Pritchard's Bridge Railway
Station

The Ulster Railway
Company
In 1836, an Act of Parliament was passed granting
the Ulster Railway Company licence to "lay a line of rails from the
town of Belfast to the city of Armagh".
Radiating from its Great Victoria Street station
in Belfast, which was both the terminus and headquarters of the
company, the first train rolled into Lisburn on 12 August 1839.
Trains first ran into Lurgan on 18th November 1841 and on 31st
January 1842 a temporary terminus was brought into operation at
Seagoe on the outskirts of Portadown. Because of the soft nature of
the ground it was not until 12th September 1842 that the Ulster
made it to its new station at Watson Street,
Portadown.
The engineers involved were a distinguished trio:
William Bald, who directed the project, was the designer of the
Antrim Coast Road; John Godwin, engineer, had trained under Sir
James McAdam, and William Dargan, the contractor, had worked under
the famous Thomas Telford.
Portadown was to pose yet another challenge in
the form of the River Bann and the need to construct a bridge over
it resulted in the first trains not rolling into Armagh until 1848.
It was not until 1852 following completion of the viaduct at
Bessbrook that the line from Portadown was built through to just
north of Drogheda. Dublin was finally reached in 1855 after a
bridge over the River Boyne was completed. The Armagh line was
subsequently extended to Clones in 1863 and, from there on to
Enniskillen. Another railway line, which opened in 1858, radiated
from Portadown towards Omagh via Dungannon (see my other caches)
and was operated by the “Portadown, Dungannon and Omagh
Junction Company”. These three lines firmly established
Portadown as a major railway junction.
A major problem arose when the Ulster Railway
began to construct its line between Belfast and Armagh. They chose
a gauge of 6ft 2in, whilst the proposers behind the Dublin and
Drogheda Railway intended to build their line to a gauge of 5ft
2in. The Dublin & Kingstown Railway was initially built to
George Stephenson's gauge of 4ft 8½ inches. Immediately this caused
political wrangling as the different gauges between Ireland's three
railways would lead to problems whereby trains from one railway
could not run on another.
At this point, the Board of Trade stepped in. The
opinion of the Stephenson’s was sought, who, while committed
to the 4ft 8½in used in Great Britain, suggested a compromise gauge
for Ireland between 5ft 0in and 5ft 6in. A simple calculation
proved to be the solution - the exact average between all three
gauges was 5ft 3in, and so this became the adopted standard gauge
throughout Ireland - a brilliant example of a political compromise!
The gauge of the Ulster Railway was altered about 1846, and that of
the Dublin and Kingstown Railway in 1857. This unusual gauge is
otherwise found only in the Australian states of Victoria, New
South Wales and South Australia where it was introduced by the
Irish railway engineer F.W. Shields. (5ft 3in was not the only
gauge to operate in Ireland - numerous narrow-gauge systems were
built, usually to a gauge of 3 feet – again see my other
caches).
1876 saw the amalgamation of Irish North Western
Railway (INW), Northern Railway of Ireland, and Ulster Railway,
which, in themselves were largely the result of earlier
amalgamations, to form the Great Northern Railway (Ireland). A
combination of the increasing road competition facing all railways,
and a change in patterns of economic activity caused by the
partition of Ireland in 1921 reduced the GNRI's prosperity. By the
1950's the GNR(I) had ceased to be profitable and in 1953 the
company was jointly nationalised by the governments of Northern
Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. The two governments jointly
ran the railway under The Great Northern Railway Board until 1958,
although since 1948 the creation of the Ulster Transport Authority
had effectively taken all Northern Ireland railway lines, including
the Northern Ireland part of the GNR(I), under its
remit.
As early as March 1949, the UTA applied to the
Transport Tribunal for authority to proceed with large scale
closures of former Belfast & County Down Railway lines,
sounding the death knell for Northern Ireland’s branch lines.
The main line from Comber to Newcastle, and the branches to
Ardglass and Ballynahinch were closed in January 1950. The Belfast
to Donaghadee line was closed and services on the Newcastle to
Castlewellan line ceased three months later, thereby leaving
Belfast to Bangor as the only part of the former B&CDR. The
Authority then turned its attention to the former Northern Counties
Committee section and closures here were equally drastic. County
Antrim branch lines were decimated covering Ballyclare, Larne
Harbour, Macfin, Kilrea, Magherafelt, Draperstown, Ballymoney,
Ballycastle, Limavady and Dungiven.
The UTA was dogged with accusations of anti-rail
bias; the Stormont administration at that time being strongly
lobbied by many road hauliers, indeed several senior politicians
were themselves closely linked to the road haulage business. By
1967 the Authority was wound up and replaced by Ulsterbus, Northern
Ireland Carriers (for freight, which soon passed into the private
sector) and Ulster Transport Railways which became Northern Ireland
Railways in 1968. However, the dissolution of the UTA (or
Ulster’s Terrible Affliction as it was often referred) came
too late for the 65% of Northern Ireland's rail network which was
lost in those twenty years. What is particularly interesting to
consider is that within months of our branch lines being closed all
were systematically ripped up and destroyed, thus ensuring no
chance of them ever being resurrected. Compared to mainland Great
Britain it is difficult, in places, to trace our old railway lines,
something I hope to try to remedy with this series of
caches.
September 30th 1957 saw the last train run from
Armagh to Portadown. The services to Dungannon, Omagh and
Londonderry disappeared eight years later on 14th February 1965,
only six weeks after Newry and Warrenpoint were denuded of their
railway links. At this time too freight trains disappeared from our
railways, and a little later, the UTA morphed into Northern Ireland
Railways.
As these caches are only focused on the original
Ulster line to Armagh, I will limit further background to facts
associated with that stretch of line, and these will be included in
each respective cache. So to assemble your potted history you will
need to collect (or at least read) each Railway Heritage cache
!
Pritchard's Bridge Railway
Station
Located in the townland of
Kilmore, on the line between Moira and Lurgan, this bridge has been
extensively upgraded and modernised but at least, in this instance,
some effort has been made to retain some of the original character
and employed some traditional stone facing.
Between 1841 and 1844 there was a
station here at Pritchard's Bridge. During this time the line was
completed to Lurgan and on to Portadown.
The stonework and graded high
ground which you can see in the left side of the photograph is all
that remains of this short-lived railway
station.
The
Cache
The cache is a small magnetic
tab-locked box. When placed it contained a log book, pencil, FTF
prize and some small swaps.