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Home

How to Get Here and Interactive Route Map

Timetable and Events

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Key:
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Train service
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Event
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No trains, Opening hours
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Closed

Full Timetable Fares

Next Events

Click on date to see full information for that day

Stations @ Stations
Friday, 2. April 2010
Easter Bunny Day
Sunday, 4. April 2010
Founder's Weekend and Tom Rolt Centenary Gathering
Friday, 14. May 2010 - Sunday, 16. May 2010
The Children's Duncan Day
Thursday, 3. June 2010

Events page

Latest News

News from Pendre - 14 March 2010
Spring Outdoor Week 2010 - Work at Brynglas
Pendre News - March 6 & 7
Canadian travel writers visit the TR
11 February - Rolt Centenary

Full news

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Things to do

Duncan Days

Refreshments

The Porter's Platter restaurant and the Quarryman's Caban tea room

Shop

So much more than a 'Railway shop'

Talyllyn Treats

Adult treats with footplate ride. Childrens birthday parties.

Driver Experience

Drive your own train for that really special occasion

Group travel

Civil Marriages

Museum

Explore the world of narrow gauge railways through this unique and comprehensive collection.

Railway Letter Service

Preservation Society

Join the Society and help support the railway.

Volunteering

Young or old, see how you can help run and maintain the world's first preserved railway.

Young Members

'Dolgoch' Appeal

Please support the appeal for locomotive No. 2 'Dolgoch'. Click for details.

About the Talyllyn Railway

No. 1 'Talyllyn' at RhydyronenWe hope you will come and visit our historic, steam-operated railway and enjoy meeting the friendly volunteer staff. The line runs for seven and a quarter miles (11.8 km) through the beautiful and unchanging Fathew valley.


In 1953 the railway was filmed by the American producer Carson Davidson. In his film 'Railway with a Heart of Gold', he described it like this:-

"It is a relic, this railway, a bit of ornamental scrollwork lifted from the pattern of yesterday and kept, as a memento ..."

Built on a gauge of 2 feet 3 inches, the Talyllyn Railway is one of a number of narrow-gauge lines in north and mid Wales built in the 19th century to carry slate, in the Talyllyn's case from the Bryn Eglwys quarries near Abergynolwyn. Opened in 1865, the line runs the seven and a quarter miles from Tywyn (on the Cardigan Bay coast) to Nant Gwernol, from where a series of horse-drawn tramways continued into the mountains. The slate traffic ceased in 1946 following a serious rock fall in the quarry.

In 1950 the line's owner Sir Henry Haydn Jones died, and the future for the TR looked very bleak, as it had been losing money for some years. A group of enthusiasts, led by the engineer and author L.T.C. Rolt, sought to prevent the railway's closure and scrapping and, thanks to the generosity of Lady Haydn Jones, the Talyllyn Railway Preservation Society (the first such organisation in the world - find out how to join) was allowed to take over the running of the line. By then the railway was in a very sorry state with the one operable locomotive, in very poor condition, struggling to pull the trains along an overgrown and perilous track.

Since 1951 great improvements have been made; volunteer members of the TRPS now provide most of the train crew and station staff required to operate the line, and assist with maintenance work and with many other activities. The track has been relaid, locomotives have been acquired and rebuilt, additional carriages have been constructed, a safe and flexible signalling system has been installed, and the many other improvements needed to cater for the much increased number of passengers have been carried out.

But the TR is still very much the railway it always was, a rural byway where the pace of life is gentle, the average speed of the train is still less than nine miles per hour, and passengers can have an unhurried journey along the beautiful and unspoilt Fathew Valley. Both the original locomotives and all the original carriages remain in regular use to this day. We'd love you to come and travel on our railway.

 

For another view of the Talyllyn Railway, why not visit Erik Ledbetter's excellent Trainspotting in Wales web site describing his 1997 visit to the railways of Wales?

Booking Office: 01654 710472

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