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The Railway Series

Cros-ny-Cuirn (Sudric for "the Ford of the Mountain Ash") is a small village and station on the Skarloey Railway. It is located between Crovan's Gate and Glennock.

History[]

Some thirty chains beyond the bridge at Crovan's Gate the line climbs sharply before leveling out for the last mile to Cros-ny-Cuirn. This stretch needs to be negotiated carefully as the trackbed has an element of instability which the most careful ballasting has so far failed to correct. It was here that the unwary Duncan came to grief soon after he arrived at Crovan's Gate.

The village stands astride the Ballahoo/Glennock road and east of an ancient ford still marked by Rowan trees. It was regularly used by the Crovan's Gate Mining Company's pack-horse trains until about 1806 when they by-passed it with a bridge and diverted the road to suit. When, in 1820, the chain of inclines up the valley to Ward Fell replaced the pack-horses, Cros-ny-Cuirn's importance as a transport center grew, but came to a sudden end with the adoption of steam haulage in 1865. Horses and horse keepers departed, sidings were lifted, stables and wagon sheds were abandoned and a small unstaffed station with a siding was henceforth enough for local needs. This siding had been so little used during "the lean years" that by 1953, it had become grass-grown and invisible.

The siding was cleared and reinstated soon afterward as a parking place for Mr. Ivo Hugh's petrol-driven trolley (the first of several; he is currently using Mark V). In 1970 the siding was relaid and extended to make an extra passing loop for use at busy times. Mr. Hugh lives at Cros-ny-Cuirn in a comfortable cottage near the station.

Other inhabitants of the village are farmers and farmworkers, with a sprinkling of quarrymen and railwaymen. A few business people from Crovan's Gate and Ballahoo have settled here and commute daily. Sir Handel Lloyd Brown lives here too at The Rowans, a house built by his father on the hillside overlooking the gorge and from which he has an extensive view over the whole valley.

Just north of the station, the line swings over the road. The road was there first and hugged the river bank; so the railway builders crossed it on the level, hacking and blasting their right of way from the hillside to the east. Road and rail run side by side for two miles until first the road and then the railway swing west across the river. The level crossing has no gates. This was a sore point with the Sodor Island Council who kept pestering both the present Sir Handel and his father to install them, but neither saw any necessity. Gates had not been ordered in the Railway's Act of 1864; visibility in both directions is good and there has never been an accident.

In 1960 however, during road widening works, an incident occurred between a train hauled by Sir Handel and the Council's steam roller. The Council thought that this had allowed them to force Sir Handel's hand. They sued him, claiming that according to regulations his driver should have stopped dead at the crossing and they asked for an Order that gates should be erected. Unfortunately for them, Sir Handel had seen the whole incident from his study window. He counterclaimed against the Council for the careless driving of their steam roller and damages resulting therefrom. He was moreover able to prove, with the aid of photographs taken at the time by a reporter from the Crovan's Gate Gazette, that not only was his driver not at fault but that the incident had taken place some distance north of the level crossing. The Council lost its case. Damages were awarded against them and they were told that if they wanted gates, they would have to provide them themselves. This they declined to do and a certain coolness resulted.

In 1966 however, with the traffic build-up resulting from the Railway's Centenary publicity, it was found that the statutory level crossing precautions were causing unwelcome delays. Sir Handel, therefore, approached the Chairman of the Council and suggested that if they were willing to share the cost, he would be prepared to install a system of train-operated bells and flashing lights. This offer was accepted and harmony was restored once more.

Where road and rail divide, the road dips sharply and swings west to cross the river by a hump-backed bridge. The railway, without change of gradient, crosses by a girder bridge (seen on LOE/27, as Skarloey passes with the workmen to rescue a stranded Duncan at the tunnel). Two miles of lonely moorland follow. It was here that Rheneas came to grief but "first aid" rendered by Ivo Hugh and the Thin Controller, enabled him to struggle up the last mile and a half to Glennock.

The illustrations seen in Four Little Engines show a bridge near the station; this is incorrect because there is a level crossing on there. The same book shows an open country just after the station, but in reality, the line runs parallel between the road and cutting as shown in Gallant Old Engine.

Residents[]

Appearances[]

Trivia[]

  • Its Talyllyn Railway equivalent is Rhydyronen.
  • Prior to the map of Sodor being finalised, Cros-ny-Cuirn had two alternative names:
    • George Awdry originally proposed the name Crossag-ny-Cuirn, meaning "Little Crossing in the Mountain Ash".[1]
    • On a redrawn map of Wilbert Awdry's planned OO9 Skarloey Railway layout exhibited at the second Awdry Extravaganza, Cros-ny-Cuirn is spelled as Cros-ny-Quern.
  • While planning his Ffarquhar Branch Mk2 layout, the Rev. W. Awdry also planned to create a OO9 Skarloey Railway layout featuring Cros-ny-Cuirn. The station was planned to be only a small halt with no loop, in a similar style to Henry or Fach Goch on the Talyllyn Railway.[2]

Gallery[]

The Railway Series[]

Main Series[]

Miscellaneous[]

Station Guide[]

Preceding station StationTemplateIconSkarloey Railway Following station
Crovan's Gate Skarloey Railway Glennock

References[]


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