Derwent Valley Light Railway

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Identity area

Type of entity

Corporate body

Authorized form of name

Derwent Valley Light Railway

Parallel form(s) of name

  • DVLR; The Blackberry Line

Standardized form(s) of name according to other rules

  • Derwent Valley Light Railway; 1913-Present

Other form(s) of name

    Identifiers for corporate bodies

    Description area

    Dates of existence

    1913-Present

    History

    The railway line opened on 21st July 1913. It had strong connections with the North Eastern Railway (NER/LNER) and often used NER/LNER motive power. There were 11 stations which started at Layerthorpe and ended at Cliff Common. The line from Wheldrake to Cliffe Common was opened on October 29, 1912, with the remainder of the line opening on July 21st, 1913. It was constructed primarily as a freight line but passenger trains were introduced from 1913. During World War I it was used as a diversionary route by the North Eastern Railway between York and Selby. Passenger services ended in 1926, though freight traffic continued through World War II. During the Grouping of 1923 it remained private. Over the years much of the line has been closed. Today the line runs between Murton Lane and Murton Way, the last half mile of its former route. It is run by the Derwent Valley Light Railway Society who operate it on behalf of the Yorkshire Museum of Farming.
    Derwent Valley Light Railway Society; Yorkshire Museum of Farming

    Places

    Legal status

    Functions, occupations and activities

    A privately owned standard-gauge railway.

    Mandates/sources of authority

    Internal structures/genealogy

    General context

    The railway line opened on 21st July 1913. It had strong connections with the North Eastern Railway (NER/LNER) and often used NER/LNER motive power. There were 11 stations which started at Layerthorpe and ended at Cliff Common. The line from Wheldrake to Cliffe Common was opened on October 29, 1912, with the remainder of the line opening on July 21st, 1913. It was constructed primarily as a freight line but passenger trains were introduced from 1913. During World War I it was used as a diversionary route by the North Eastern Railway between York and Selby. Passenger services ended in 1926, though freight traffic continued through World War II. During the Grouping of 1923 it remained private. Over the years much of the line has been closed. Today the line runs between Murton Lane and Murton Way, the last half mile of its former route. It is run by the Derwent Valley Light Railway Society who operate it on behalf of the Yorkshire Museum of Farming.

    Relationships area

    Access points area

    Subject access points

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    Occupations

    Control area

    Authority record identifier

    GB0192-302

    Institution identifier

    GB0192

    Rules and/or conventions used

    International Standard Archival Authority Record for Corporate Bodies, Persons and Families - ISAAR(CPF) - Ottawa

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    Dates of creation, revision and deletion

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