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The Great Britain Guide

Heritage railways · North Wales

Ffestiniog Railway

Also known as: Rheilffordd Ffestiniog, Iarnróid Ffestiniog, Hyns-horn Ffestiniog

World's oldest narrow-gauge passenger railway (1832) — Snowdonia, double-Fairlie locos.

Sheep grazing, south-west of Pen y Mount Station - geograph.org.uk - 4510884

Christine Johnstone — CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons licence

Plan your visit

Typical visit
1.5 h–3 h
Best time of year
Spring – autumn
  • Family-friendly

About

The Ffestiniog Railway in Snowdonia is the oldest narrow-gauge passenger railway in the world (1832) and the leading example of preserved steam railway engineering in Britain. 13.5 miles from Porthmadog to Blaenau Ffestiniog through the slate quarries; double-Fairlie articulated locomotives are unique to the line.

Photo gallery

From the Wikipedia article

The Ffestiniog Railway (Welsh: Rheilffordd Ffestiniog) is a heritage railway based on 1 ft 11+1⁄2 in (597 mm) narrow-gauge, in Gwynedd, Wales. It is a major tourist attraction located mainly within the Snowdonia National Park. The railway is about 13+1⁄2 miles (21.7 km) long and runs from the harbour at Porthmadog to the slate mining town of Blaenau Ffestiniog, travelling through forested and mountainous terrain. The line is single track throughout with four intermediate passing places. The first mile of the line out of Porthmadog runs atop an embankment called the Cob, which is the dyke of the polder known as Traeth Mawr. The Festiniog Railway Company, which owns the railway, is the oldest surviving railway company in the world. It also owns the Welsh Highland Railway, which was re-opened fully in 2011. The two railways share the same track gauge and meet at Porthmadog station, with occasional trains working the entire 40-mile (64 km) route from Blaenau Ffestiniog to Caernarfon.

Excerpt from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0. See the source article linked in Sources below.

Background

History

The railway company is properly known as the "Festiniog Railway Company". The single F spelling is in the official title of the company in the local act, the Festiniog Railway Act 1832 (2 & 3 Will. 4. c. xlviii), that created the railway. It is the oldest surviving railway company in the world (although not the oldest working railway – a record that goes to the Middleton Railway, in Leeds), having been founded by the act of Parliament on 23 May 1832 with capital mostly raised in Dublin by Henry Archer, the company's first secretary and managing director. Most British railways were amalgamated into four large groups in 1921 and then into British Railways in 1948 but the Festiniog Railway…

Description

in the late 1950s/early 1960s. The replacement FR line is in the foreground.]] Between 1965 and 1978, the Ffestiniog Railway Deviation, a 2+1/2 mi long diversionary route, was constructed between Dduallt and Tanygrisiau to avoid the Ffestiniog hydro-electric power station and its reservoir (Llyn Ystradau). The Deviation (this is the conventional name for such railway works) was built mostly by volunteers. At the southern end is the Dduallt spiral formation which is unique on a public railway in the United Kingdom. Including a bridge, it was constructed entirely by volunteers, and gains an initial height rise of 35 ft in order (after a further 1 mile of new volunteer-built railway and a new…

Visiting

One of the earliest references to tourism is in the LNWR Tourist Guide for 1876, which waxed lyrical about the Ffestiniog Railway, which it illustrated with a drawing of a lady in Welsh National Dress (then still in regular local use) travelling on an FR up train (since many empty slate wagons – with two standing brakesmen – were attached at the rear) with the caption "On the Ffestiniog Railway". The guide uses the "double F" spelling throughout. It was, however, in the inter-war years from 1919 to 1939 that tourism, though always valued, came to acquire a major importance. Since restoration commenced in 1954, tourism has been the only significant source of income. The role of the…

Sourced from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Coordinates
52.9344, -4.1264
District
Gwynedd
Parish
Porthmadog
Postcode
LL49 9PP
Parliamentary constituency
Dwyfor Meirionnydd

Sources

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Frequently asked questions

Where is Ffestiniog Railway?
Ffestiniog Railway is in North Wales, United Kingdom (postcode LL49 9PP), in the parish of Porthmadog.
When was Ffestiniog Railway built?
Dates from the Victorian period.
Who owns Ffestiniog Railway?
Ffestiniog Railway is owned by Festiniog Railway Company.
How do I get to Ffestiniog Railway?
Drivers can navigate to postcode LL49 9PP. It sits within the Dwyfor Meirionnydd parliamentary constituency.