The Framlingham branch was authorised in 1854 and built with several other railway lines by the East Suffolk Railway, including those from Halesworth to Woodbridge (now part of the East Suffolk line), Saxmundham to Leiston and the Snape branch line. Construction was straightforward as the countryside of East Suffolk is relatively flat. Flooding at Parham meant the river had to be diverted to protect the line of the railway.
The Framlingham branch started from a junction at Wickham Market station and was officially opened on 1 June 1859.[1] However, the East Suffolk Railway was promptly incorporated into the Eastern Counties Railway, the dominant railway company on East Anglia. Before the opening, a special train was recorded as running in February 1859 from Woodbridge. The line south of Woodbridge was still being built by the Eastern Union Railway.[2]
The Ipswich Journal of 4 June 1859 reported on the opening on the official opening day: "The bells rang merrily throughout the day, a cricket match was played, and tea was provided by Mr. John Pipe of the Crown Inn, in his usual style, of which 40 of the gentry and inhabitants of the town partook; appropriate speeches were made, songs sung, and a merry and convivial evening spent." Unfortunately an evening concert at the Corn Exchange was cancelled as the band leader Edward Plantin was involved in a serious accident at the station and died of his injuries a few days later.
Early traffic
The service began with five daily passenger trains and a goods train. So successful was the coming of the railway to Framlingham that within months the latter had doubled to two goods trains a day. Passenger business came from trips to the developing seaside resorts, not just easy access to Ipswich and London. For instance in June 1865, a schools excursion was run from Framlingham to Aldeburgh at a cost of six shillings (£0.30). From the outset, Framlingham College made use of the railway both for college outings and at the beginning and end of terms. These trains continued running until March 1954.
As can be expected, most of the goods traffic was agricultural in nature, although photographs indicate some inward domestic coal.[3]
In 1922 Hacheston Halt was opened in an attempt to improve the line's poor passenger receipts.[3]
Well used until the 1930s, when passenger numbers fell due to the increased popularity of road transport, the line closed to passenger services on 1 November 1952, and to freight on 19 April 1965.[4] The Royal Train overnighted on the branch in May 1956 headed by B1 4-6-0s 61252 and 61399.
The branch was often served by mixed passenger/freight trains in latter years.[5]
Timetable
Bradshaws 1922 timetable (Table 316) showed five departures from Framlingham at 0720, 0830, 1240, 1625 and 1830. All services had connections to London Liverpool Street.
Journey times were 6 minutes from Framlingham to Parham, 6 minutes from Parham to Marlesford and 6 minutes to Wickham Market giving a total of 18 minutes.
From Wickham Market the trains departed at 0756, 0935, 1314, 1752 and 1910. All services except the 0935 departure had a connection from London Liverpool Street
Locomotives
The line was operated by the Great Eastern Railway from 1862 until 1923 and it is locomotives from that company that predominantly operated the branch in London & North Eastern Railway and indeed up to closure under British Railways. Most locomotives would have been based at Ipswich engine shed which supplied branch line motive power for most branch lines in this area.
Diesel locomotives operated freight over the line, but as the passenger service had been withdrawn in 1952 only one diesel-hauled passenger train is believed to have worked the branch. This was a Ramblers special and was hauled by Class 31 no D5587.
Many of the last years of the branch were photographed by Dr Ian Cameron Allen (1910–1989), a local GP.[10]
Allen compiled a number of photographic books about railways in East Anglia, in which the Framlingham branch often featured.
References
^Atterbury, Paul (2006). Branch Line Britain. Marlborough: David & Charles. p. 100. ISBN978-0715324165.
^ abcCanon, David Pitcher (2002). All change for Framlingham. Leiston Press. ISBN978-1907938603.
^ abJenkins, Stanley C. (July 2007). "Great Eastern Railway Society Journal" (131): 130–137. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)