Books | Mitchell & Smith (2007)]]</ref> the line itself finally being taken out of use on 12 January 1981.<ref>[[Bibliography#Books | Vanns]] p. 94.</ref> Stourport B finally closed in 1984 and has since been demolished, with the area now mainly being a housing estate.
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By the 1970s the power station was in decline, with Stourport A being closed in 1976.<ref name = "Booth" />  Coal continued to be delivered to the power station by rail via Hartlebury, but an increasing proportion was delivered by road towards the end of the 1970s, until coal trains ceased in March 1979 and road haulage took over completely.<ref>[[Bibliography#Books | Mitchell & Smith (2007)]]</ref><ref name="StourportPast">[https://www.facebook.com/STOURPORTPAST/posts/1170675616317956 Stourport Past Facebook Page, retrieved 14/06/2016]</ref> The line itself was finally taken out of use on 12 January 1981.<ref>[[Bibliography#Books | Vanns]] p. 94.</ref> Stourport B finally closed in 1984 and has since been demolished, with the area now mainly being a housing estate.
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==

Revision as of 10:49, 14 June 2016

Two CEGB steam locomotives at the power station circa 1968. The small shed can just be seen behind the second engine.

Stourport Power Station was built by the Shropshire & Worcestershire Electric Power Co., and opened in June 1927 by the Prime Minister, and MP for Bewdley, Stanley Baldwin. Unusually the power station did not have the customary cooling towers, drawing cooling water directly from the adjacent River Severn and River Stour.

Association with the Severn Valley Railway

Stourport Power Station from the air in 1948. The exchange sidings are in the top left, with the coal drops in the middle of the image. Note the smoke stacks are painted in camouflage colours. Image from Britain from Above

Coal was initially delivered via the River Severn or the Staffordshire & Worcestershire Canal (which passes under the SVRSevern Valley Railway at Falling Sands Viaduct). A branch line from Stourport station along the embankment was constructed in 1940 so that coal could be brought in directly by rail. A portion of the coal for Stourport Power Station came from Collieries served by the Severn Valley Railway, with approximately 30% of the output of Alveley Colliery being sent to the power station. The majority of the coal came from Cannock Chase, with such coal arriving at Hartlebury from Stourbridge, often behind a Midland engine. A shunting locomotive was stationed at Hartlebury to shuttle coal wagons between there and Stourbridge.[1] A former NCBNational Coal Board employee's recollections of coal workings can be found in Tales from the Severn Valley.

A second power station on the site was opened on 26 September 1950; this became known as Stourport B with the earlier station becoming Stourport A.

Locomotives

Andrew Barclay 0-4-0ST works number 2088/1940 "Sir Thomas Royden" was ordered for the station and delivered new on 28th May 1940. This article by Adrian Booth suggests that the delivery was initially to Little Barford Power Station in Bedfordshire, with a transfer to Stourport in 1941 when the standard gauge facilities on the power station were completed. The locomotive was named after the Chairman of the Edmundsons Electricity Corporation which operated the power station at the time. It remained in service until 1977, and is now preserved at Rocks by Rail, formerly known as the Rutland Railway Museum.[2]

A second locomotive, WG Bagnall 0-4-0ST works number 2665 "General Wade Hayes", arrived in 1942. These two locomotives were the mainstay of shunting operations for some years, although by January 1958 a third locomotive had arrived, Peckett 0-4-0ST 1893/1936, which had begun life at Ironbridge power station as Ironbridge No 2. Bagnall 2665 was scrapped in 1968, and by 1975 the other locomotives were retained as spare, their work having been assumed by diesel shunters. Peckett 1893 was also preserved and is now at the Coleford Railway Museum in the Forest of DeanWilliam Dean, Chief Locomotive Engineer of the Great Western Railway 1877-1902.[3]

Closure

By the 1970s the power station was in decline, with Stourport A being closed in 1976.[3] Coal continued to be delivered to the power station by rail via Hartlebury, but an increasing proportion was delivered by road towards the end of the 1970s, until coal trains ceased in March 1979 and road haulage took over completely.[4][5] The line itself was finally taken out of use on 12 January 1981.[6] Stourport B finally closed in 1984 and has since been demolished, with the area now mainly being a housing estate.

See also

Stourport
Pre-1963 map

References

  1. Recollection of former NCB employee
  2. Rocks by Rail (Retrieved 13 June 2016)
  3. 3.0 3.1 Adrian Booth article
  4. Mitchell & Smith (2007)
  5. Stourport Past Facebook Page, retrieved 14/06/2016
  6. Vanns p. 94.

Links

Unlocking Stourport's Past (Power Station page)
Railways in Worcestershire article by Adrian Booth