Tag Archives: Essex

Shoeburyness History, Standard-Gauge Military Tramway, and other Narrow-Gauge Tramways

Shoeburyness was once a fortified place guarding the Northern flank of the Thames Estuary. It appears in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle of 894 CE, and it was assumed for many years to have been built as a  ‘Danish Camp’ by the Viking leader Haesten as those chronicles say that while King Alfred headed West towards Exeter, Danish marauding parties, “gathered at Shobury in Essex, and there built a fortress.” [1][2: p60]

However, in 1998, archeological excavations unearthed classic Iron Age interior features and just a year later found evidence of a Middle/Late Bronze Age pottery associated with the visible remains of the ramparts. [1] These excavations took place after the closure of Shoeburyness Barracks while the site was being prepared for redevelopment. Subsequently Southend Borough Council sought to create a Conservation Area centred on the site. [3]

Speaking of this site, Historic England (List Entry 1017206) says: “The defended prehistoric settlement at Shoeburyness has been denuded by the development of the 19th century military complex, although the southern half of the enclosure has been shown to survive extremely well and to retain significant and valuable archaeological information. The original appearance of the rampart is reflected in the two standing sections, and the associated length of the perimeter ditch will remain preserved beneath layers of accumulated and dumped soil. Numerous buried features related to periods of occupation survive in the interior, and these (together will the earlier fills of the surrounding ditch) contain artefactual evidence illustrating the date of the hillfort’s construction as well as the duration and character of its use. In particular, the recent investigations have revealed a range of artefacts and environmental evidence which illustrate human presence in the Middle and Late Bronze Age and a variety of domestic activities in the Middle Iron Age, including an assemblage of pottery vessels which demonstrate extensive trading links with southern central England. Environmental evidence has also shown something of the appearance and utilisation of the landscape in which the monument was set, further indications of which will remain sealed within deposits in the enclosure and on the original ground surface buried beneath the surviving sections of bank. Evidence of later use, or reuse, of the enclosure in the Late Iron Age and Roman periods is of particular interest for the study of the impact of the Roman invasion and subsequent provincial government on the native population; the brief reoccupation of the site in the Anglo-Saxon period, although currently unsupported by archaeological evidence, also remains a possibility.” [4]

Despite the extensive destruction wrought by the occupation of the site by the Board of Ordnance in 1849 (and successors), much more of the original survives than might be expected.

Historic England’s listing continues: “The settlement, which many 19th century antiquarians associated with historical references to a Danish Camp, lay in a rural setting until 1849 when Shoebury Ness was adopted as a range finding station by the Board of Ordnance and later developed into a complex of barracks and weapon ranges. The visible remains of the Iron Age settlement were probably reduced at this time leaving only two sections of the perimeter bank, or rampart, standing. This bank is thought to have originally continued north and east, following a line to East Gate and Rampart Street, and enclosed a sub-rectangular area of coastal land measuring some 450m in length. The width of the enclosure cannot be ascertained as the south eastern arm (if any existed) is presumed lost to coastal erosion. The surviving section of the north west bank, parallel to the shore line and flanking Warrior Square Road, now lies some 150m-200m inland. It measures approximately 80m in length with an average height of 2m and width of 11m. The second upstanding section, part of the southern arm of the enclosure, lies some 150m to the south alongside Beach Road… [Trial excavations within the enclosure during 1998] revealed a dense pattern of well preserved Iron Age features, including evidence of four round houses (identifiable from characteristic drainage gullies), two post- built structures, several boundary ditches and numerous post holes and pits. Fragments from a range of local and imported pottery vessels date the main phase of occupation to the Middle Iron Age (around the period 400-200 BC).” [4]

Our primary interest in this article is in the later development of the site from 1849 onwards and the construction and extension of a military tramway and railways associated with the Ordnance depot and other military sites along the coast close to Shoeburyness.

The land was first purchased here for Experimental artillery ranges in 1849. “Shoeburyness was chosen because of its position close to the Maplin Sands, Where a huge expanse left dry at low tide could be used in conjunction with the sparsely inhabited coast of Essex adjacent. In 1856, Lord Panmure, Secretary of State for War, submitted a recommendation that the work of proof experimentation should be severed from that of instruction. The outcome was the creation of a separate school of gunnery, which was opened on 1st April 1859.” [5: p239]

Throughout the immediate vicinity of Shoeburyness there are a lot of older buildings associated with the Military Depot.  A number of these buildings can be found here. [31]

The Standard-Gauge Military Tramway

Shoeburyness changed rapidly from a hamlet to a bustling military establishment. And by 1873, and the completion of the construction of the site, “the original portion of the Shoeburyness Military Tramway had been built as an integral part of it. The line was linked to three piers to facilitate unloading and transport by river from Woolwich and elsewhere, of stores, equipment and guns, brought and destined for various parts of the garrison.” [5: p239]

The use, officially, of the word ‘tramway’ for what is in fact a ‘railway’ was derived from the term’s use in respect of colliery tramways and “is rooted in the legislation under which it was extended and worked. … Had the original line impinged on any highway, the Tramways Act of 1870 would have been applied to it, but having been laid on land already held from which the public were rigorously excluded, the Act was not invoked. By the time the first extension was required. the Military Tramways Act of 1887 had been passed, a measure designed to strengthen rather than to supersede the Act of 1870, which was intended primarily for street tramways.” [5: p239]

The main Shoeburyness military tramway was standard-gauge, but the military site also featured separate narrow-gauge sections of both 2 ft- and 2 ft 6 in-gauge. The standard-gauge line was constructed by the army to connect various installations within the experimental range and was later connected to the main railway network in 1884. The site used standard gauge lines extensively to serve its numerous buildings.

The separate narrow-gauge lines were often used in high-risk areas, such as shell filling huts, where steam locomotives were considered a fire hazard. These lines typically used hand-pushed or sometimes horse-hauled trolleys.

When the tramway was extended to New Ranges in 1890, the whole line was brought within the provisions of the Act of 1887. (But thirty years later, it appears that the extension to Havengore Island did not conform with the Act). “The Shoeburyness Military Tramways Order of 1893 authorised, retrospectively, an extension north-eastward for a distance of 1 mile 20 chains. from a junction with the original tramway, 21 chains South of Campfield Road, to where new artillery ranges had been brought into use on 5th April 1890.” [5: p239-240]

By permission given in April 1889, the tramway passed through the London, Tilbury & Southend Railway station yard alongside its southern boundary: and an Agreement dated 8th July 1891 anticipated a rail connection there, for which £1000 had been voted in accordance with the Army Estimates for 1886/1887 This having been accomplished, fresh terms were embodied in a second Agreement dated 4th July 1895. Administrative buildings and the railway centre were placed in and around a seventeenth century property known as Suttons,” [5: p240] or Sutton Manor.

The now Grade II listed Sutton Manor was “built in 1681 of red brick and is surrounded by a red brick wall and gate.  The interior has wooden panelling. An oak staircase with a dining room, servant quarters and around 9 bedrooms.
The land was owned by Daniel Finch (2nd Earl of Nottingham) but the House itself was most likely built by Francis Maidstone (a dealer in woollen textiles). He may have demolished a previous house standing on site.” [6] Suttons is a Category A structure on the Historic England Heritage at Risk Register. [7]

In 1906, the line was further extended 1 mile 52.22 chains from New Ranges to Havengore Point. The War Department completed the acquisition of New England and Foulness islands in 1914/1915. In August 1915, a contract was placed with Findlay & Co Ltd. For the supply and erection of a Scherzer Rolling Lift Bridge over Havengore Creek. Scherzer was an American Company from Chicago. The contract for the viaduct to run either side of the bridge was placed with Braithwaite Thirsk in February 1917 and piling started in June. There were a number of problems with the piling and completion of the viaduct stretched out to 1919 when the lift bridge was erected.

The bridge had a split counterweight and was originally hand operated carrying a road and a military tramway which enabled the tramway to be taken to a terminus on Havengore Island by 1925. [11]

The bridge was shown on the 25″ Ordnance Survey of 1920/1921, published in 1923. However it was not connected to the standard-gauge military tramway network at this time. [23]

In 1959, this was still the terminus of the line. … The road across the bridge ran to Churchend and Fisherman’s Head was completed in 1922-23. [11]

Back to the Southwest, in 1957, work commenced on a new line, 1,300 yards long moving the line from the South side of Suttons to the North. By the beginning of 1958, track was laid along the length within the perimeter of New Ranges and earthworks were completed over the remainder of the realigned route. [5: p240]

The line was designed to relieve congestion Southwest of Suttons. It eliminated two sharp curves on the original line and opened in November 1958, after which the older line was removed.

At the time of the writing of The Railway Magazine article, the School of Gunnery had just closed. With that closure the primary purpose of the tramway became the support of the “requirements of the Ministry of Supply which [had] controlled the Proof and Experimental Establishment since 1939. Although the War Department still own[ed] the tramway and the land on which it [was] built, the right to its use and control … passed to the Ministry. For convenience, the War Department operated[d] the tramway because, [as of that date], railway operation and maintenance [was] a branch of army training.” [5: p241]

The greatest length of the tramway [was] 5 miles, and its total track mileage [was] 24. Havengore Bridge, the only engineering feature of note, [was] a cantilever structure of 55 ft. span for road and rail.” [5: p241] The steepest gradient on the line was 1 in 52 on the eastern approach to Havengore Bridge. “Conveyance of increasingly heavy pieces of ordnance … necessitated the use of rail weighing 98 lb. per yd. The track [was] variously ballasted with slag, clinker, Thames ballast or granite. Weed-killing on the main line [was] by motor-driven spray on a diesel-hauled wagon, and on sidings by hand-spray on a plate-layers’ trolley. Points are hand-operated, sixty percent of them by MacNee tumbler lever boxes [9] and the rest by Williams two-way spring levers. [10] Facing points [had to be held down by the fireman (the word ‘Stoker’ – foreign to railway terminology – [was] used officially), although responsibility for the train’s safe passage rest[ed] with the driver. The radius for curves and turnouts varie[d] between 600 and 320 ft.” [5: p241]

Freight train at Suttons hauled by a 110-h.p. diesel locomotive built by the English Electric Co. Ltd. in 1926. [5: p241]

At one time, signals were installed to protect road crossings and these were operated by gate-keepers. In practice, they were not needed. Even so, they were only gradually removed – the last survived until the mid-1950s.

A census of locomotives and rolling stock on site in June 1957 showed that the Ministry of Supply owned “6 railcars, 99 open wagons, 71 flat-top wagons, 45 assorted vans and 28 cranes (18 steam and 10 electric). The biggest crane weigh[d] 200 tons, and ha[d] a lifting capacity of 60 tons.” [5: p241] Also on site, but owned by the War Department, were “17 locomotives (11 steam, 5 diesel and one diesel-electric) and 12 passenger coaches.” [5: p241]

One passenger vehicle, used as a drawing office, was a celebrity! It carried a plaque inscribed: ‘This coach did service on the Suakin-Berber Railway. It is reputed to have been the saloon coach used by Lord Kitchener’.

In December, 1899, at the close of his campaign in the Sudan, Lord Kitchener left Khartoum for South Africa, whereas Suakin and Berber were not linked by rail until 1905. The reference intended probably is to Kitchener’s famous military railway built across the Nubian Desert in 1897, and completed to Berber and the Atbara River in 1898. The letters T.V.R. are moulded into the ornamental brackets supporting the lug gage racks. Built by the Metropolitan Carriage & Wagon Company of Saltney, the coach is one of a pair of 32-ft. clerestory carriages which, in common with other passenger stock, has been saved from the scrap heap by acquisition for service on the Shoeburyness Military Tramway – the so-called Kitchener coach in 1898, the other in 1900.” [5: p243]

The ‘Kitchener Coach’ built in 1898 and in use, in the late 1950s as a drawing office at Shoeburyness. [5: p242]

Locomotives, etc.

Sequestrator reports that the motive power on the tramway network fell into three categories, “steam locomotives, diesel locomotives and railcars. The maximum weight permissible on the … bridge being 20 tons, steam engines [were by 1958] confined to the west of Havengore Island. To overcome this limitation, electric battery locomotives were introduced, and diesel engines [then] superseded them. The railcars [were] for the transport of gangs with tools and light equipment or for use as inspection cars.” [5: p243]

Taken at Camp Field terminus, a WD 0-6-0ST Iain charge of a two coach train. The locomotive was delivered in 1945, the two corridor- coaches were built at Derby for the Midland Railway in 1906/7. [5: p239]

Of the steam locomotives, “ten [were] of one ubiquitous type, having been built to standard specification by various firms in 1943-45: five by the Hunslet Engine Co. Ltd., two by W. G. Bagnall Limited, and one each by Robert Stephenson & Hawthorns Limited, Andrew Barclay Sons & Company, and the Vulcan Foundry Limited. All [were] 0-6-0 saddle-tank engines with 4 ft. 5in. wheels, and inside cylinders using saturated steam at 170 lb pressure. The water capacity [was] 1,200 gal. and the weight empty 371 tons. The eleventh steam locomotive, built by Hudswell, Clarke & Company in 1923, [was] smaller and lighter, but [was] a favourite with the men for efficiency and ease of working.” [5: p243]

The Tramway’s oldest locomotive (as of the late 1950s) a Hudswell, Clarke & Co. 0-6-0ST of 1923. [5: p242]

The lined-out brown livery in use prior to WW2 had, by the late 1950s, given way to plain light apple-green for all steam locomotives. Locomotives and rolling stock were kept in excellent condition. Each engine carried three numbers. That displayed most prominently was the local number by which locomotives were distinguished for rota purposes. “Every engine owned by the War Department [had] a W.D. number, irrespective of the particular railway on which it [was] in service. There [was] also a makers’ number.” [5: p243]

“Most of the traffic [was] internal, and at times as many as twelve motive-power units [could] be at work simultaneously. Transfers to and from British Railways [took] place on an exchange siding – a single line just over 100 yd. long – on the extreme south of the station yard at Shoeburyness.” [5: p243] By the late 1950s, river-borne consignments were rare, and the piers were little used.

Military Standing Orders and Bye-laws

Military standing orders for train working, which correspond to the rule book in normal railway practice, incorporate the original bye-laws dated 11th August 1896, which were framed in compliance with the Act of 1887. Government Records [8] hold a copy of the bye-laws in place on the line. These bye-laws were promulgated by the War Department with the approval of the of Trade, under the provisions of the Military Tramways Act, 1887. Additional bye-laws were made in April 1915. The bye-laws are included immediately below. [8]

Bye-laws, page 1. [8]
Bye- laws, page 2. [8]
Bye-laws, page 3. [8]
Bye-laws page 4. [8]

It may also be of interest to read the bye-laws covering the military ranges on the MOD site. These can be read here. [39]

Sequestrator comments that in general the bye-laws “enforce the use of the train staff on the one-engine-in-steam principle, regulate the closure of crossing gates, prohibit regular traffic after dark, and forbid anyone but the magazine attendant to ‘travel in or on the Powder Wagon’. A general speed limit of 12.5 m.p.h. is imposed. At one time the tramway system itself played a part in providing flying target practice, and a special supplementary bye-law. signed by Lord Kitchener on April 2 1915, permitted a speed of up to 35 m.p.h. by an engine and vehicle over a specified stretch near Wakering Stairs. The train staff is carried only west of Suttons, where, in passing through a semi-built-up area, the line [had] several sharp curves, some of them blind. Eastward, however, the railway crosse[d] flat, open land, where branch-lines and sidings [led] to firing platforms and testing sites, and where a collision at 12.5 m.p.h. would be inexcusable.” [5: p243]

Administration [was] delegated to army officers of the Royal Engineers, whose responsibility [was] divided between motive power, civil engineering, track maintenance and traffic control. The staff [were] wholly civilian; their working day begins at 6.45 am, and ends at 6 p.m. Engine-drivers work[ed] on a daily rota system, which [was] set out on a ‘detail board’. Steam locomotives [were] sent to the makers for overhaul every five years, but normal repairs and maintenance [were] done in War Department’s own workshops at Suttons.” [5: p243-244]

The full extent of the Shoeburyness Military Tramway as shown in The Railway Magazine article of April 1959. [5: p239]

A Journey Along the Line

We start our journey at the Southwest end of the network.

These first two extracts from the 1st Edition of the 25″ Ordnance Survey which was amended in 1895 show the piers at Shoeburyness and the Artillery Barracks. [14 & 15]
The line ran North-northeast on the West side of the Cricket Ground. [16]
The same area as covered by the three 25″ OS map extracts above, as it appears on railmaponline.som’s satellite imagery. The lines of the Shoeburyness Military Tramway are shown in Orange and the Green line rep[resents a narrow-gauge line which ran West from a Powder Magazine, along Magazine Road to a point adjacent to the standard-gauge tramway. Arms of this narrow-gauge line also served the Gravel Pit on the East side of the standard-gauge line and on the South side of the narrow-gauge line. The original line served the piers which are shown on the map extracts above. A later line served the new, larger, pier which can be seen at the bottom left of this image. At the top of this image the chapel visible on the third of the OS map extracts above can be seen at the East end of New Garrison Road. [17]
The more modern pier at Shoeburyness which appears in the bottom left of the satellite image immediately above, (c) Prashant Kumar (March 2017) and shared on Google Streetview. [18]
Turning to look North-northeast, the orange lines superimposed on this image mark the alignment of the two tramway lines approaching the piers from the Northeast, (c) Prashant Kumar (March 2017) and shared on Google Streetview. [18]
North-northeast on New Barge Pier Road, this view looks South-southwest from the road along the line of the two arms of the old tramway, that to the right is the newer line which led to the more modern pier. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
The tramway main line heads Northeast away from the modern New Barge Pier Road, a short branch ran Southeast from the mainline at this point into the area immediately behind the tree in the right foreground. A narrow-gauge tramway ran along Magazine Road – to the right of this image further back from the tree. The narrow gauge line is represented by the green line in this image. It split with a longer length following Magazine Road and as shorter length serving a Gravel Pit which has been infilled and serves as a children’s play area. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
Looking East along the modern Magazine Road. The green lines illustrate the approximate route of the narrow-gauge lines. The gravel pit was to the right (South).of the road [Google Streetview, June 2024]
Travelling North-northeast, the line crossed two roads on the level. The modern road layout is shown on the satellite image below. [19]
This modern satellite image is an extract from the satellite imagery from railmaponline.com and it covers the area shown on the OS map extract above. Campfield Road is the more northerly of the two roads shown on the map extract. Extending Chapel Road to the West to meet Campfield Road, gives the line of the other road. A new road now serves the area around St. George’s Church – New Garrison Road. [17]
Looking North-northeast along the line of the old railway from New Garrison Road. The Pier Insurance building is built over the line of the old railway. The tree in the foreground sits approximately on the centre line of the railway. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
Looking back Southwest along the line of the old railway from Campfield Road. The distant tree at the centre of the image is approximately on the line of the railway. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
Looking Head along the line from Campfield Road. The line curves round to the East from this location. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
Just to the North of Campfield Road, rail access was provided to a gravel pit. This is an extract from the 25″ Ordnance Survey of 1920/21, published in 1923. [20]
The line swung through East to Southeast and met the access siding from the national rail system adjacent to Shoeburyness Railway Station. [20]
The route of the line crosses Rosewood Lane. [17]
Looking North on Rosewood Lane, the old railway would have run just ahead of the camera. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
It then runs through the carpark at the end of Rosewood Lane. [17]
The line once ran through where the vehicles are parked directly ahead of the camera. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
The turquoise-blue line marks the connection siding which remains in place in the 21st century. The junction with the military line is at the right side of this extract from railmaponline.com’s satellite imagery. The rail tracks can be seen beneath the superimposed turquoise and red lines. [17]
The access siding from Shoeburyness Station remains in place and from the junction on to the East and North the next length of railway remains in an operable condition with gated crossings to public roads. This map extract highlights the presence of other off-road tramways of which there were a significant number in the area. [20]
This extract from the satellite imagery from railmaponline.com illustrates the preponderance of different rail systems in this immediate area. Historic tramways are shown in green, the standard-gauge military railway is shown in red and the national rail network in turquoise-blue. [17]
The line crosses High Street. [Google Maps, February 2026]
The line heading back towards Shoeburyness Station. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
The line ahead. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
A similar view but from beyond the crossing gates, © Nigel Cox and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons licence (CC BY-SA 2.0). [29]

The line heads Northwest, alongside Gunners Road in the 21st century. …

Gunners Road runs along the West side of the line. [Google Maps, February 2026]
The view northwest along Gunners Road. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
A little further Northwest. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
Further Northwest the line runs alongside Tingdene Parks Road. [Google Maps, February 2026]
Looking Northwest towards Blackgate Road. [Google Streetview, June 2023]
The Blackgate Road Crossing. [Google Maps, February 2026]
Looking back along the line towards High Street from Blackgate Road. [Google Streetview, April 2012]
Turning through 180°, this is the view ahead along the line. [Google Streetview, April 2012]
Within the military site. [Google Maps, February 2026]
Further North, two lines diverge. [Google Maps, February 2026]
Taken looking North-northeast at the location above and showing stored underground stock and main line railway stock in 2005, © Glyn Baker and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons licence (CC BY-SA 2.0). [30]
The 25″ 1920/1921 Ordnance Survey shows only a single line North of the junction shown in the image above. That line curved round to the East and entered a passing loop. [21]
The main line then curved away from the coast before heading North-northeast and then Northeast. A complex series of sidings sat alongside the coast. [21]
This later map extract shows the more complex arrangements in place at the start of WW2. This 25″ Ordnance Survey extract comes from the 1939 revision which was published in 1947. It is clear, however from later mapping that the network on the site has changed dramatically. [22]

The next two satellite images cover approximately the same area as the three map extracts above. RailmapOnline.com seeks to show all the different track layouts which once graced the MOD site. It appears to be a ‘cats’ cradle’ of different lines! …

This image shows the area of the MOD depot immediately to the North of the rail junction shown in the street level photographs above. [17]

These next two satellite images show the lines at the Western edge of the site and the buildings that they serve. …

The two buildings at the western edge of the MOD site and the lines that serve them. [Google Maps, February 2026]

Attempting to show all the lines on the site on satellite images at a larger scale bill be more confusing than helpful, so contemporary Ordnance Survey maps, and the diagrams of track layout from RailMapOnline.com will suffice, together with 21st century OpenStreetMap mapping.

In these two images, the same area as covered in the three map extracts above is shown. A myriad of different lines criss-crossed the site. [17]
Access from the sidings met the main line again as shown on the right of this map extract. The double-junction in the bottom-right of this image appears at the centre-top of the satellite image immediately above. [21]
The same location appears bottom-left in this satellite image. [17]
Of the two lines seen on this map extract, that on the left of the image ran Northeast. In 1925, it was extended to Havengore Bridge. That running diagonally across the extract served the various coastal ranges. Both appear in the next satellite image below. [32]
The road running diagonally across the bottom-left of this image appears towards the top of the last RailMapOnline.com satellite image above. [17]
By 1925, the line to Havengore Bridge left the line at the left of this extract and headed North-northeast. [33]
This extract from RailMapOnline.com’s satellite imagery continues to follow both lines, with the line heading to Havengore Bridge leaving the top of this image. [17]
The bottom half of this TailMapOnline.com shows two lines converging to a junction off the right of the image. The line leaving the top of the image runs towards Havengore Bridge. [17]
The line in the above extract ran West to join the line serving the coastal ranges. [33]
The same area as it appears on modern satellite imagery. [17]
The end of the coastal line was close to Haven Point (Havengore Point?). [34]
This satellite image covers the remaining length of the line which served the coastal ranges. [17]
The other line ran North-northeast to cross Havengore Bridge. [23]
Havengore Bridge in the 21st century. The original bridge was shared by both road and rail. [17]
The extension of the military tramway across Havengore Bridge was not completed until 1925. [5: p239]

The remaining extracts from the satellite imagery provided by RailMapOnline.com show the route of the line to its terminus at the eastern extremity of Havengore Island. …

Three images extracted from the satellite imagery from RailMapOnline.com’s satellite imagery take us to the full extent of the line on Havengore Island. [16]

The series of extracts from OpenStreetMap.org below shows the railway layout within the military site North of the junction on the last Google Maps satellite image some distance above (near the crossing at Brodie Road). The layout is considerably different to that in place in the 1920s and at the beginning of WW2. These extracts purport to show what remains of the rail network in the 21st century…

The biggest changes in the network appear in these first two extracts from OpenStreetMap.org. [26]

Further Northeast on the site the railway layout is much reduced from that shown on earlier series of images. …

The line that once ran across Havengore e terminated towards the top of this map extract
The coastal line still terminated close to Havengore Point.

In the 21st century, the site is managed by QinetiQ and consists of a range covering a land area of 7,500 acres (3,000 ha) with 35,000 acres (14,000 ha) of tidal sands and 21 operational firing areas. MOD Shoeburyness is also a centre of excellence for environmental testing of ordnance, munitions and explosives. The Environmental Test Centre on site also simulates extreme environmental conditions to evaluate military vehicles and equipment. [24]

Several buildings and structures on the site are listed, including the cart and wagon shed, which is used as a heritage and community centre; together they are described by Historic England as constituting “a complete mid-19th century barracks”. [25] As of 2016 many of these have been refurbished for sale as private houses, and additional housing is being built in the vicinity. A tower was planned to stand in the Shoeburyness Garrison housing development. The tower was to be 18 storeys high and designed to mark the start of the Thames Gateway development. [24]

The history of the site, in pictures, can be found here. [27]

Buildings on the site include the Air Blast Tunnel below:

The Air Blast Tunnel (ABT), © Simon Clubley, 2013, and licensed for reuse under a Creative Commons licence (CC BY-SA 4.0). [28]

Understandably full details of buildings on the site and their military uses are difficult to obtain!

Passengers

The passenger service on the line was limited to use by Government employees. The service began when the line was extended to New Ranges. By 1959, Old Ranges Station had been demolished, and the old station at Camp Field partly so. Chapel Road Station and Magazine Station were disused. Platforms in use in 1959, “were built long enough to accommodate six-coach trains, in anticipation of a large influx of troops which did not materialise; but Magazine could take only one coach, and the rest four coaches, which, until three or four years [before] was the normal complement.” [5: p244]

All intermediate stations except Village Crossing were conditional stopping-places and Magazine and Camp Field (old station) were untimed. The bye-laws of 1893 oblige[d] trains to stop before crossing the road, and state that ‘a man with a danger flag shall warn the Public of the approach of trains’. For this reason Village Crossing ha[d] two platforms, both on the south side of the single line, but one on each side of the crossing, thus enabling passengers to alight while the train [was] waiting for the gates to open.” [5: p244]

Sequestrator tells us that average passenger numbers were: 166/day in the year to 31st March 1895; 276/day in the year to 31st March 1896; just below 140 passengers/day in January 1957. “In 1894-5 it was calculated that the cost of conveyance per mile per passenger was 0.065d. In this computation no allowance was made for depreciation, maintenance or interest on capital.” [5: p244]

Passenger train times were provided as an appendix to standing orders, and up to 1929, with each major change, the new times were printed in a pocket folder for distribution to those entitled to use the service. “The timetable for 1910 shows eight up and nine down trains on ordinary weekdays, each with a journey time of ten minutes. The first [left] the southern terminal station (then named Engine Shed) for New Ranges at 8.20am, the departure of the last, also a down train, [was] at 4.50 p.m. There [were] two additional trains each way on Saturdays during the summer, and one in winter. The schedule for 1913 [was] similar but mark[ed] the withdrawal of all Saturday afternoon trains.” [5: p244]

March, 1922, saw the service in a transitional stage, “with six trains each way between New Ranges and Old Ranges (renamed). Two more start[ed] from, and terminate[d] at, Camp Field, the latter, as well as Magazine, being names which appear for the first time. With the issue of the last printed timetable, in June 1929, … the passenger service between Camp Field and Old Ranges [was] withdrawn, and six trains each way (five in winter) beg[an] and end[ed] their journeys at a terminal station, built in 1924, on a spur at the site of an old quarry north of Campfield Road. For the benefit of employees with children attending school, one down and two up ‘children’s trains’ (untimed) [we]re introduced.” [5: p245]

A passenger service managed by a WD Austerity 0-6-0ST crossing the road at ‘ Village Crossing’, approaching the eastern platform of the station, in the later days of the passenger service. [5: p244]

Passenger trains were withdrawn on 1st September 1958. There were at that time three trains each way daily except on Saturdays and Sundays, leaving New Ranges at 7.50 a.m. and 12.40 and 1 p.m., and returning at 8.50 a.m. and 12.50 and 1.50 p.m. The actual time for the journey of just over one mile was six minutes, compared with an allowance of eight minutes in 1929. In orders and official notices the army’s own 24-hour system of time recording was incorporated. … The two coaches, once resplendent in Midland livery with coats of arms, [we]re painted over a dull brown. Inside, though first and third class compartments [we]re still distinguishable, the plush upholstered seats [we]re covered with hessian. Above them [was] a glass-framed gallery of faded pictures redolent of the England of Edwardian days – Neidpath Castle, Rowsley Bridge, Ambleside, Sulgrave Manor, Chatsworth House with here and there a black-out notice, and the once-familiar poster depicting the individual with long furry ears erect listening to the careless talk of fellow-citizens which might cost lives. They [we]re ladies of quality, these coaches, 24 to 28 tons apiece, … fallen on hard times but still well cared for and comfortable to ride in. [In use,] they screech[ed] querulously on cruel curves; and no wonder, for the driver sa[I’d] he ha[d] to keep a good head of steam to pull them round.” [5: p245]

Havengore Bridge Replacement

The Replacement Havengore Bridge was completed in 1988. It spans Havengore Creek and provides the only vehicle crossing point to Foulness Island. No provision for a tramway was made in the design of the bridge. [12] The bridge is a single leaf, counter-weighted bascule bridge raised by a pair of double acting hydraulic cylinders. [13]

Following many years of service, it was identified that the second bridge’s lifting mechanism and associated control system were in need of refurbishment and upgrading and Fairfield Control Systems were appointed to conduct the work. This included: [13]

  • Comprehensive survey and inspection of the hydraulic systems, mechanical components and control systems
  • Refurbishment and upgrade of hydraulic control, including redesign and replacement of cylinder manifold blocks and HPU control manifold
  • Replacement of the two 4m main lifting cylinders
  • Repair of tail-locking bolts and fixings
  • Installation of upgraded lifting control, control desk, safety and diagnostic systems
  • Replacement wigwag warning lights and barrier repairs
  • Refurbishment of ancillary steelworks

Work was undertaken in 2019 & 2020. [13]

As the island is used for the testing of new munitions and the destruction of old ones. When these tests are in progress, the bridge cannot be used. However, the bridge is staffed for two hours either side of high water (during which time the creek is navigable) during daylight hours only, 365 days of the year.

Narrow-Gauge Tramways

In addition to the standard-gauge military tramway, the area was criss-crossed by a series of narrow gauge tramways which were primarily industrial, serving the area’s extensive brickworks, coastal gun ranges, and military depots between the late 19th century and WWII.

A former tramway at East Beach, Shoeburyness. The grassy picnic area just to the West of East Beach was once a brickworks – hence the remains of the narrow-gauge tramway seen here. The marquees in the distance are for the Ganesh Visarjan Hindu Festival in 2012, © David Kemp, and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 2.0). [35]

Brickfields Lines

There was a 2ft-gauge line connecting East Beach brickfields to Elm Road and wartime, ammunition storage tracks on the New Ranges, with some remnants remaining visible at East Beach, as can be seen above. This and other lines predated the arrival of the London, Tilbury & Southend Railway. The coming of the railway saw the growth of the town and its expansion into what were the sites of brickworks.

A significant 2ft-gauge tramway network connected East Beach with the area in and around Elm Road. [17]
Tramways serving the brickworks in the area between Elm Road and the Railway Station in 1896. This map extract comes from the 25″ Ordnance Survey of 1896, published in 1897. Some of these tramways remained in use as late as the 1920s. [36]

This next series of map extracts come from the 6″ Ordnance Survey of 1873, published in 1880 and they show an earlier incarnation of the tramways in the area to the North of the railway station (which had yet to be built).

A first length of tramway ran from East Beach across the North side of the old settlement. [37]
The line ran North with a short branch off it to the North-northwest. [37]
The end of the short branch line appears on the extract, the main line heads North and another branch heads East. [37]
The line continued to the North. [37]
The end of the line was a short distance to the Northwest. [37]
The branch line heading East towards the coast. [37]

The different incarnations of tramway ran to the coast at East Beach where there were further brickworks and where bricks were loaded into barges on piers. The tramway crossed the standard-gauge military tramway on the level. [38]

Military Lines

The Ministry of Defence (MoD) and War Department (WD) operated narrow-gauge lines within their firing range area. These included, 2ft-gauge lines, with evidence of a 2ft-gauge Ruston diesel locomotives operating there.

East Beach Remains:

A tramway system existed near East Beach, which may be that pictured above. It was re-purposed or re-installed by the WD in 1943 for ammunition storage, connecting to the, New Ranges.

Maplin Sands Line

A separate, small-gauge, tramway existed on Maplin Sands in connection with the gun ranges.

Largely independent of the main standard-gauge line that ran into the Shoeburyness station, these systems were crucial to the town’s early industrial and military, infrastructure.

References

  1. https://www.themodernantiquarian.com/site/20159/danish-camp-shoeburyness, accessed on 5th December 2025.
  2. J. A. Giles (trans); The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle; G. Bell & Sons, London, 1914; via http://www.public-library.uk/dailyebook/The%20Anglo-Saxon%20chronicle%20%20(1914).pdf, accessed on 5th December 2025.
  3. https://democracy.southend.gov.uk/documents/s48578/Appendix%205%20Southend%20CAA%20Shoebury%20Garrison.pdf, accessed on 5th December 2025.
  4. https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1017206?section=official-list-entry, accessed on 5th December 2025.
  5. Sequestrator; Shoeburyness Military Tramway; in The Railway Magazine, Tothill Press Limited, London, April 1959, p239-245.
  6. https://fortheloveofhistory.home.blog/2021/04/19/the-almost-forgotten-manor-suttons, accessed on 7th December 2025.
  7. https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/heritage-at-risk/search-register/list-entry/48360, accessed on 7th December 2025.
  8. https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5b2a2c0ae5274a18f134fe02/Shoeburyness_Mil_Tramway_1923.pdf, accessed on 12th December 2025.
  9. The Macnee patent was for a hand-operated point lever (or “lever box” as they were known in the trade). Although holding the patent, Macnee sold his manufacturing plant to Anderson Foundry, a significant supplier of rail chairs. Victorian patent, business relationships and tendering processes were fairly murky, but it is probable Daniel Macnee would have received his commision per unit (he was still working as a London based agent for Andersons) till his death in 1893 and afterwards to his heirs. He had business connexions with Dugald Drummond and Sons, the Caledonian Railway and the L&SWR. The levers could be positioned on either side as safety dictated, and the lever position would sit towards the V for the “main” line and pulled “back” for the diverging road. … These notes have been extracted from a post on the Caledonian Railway Association Forum (https://www.crassoc.org.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?t=38), accessed on 13th December 2025.
  10. Williams two-way spring point levers were patented in May 1916 in the US. Drawings can be seen at the bottom of these references (https://85a.uk/templot/club/index.php?resources/wynn-williams-patent-ground-lever-boxes.16, accessed on 13th December 2025).
  11. http://www.barlingwakeringvillages.co.uk/heritage/havengore_bridge.html, accessed on 13th December 2025.
  12. https://www.qinetiq.com/en/shoeburyness/public-access/havengore-bridge, accessed on 13th December 2025.
  13. https://www.fairfields.co.uk/fes/sectors/bridges/havengore-lifting-bridge-upgrade, accessed on 13th December 2025.
  14. https://maps.nls.uk/geo/explore/#zoom=17.0&lat=51.52278&lon=0.78849&layers=168&b=ESRIWorld&o=100, accessed on 16th December 2025.
  15. https://maps.nls.uk/geo/explore/#zoom=17.0&lat=51.52543&lon=0.78974&layers=168&b=ESRIWorld&o=100, accessed on 16th December 2025.
  16. https://maps.nls.uk/geo/explore/#zoom=17.0&lat=51.52817&lon=0.79082&layers=168&b=ESRIWorld&o=100, accessed on 16th December 2025.
  17. https://railmaponline.com/UKIEMap.php, accessed on 16th December 2025.
  18. https://www.google.com/maps/place/Shoeburyness,+Southend-on-Sea/@51.5215111,0.7824944,3a,75y,268.59h,88.17t/data=!3m8!1e1!3m6!1sCIHM0ogKEICAgICE1cfElwE!2e10!3e11!6shttps:%2F%2Flh3.googleusercontent.com%2Fgpms-cs-s%2FAPRy3c-ooyjPUlo1M8G75dkeC5x8yVIKNQhwzD86BATQ8d6mAIcwTK3kjj_RxSaMLxx22wsxueC1L4kXfKGuoaMZHEYSRLqu1-TxPakoFRpZi-qQ7l2GgVvrOPDs4iyg0AYdPZLVLx7L%3Dw900-h600-k-no-pi1.826277195659742-ya357.58743373399966-ro0-fo100!7i7680!8i2166!4m6!3m5!1s0x47d8d83fa5f72033:0x8e098255675351c0!8m2!3d51.5354901!4d0.7905701!16zL20vMDFjdzA4?entry=ttu&g_ep=EgoyMDI1MTIwOS4wIKXMDSoKLDEwMDc5MjA2N0gBUAM%3D, accessed on 16th December 2025.
  19. https://maps.nls.uk/view/104191016, accessed on 17th February 2026.
  20. https://maps.nls.uk/view/104195166, accessed on 17th February 2026.
  21. https://maps.nls.uk/view/104195145, accessed on 17th February 2026.
  22. https://maps.nls.uk/view/104195142, accessed on 17th February 2026.
  23. https://maps.nls.uk/view/104194773, accessed on 17th February 2026.
  24. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MOD_Shoeburyness, accessed on 18th February 2026.
  25. Historic England: “Blocks K-M, Shoebury Garrison (1112690)”National Heritage List for England. Accessed on 18th February 2026.
  26. This series of map extracts can be found by following this link and then moving around the page reached, https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=16/51.55235/0.84549, accessed on 17th February 2026.
  27. https://www.qinetiq.com/en/shoeburyness/about/mod-shoeburyness-timeline-and-history, accessed on 18th February 2026.
  28. https://www.researchgate.net/figure/Air-blast-tunnel-ABT-at-MoD-Shoeburyness-8_fig1_328060297, accessed on 18th February 2026.
  29. https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/924400, accessed on 18th February 2026.
  30. https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/66789, accessed on 18th February 2026.
  31. https://aroundus.com/p/165471749-shoeburyness-boom, accessed on 18th February 2026.
  32. https://maps.nls.uk/view/104195172, accessed on 18th February 2026.
  33. https://maps.nls.uk/view/104194773, accessed on 18th February 2026.
  34. https://maps.nls.uk/view/104194776, accessed on 18th February 2026.
  35. https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/3140647, accessed on 18th February 2026.
  36. https://maps.nls.uk/view/104191010, accessed on 19th February 2026.
  37. https://maps.nls.uk/view/102342029, accessed on 19th February 2026.
  38. Richard Kirton; Sandpit Cottages Shoebury; Barling and Wakering Villages Plus Website; accessed on 19th February 2026.
  39. https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a79d33e40f0b670a8025b2d/shoeburyness_artillery_ranges.pdf, accessed on 19th February 2026.
Williams Point Levers – see reference 10 above.
Williams Point Levers – see reference 10 above.

The Kelvedon and Tollesbury Light Railway

I am continuing to read through old copies of ‘The Railway Magazine’. This time it is the December 1950 edition. It contains a short article about the Kelvedon and Tollesbury Light Railway in Essex. This article held my interest because it relates to a line not too far from Braintree in Essex where we lived between 1970 and 1972. A scan of the article in the Railway Magazine is reproduced at the end of this post below the References

The Kelvedon and Tollesbury Light Railway was an 8-mile-42-chain (13.72 km) standard-gauge light railway in Essex, England. It was authorised under the Light Railways Act 1896 and operated between the two villages of Kelvedon (on the Great Eastern Main Line) and Tollesbury to the south of Colchester on the coast. The line, which was part of the Great Eastern Railway (GER), was authorised on 29 January 1901, although its opening was delayed until 1 October 1904. [1][2][3]

The approximate route of the line shown on OpenStreetMap.

The area served by the railway lay between the GER main line and the coast, mostly agricultural land, with fruit being a main crop. At Tiptree, Wilkin & Sons, the jam-making firm, founded in 1885,[4] provided a large amount of the freight traffic; it had also been hoped that a tourist trade would ensue from the yachts moored near Tollesbury. The line became known locally as The Crab and Winkle Line, although the original railway to bear that name was the Canterbury and Whitstable Railway, which used a play on the initial letters of the line.

Arthur Wilkin, the proprietor of the jam making family firm, was intent on having the railway built because Tiptree was only a farmstead in a large heathland. Fruit had to be taken to Kelvedon, the nearest village, by horse and cart, which took time. There were no made roads, just rugged tracks. For the company, it was imperative that they had a railway. In fact, Arthur Wilkin threatened to move his jam company to Dagenham if the railway was not built. [2]

Tiptree, Tollesbury and Tolleshunt D’Arcy had substantial buildings; the other intermediate stations had an old passenger coach for accommodation. [1] All the platforms were at a low level; there was no signalling, since only one locomotive worked the line; and only local tickets were issued on the trains; there were no through tickets to mainline stations. [4]

The 1.75 miles (2.8 km) extension to Tollesbury Pier never brought the expected traffic. During World War I it was used for troop training on the river and was subsequently closed to passengers in 1921.The government took it over during World War II and erected defences along it.[2] Final closure to passenger traffic took place on 5th May 1951, just 6 months or so after the article in The Railway Magazine was written. Freight traffic continued between Tollesbury Pier and Tiptree until 29th October of the same year. The section between Tiptree and Kelvedon continued in use for freight traffic until 28th September 1962. [1]

The total construction cost of the line from Kelvedon to the River Blackwater was estimated at £45,000 or £4,667 a mile. The maximum speed allowed was 25mph and 10mph through villages and ungated level crossings. Fares on the first journeys were only offered as third class. For the full excursion from Kelvedon to Tollesbury, you would have been charged 9d (about 4p), and the journey would have taken 40 minutes if there were no accidents or animals on the line. [2]

On the last day of the passenger service: “On the engine’s smokebox door were chalked ‘Born 1904. Died 1951’, and on the bunker was the solemn warning, ‘There be many a poor soul have to walk’. This last train to Tollesbury arrived on time at 6.25pm, and on departure for the last time to Kelvedon was accompanied by as much noise as the departure on the outward journey.” [1] Following the last passenger train from Kelvedon, a black coffin from Kelvedon with wreaths, one of which was shaped in the letters of BR, was laid along Tiptree platform. On the side of the train, someone had chalked: “Crab and Winkle, sorry to say, you died because you did not pay.” [2]

Access at the Kelvedon terminus was by a footway running across the road bridge and descent to the Low Level Station. The Low level station is shown in the two images above. [5] Passengers waited here for their train in a wooden shed.

A mixed train behind a GER 0-6-0 tank near Kelvedon on the Kelvedon & Tollesbury Light Railway in around 1910. [6]

The stations/halts served by the line were, Feering, Inworth, Tiptree, Tolleshunt Knights and Tolleshunt D’Arcy, before reaching Tollesbury and finally Tollesbury Pier. [1]

The route meandered through the Essex countryside, the maximum gradient being 1 in 50. The tightest curves occurred on the final section between Tolleshunt D’Arcy and Tollesbury and included an agricultural siding at Old Hall. The stations at Tiptree and Tollesbury were the most attractive on the line. The latter consisted of a small goods yard, complete with loading gauge and cart road and wooden buildings.

Tiptree Station. [6]

Tollesbury Station. [5]

Tolleshunt Knights Halt. [1]

The line then crossed the road, Station Road, by an open crossing on the other side of which was a run-round loop. [1]

The extension to Tollesbury Pier was completed on 15th May 1907 about two years after the rest of the line. It remained open for less than 20 years and skirted the village before dropping steadily to the River Blackwater. Two roads, Woodrolfe Road and Woodrolfe Farm Lane were crossed by this final section of the line. The terminus facilities included an old coach body and a red brick hut about 40 yards from where the pier began. [1]

The Tollesbury Pier Station. [7]

In 1939, the pier extension, which had only remained open until 1921, was taken over by the then War Department. Part of the structure was blown up in 1940 as an anti-invasion precaution. The overgrown track was terminated in a sand-drag and used by four locomotives to service the mobile guns that were stationed along the estuary. Part of the extension had been used previously for the storage of rolling stock, but the wooden pier had been allowed to fall into disrepair after closure nineteen years earlier. [1]

During war-time, a pill-box of thick reinforced concrete was built on the land end of the pier, and a control tower for the many electrically controlled mines, which effectively blockaded the estuary against enemy attack, was built about mile inland on the seaward side of the line. The old pier was finally demolished when the line was taken up in 1951, and any traces that might have been left were washed away when the great floods of February 1953 inundated the north bank of the Blackwater for about mile inland. Even the few rotting stumps of timber which stood above the mud at low tide have now disappeared. [1]

“Services were neither rapid nor very frequent. A majority of the trains were mixed and the time allowed for the journey was between 30 and 40 minutes. No trains ran on Sundays.” [1]

“By 1937 branch traffic was in steady decline. Ten years later passenger journeys had reached their lowest ebb – averaging only 33 return journeys along the entire route each day.” [1]

Searching the internet, I have found a number of texts relating to the line which I have not yet been able to read:

  • N.J. Stapleton; The Kelvedon and Tollesbury Light Railway; Forge Books; 2nd Revised edition edition, December 1975.
  • M. House; The Kelvedon to Tollesbury Railway: A Pictoral History;
  • Vic Mitchell; Branch Lines Around Witham and Kelvedon: Bishop’s Stortford, Maldon, Tollesbury; Middleton Press, 2010.
  • Peter Paye; The Tollesbury Branch; Oxford Pub Co, 1985.

I have also had this link to a video pointed out to me:

References

  1. Keith Lovell; The Crab and Winkle Line; http://www.tollesbury.org/history/crab_winkle.html, accessed on 29th January 2019.
  2. http://www.tiptreeturner.co.uk/crabandwinkle.html, accessed on 29th January 2019.
  3. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kelvedon_and_Tollesbury_Light_Railway, accessed on 29th January 2019.
  4. R.C.J. Day and R.K. Kirkland; The Kelvedon & Tollesbury Light Railway; The Railway Magazine Tothill Press Ltd, Volume 96 No. 496, December 1950, p838-842, p847.
  5. http://railthing.blogspot.com/2015/11/tollesbury-kelvedon-low-level-top-two.html, accessed on 29th January 2019.
  6. https://spellerweb.net/rhindex/UKRH/OtherRailways/Tollesbury.html, accessed on 29th January 2019.
  7. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tollesbury_Pier_railway_station, accessed on 29th January 2019.
  8. The Railway Magazine article on which this post is based can be found in the Railway Magazine archives on line if you do not have access to the original edition of the magazine. A subsequent note in The Railway Magazine of June 1951 (p422) says that all passenger services were withdrawn from the line in May 1951. The last passenger train ran, it notes, on the evening of 5th May.