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The Severn Valley Railway under GWR/BR ownership

189 bytes added, 23:30, 3 February 2015
Add note on Wolverhampton & Bridgnorth Rly as requested
The Severn Valley Railway was originally operated by the West Midland Railway, but was fully absorbed into the Great Western Railway (GWR) in 1872. In 1878 the GWR added ‘The Loop’ linking Bewdley to Kidderminster, over which the present day Severn Valley Railway continues. ‘The Loop’ nearly didn’t happen; construction was authorised by an Act of Parliament in 1868 which also included the nearby Stourbridge Town branch (part of which is still in use today). The GWR then sought leave to abandon ‘The Loop’ and build a line linking Bewdley to Stourbridge via Wolverley, Cookley and Kinver instead. Only when Parliament rejected this proposal did ‘The Loop’ go ahead. Most Kidderminster to Bewdley trains left the Severn Valley Railway at the [[Tenbury Branch]] and took the [[Wyre Forest Line]] (dismantled in the 1960s and now a popular walking route) to Tenbury Wells and Woofferton.
 
In 1896 there was a proposal for a Wolverhampton and Bridgnorth Light Railway, to provide a direct route without the diversion south via Kidderminster. However this line was never built.
The Severn Valley line was used for both passenger and freight traffic. Much of the latter was generated by [[Alveley Colliery]] at [[Highley]] and the British Sugar Corporation factory at [[Foley Park sidings|Foley Park]], Kidderminster.
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