RAIL CHRONOLOGY : SINFIN BRANCH passenger
service
Page first uploaded:21 January
2006.
The line between Peartree & Normanton, Melbourne Jn and Chellaston West Jn lost its
regular passenger service from 22 September 1930 (although it was subsequently used for
excursions and for military trains in conjunction with the Melbourne Military Railway).
The line south-east of the Rolls Royce siding to Chellaston West Jn was taken out of use from 31
December 1973 but the section as far as that siding has remained available for supply of aero engine fuel.
With the prospect of diverting from road the workers' traffic to and from factories along the line,
the Derbyshire County Council prompted the construction of two new halts - Sinfin North and Sinfin Central -
and the re-opening for passenger services of the Peartree - Sinfin Central section of the branch with
effect from 4 October 1976. Although both halts were advertised in the public timetable, North was
accessible only from two adjacent factories, not from a public right of way. Unfortunately, it proved
too difficult to winkle the workers from their cars and from 11 May 1992 the service was reduced to a
nominal single round trip, just before 7 a.m. on Monday to Fridays. Because the track circuit equipment on the branch
was not compatible with newer multiple units subsequently introduced on services in the area, even this
single round trip ceased to run regularly from the timetable change on 17 May 1993.
Thereafter, one round trip remained advertised in the public timetables but such passengers as
turned up at Derby station were provided with a taxi (although no-one has explained what
became of any unwary traveller who presented themselves at either halt for travel in the other direction!).
The formal closure process was initiated in 1994 but stalled for four years. Eventually, on 21 May 1998
the Rail Regulator decided that closure should be approved although the two Sinfin halts could not be
demolished for ten years lest the service be resuscitated.
However, seven objections to that decision meant that it
required Ministerial endorsement before it could be implemented; this endorsement was given by
letter of 27 August 1998 (page 1 and
page 2)
- but with the requirement that the replacement taxi service continue until April 2004. The train operating
company, Central Trains, state (letter of 9 June 2003) that the service was
"withdrawn from [their] schedule" on 26 September 1998 - but the requirement to continue the taxi service
was not finally lifted until another Ministerial authority, given in letter of 23 September 2002.
In the absence of any "with effect from" date being quoted in either Ministerial letter for the decisions
conveyed therein, each must be presumed to have taken effect not earlier than the date of the respective letters. Thus
one concludes that the "real" withdrawal of "rail" service would have been from 23 September 2002 - albeit at that
stage a rail replacement service as no trains were booked after the timetable change of 17 May 1993.
Richard Maund
An abridged earlier version of this article also appeared in Branch Line News no. 953, 6 September 2003
and in Railway & Canal
Historical Society Railway Chronology Group Co-ordinating Newsletter no. 36, October 2003.
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