In April/May 2025 we had a holiday on Skye and as part of that started finding out about the history of industrial railways on Skye and immediately adjacent islands.
The first we investigated was a line used to carry Diatomite from Loch Cuithir to Lealt on Skye the linked article below looks at that industry and follows the line. ...
http://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/05/01/th ... -to-lealt/
Other articles will follow in due course. ....
The Industrial Railways of Skye and Adjacent Islands (UK)
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- Routinier
- Beiträge: 406
- Registriert: 28 Nov 2018, 16:52
- Wohnort: Telford. UK
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- Routinier
- Beiträge: 406
- Registriert: 28 Nov 2018, 16:52
- Wohnort: Telford. UK
- Kontaktdaten:
Re: The Industrial Railways of Skye and Adjacent Islands (UK)
Part 2 – The Talisker Distillery Tramway
The Talisker Distillery Tramway was a short 2ft-gauge tramway which opened in 1900 and closed in 1948. It ran from Carbost Pier on Loch Harport, along the Harport shore to Talisker Distillery and was used to transport materials for Talisker Distillery.
http://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/05/03/th ... y-tramway/
The Talisker Distillery Tramway was a short 2ft-gauge tramway which opened in 1900 and closed in 1948. It ran from Carbost Pier on Loch Harport, along the Harport shore to Talisker Distillery and was used to transport materials for Talisker Distillery.
http://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/05/03/th ... y-tramway/
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- Routinier
- Beiträge: 406
- Registriert: 28 Nov 2018, 16:52
- Wohnort: Telford. UK
- Kontaktdaten:
Re: The Industrial Railways of Skye and Adjacent Islands (UK)
Part 3 – The Skye Marble Railway
The featured image for this article is the only photograph I have been able to find of ‘Skylark’, the locomotive which for a matter of only a few years operated on the Skye Marble Railway. Further notes about the locomotive can be found in this article. An information board across the road from Kilchrist Church, features Skylark at the head of a train of wagons. [5]
Some sources say that in 1904, an aerial ropeway was constructed to transport marble to Broadford Pier from Kilchrist Quarries (alternatively known as Kilbride Quarries or Strath Suardal). The quarries were used to excavate marble. [1][2] Other sources talk of the line being worked first by horses. [14] There was an incline between the upper and lower Quarries at Kilchrist which appears to have been rope-worked. It is most likely, given the length of line from Kilchrist to the quay at Broadford and the relatively shallow gradients, that the line from the marble works down to Broadford was worked by horses, but it is entirely possible that an aerial ropeway was employed. Nothing remains of the line beyond the formation which now carries a footpath once South of Broadford, and, as will be seen below, some rails in the surface of the pier at Broadford.
http://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/06/02/th ... e-railway/
The featured image for this article is the only photograph I have been able to find of ‘Skylark’, the locomotive which for a matter of only a few years operated on the Skye Marble Railway. Further notes about the locomotive can be found in this article. An information board across the road from Kilchrist Church, features Skylark at the head of a train of wagons. [5]
Some sources say that in 1904, an aerial ropeway was constructed to transport marble to Broadford Pier from Kilchrist Quarries (alternatively known as Kilbride Quarries or Strath Suardal). The quarries were used to excavate marble. [1][2] Other sources talk of the line being worked first by horses. [14] There was an incline between the upper and lower Quarries at Kilchrist which appears to have been rope-worked. It is most likely, given the length of line from Kilchrist to the quay at Broadford and the relatively shallow gradients, that the line from the marble works down to Broadford was worked by horses, but it is entirely possible that an aerial ropeway was employed. Nothing remains of the line beyond the formation which now carries a footpath once South of Broadford, and, as will be seen below, some rails in the surface of the pier at Broadford.
http://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/06/02/th ... e-railway/