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“Please tell everyone that whatever happens elsewhere, Steam will still be at work here. We shall be glad to welcome all who want to see and travel behind, real engines.”
The Fat Controller to The Flying Scotsman , Enterprising Engines

The North Western Railway (NWR) is the main standard gauge rail network on the Island of Sodor. From nationalisation on 1st January 1948 until it privatised from BR, it was the North Western Region of British Railways. The railway's motto is "Nil Unquam Simile", which is Latin for "There's nothing quite like it".

History[]

The North Western Railway was formed in 1914 by the Government-sponsored amalgamation of the three then-extant standard gauge railways on the island - the Sodor and Mainland, the Wellsworth and Suddery and the Tidmouth, Knapford and Elsbridge, the latter two already in the process of amalgamation - as a strategic railway for coastal defence against possible danger from Ireland. Albert Regaby, Lord Harwick, always maintained that his gift to the First Lord of the Admiralty, Winston Churchill, of a copy of the History of the Island of Sodor, which lays great emphasis on the importance of Sodor as an outpost in the direction of Ireland, was the deciding factor that led to the formation of the NWR.

Lord Harwick was appointed Chairman, while Mr. Topham Hatt, formerly of the TK&ER, was appointed Chief Mechanical Engineer and the NWR began operating in 1915. Much construction work was needed in order to connect the three absorbed railways and meet the Admiralty's requirements. The NWR cut a single bore tunnel through the Ballahoo Ridge, allowing it to extend to Vicarstown, where it established its Administrative Headquarters and main Motive Power Depot. A rolling lift bridge, designed by Topham Hatt, was subsequently erected across the Walney Channel, finally connecting Sodor with the Mainland. Repair shops were also established at Crovan's Gate, while many of the routes of the former railways were converted from single to double track.

In 1916, the NWR constructed a single track extension of the Main Line up to Arlesbrugh by Government Order. The line was a key part of the NWR's obligations as a strategic railway, for it allowed the Admiralty to regularly patrol the West Coast of the island with armoured trains. It was originally intended to reach Harwick, but by the time Arlesburgh was reached, the immediate threat had passed and a further extension was dropped. Apart from the four "Coffee Pots" of the TK&ER and the four 0-6-0 tank engines of the W&SR, the NWR when formed had no locomotives of its own. Throughout the First World War, it was worked with locomotives and rolling stock borrowed from the Midland and the Furness Companies, such as Edward. It also acquired a tank engine from the LB&SCR named Thomas.

By 1921, most of these locomotives had to be returned and replacements needed to be found. This was a time of great difficulty for the NWR as with the end of the war the NWR's military value was ended and Government support withdrawn. This resulted in a locomotive crisis and Mr. Topham Hatt, now also a Director, was placed in charge of finding new motive power. In 1922, he attempted to buy a Robinson Atlantic but ended up with Henry, an engine riddled with flaws, while in 1923, he acquired Gordon and James during the next year, both experimental prototypes.

In 1923, came the Grouping and the NWR was threatened with either closure or absorption into the London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS) system. The NWR Board, however, led by their Chairman Lord Harwick believed in the Railway's future and fought off the plans. In this, they were ably backed by the new General Manager, Topham Hatt and to such good purpose that by 1925, the LMS had been brought to terms and the NWR was enabled to maintain its identity. The agreement with the LMS granted the NWR Running Powers across the Vicarstown Bridge into Barrow-in-Furness and also began a joint suburban service between Barrow and Norramby, at the cost of the NWR curtailing a steamer service between Kirk Ronan and Dublin it had launched in 1920.

Also in 1923, following an agreement with the Peel Godred Power Company, the NWR constructed a branch line from Killdane to Peel Godred to serve the Sodor Aluminium Works, using powers it had inherited from the S&MR. Due to the heavy gradients, the branch line is unique for being worked by electric locomotives. While the branch has provided steady revenue to the NWR, it resulted in the closure of the Mid Sodor Railway (which eventually occurred in January 1947). The following year, 1924, the NWR entered an agreement with Jabez Croarie to extend its Elsbridge Branch Line to Ffarquhar to service the Anopha Quarry, providing a new source of traffic.

After the NWR came to an agreement with the LMS in 1925, the Motive Power Depot moved from Vicarstown to Tidmouth. This resulted in the closure of the sheds located there in 1927. Albert Regaby stepped down as chairman in 1934.

When the railways in the United Kingdom were nationalised, Sodor was affected too with the North Western Railway becoming the North Western Region of British Railways. However, the railway was allowed to keep a large degree of independence from the rest of the network; this is why steam traction was preserved on the railway, as well as why none of the branch lines or stations were affected by the Beeching Axe. The other railways on the island were not affected by nationalisation. Since privatisation, the railway has again become the North Western Railway Company and unlike most post-privatisation train companies, it is not part of National Rail and is completely responsible for the running of the freight and passenger operations and for the maintenance of the track and infrastructure of the railway.

Liveries[]

The steam engines are painted primarily blue with red and yellow lining (Thomas, Edward, Gordon, Donald and Douglas), secondarily green with red and yellow lining (Henry, Percy) and tertiarily red with yellow and blue or black lining (James). The numbers are painted in yellow with red or black borders on the side of the cabs, tanks or tenders. The diesel engines are painted BR green (Daisy, BoCo, Bear) or BR blue (The Works Diesel, Pip and Emma) with most having yellow warning panels at each end.

The coaching stock was originally painted orange, this changed after Percy The Small Engine. Coaching stock was then painted brown with yellow lining and white lettering and numbering. GWR Autocoaches are in the GWR's post 1943 livery: chocolate brown and cream. BR livery coaches still appeared from The Eight Famous Engines to Enterprising Engines.

The wagons and brake vans are mostly painted either dark grey, dark green, dark blue, or brown with black frames and "N W" (The Spiteful Brake Van), numbers and lettering painted on the sides in white.

NWR railway lines[]

Interchanges with other railways[]

Movements of rolling stock (particularly engines) to and from the narrow-gauge railways is achieved by transporting them on flatbeds on the standard-gauge system, for example, when Rheneas is sent away for repairs in a flashback in the story Skarloey Remembers and later returned in the story Gallant Old Engine.

Trivia[]

  • The first reference of the North Western Railway was created when Wilbert Awdry built his wooden model of Thomas. Awdry claimed that the NW on the tanks stood for "No Where", but would eventually refer to the initials as "North Western" when he began building the world of Sodor and the Railway Series.
    • Coincidentally, there was a real railway company in Britain called the North Western Railway that ran from Skipton to Morecambe, but was nicknamed the "Little" North Western Railway in order to distinguish it from the larger London and North Western Railway. [1]
  • According to The Island of Sodor: Its People, History and Railways, the North Western Railway has at least a total of eighty (80) locomotives with which to work its system, this includes BR and industrial locomotives. The vast majority of these are undocumented in The Railway Series. No details about them are given.
  • Emma is the only engine to have the railway's initials displayed on her.
  • On some promotional items to tie-in with the Railway Series books dating from the 1970s the NWR is called Sodor Rail and uses a logo similar to the famous British Rail one now used by the organization National Rail.
  • A poster for the railway depicts LNER-styled illustrations of Thomas and Gordon.
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