Not the Co-op, but the
railway!
The history of the Bo'ness
Branch begins with the
Slammanan Railway which was
formed between 1826 and
1840. The Bo'ness branch
took off from that line when
an Act of Parliament for the
construction of " The
Slamannan and
Borrowstounness Junction
Railway " was obtained in
1846 and the line was open
by April 1851.
The trustees of the harbour
at Bo'ness were anxious to
have a railway to serve the
port as it had been losing
ground. In the 17th century
Bo'ness was one of the main
ports in Scotland, second
only to Leith and had a
sizable trade with the
Netherlands and France.
In 1790 the Forth and Clyde
Canal was opened and
naturally a port was bound
to develop at its exit,
therefore Grangemouth came
into prominence. This was a
severe blow to Bo'ness
because up to that time it
had been the head port on
the Forth. The trustees
thought that the railway
might help to recover some
trade for the harbour and
town of Bo'ness.
When the Bo'ness branch was
first opened the controlling
company was the Monkland
Railways. This grew out of
an amalgamation of a system
of older lines - the
Slamannan, the Monkland and
Kirkintilloch (1826) and the
Ballochney (1828). For
several years the Bo'ness
branch was the
responsibility of the
Edinburgh and Glasgow
Railway until in 1865 that
line was taken over by the
North British Railway.
In 1876 the Harbour
Commissioners of Bo'ness had
a new pier and wet dock
built at a cost of £200,000,
thereby increasing the total
water area to 13 acres.
From 1850 to 1880 the port
of Bo'ness was acknowledged
to be the third largest in
Scotland. The Bo'ness docks
became the property of the
North British Railway
Company in 1899 - hence
Bo'ness was very much a
North British preserve.
During " N. B. " ascendancy
at Bo'ness, that railway
company rebuilt and
lengthened the quays,
increasing the depth of
water at several berths and
new equipment was installed
in 1910 to improve cargo
handling. A great network
of railway sidings amounting
to some six miles covered
the quays.
After the 1923 groupings the
Bo'ness branch and the port
became part of the L.N.E.R.
The import cargoes were
mainly timber sleepers,
pitprops and flooring, but
scrap steel and metal ores
were also handled.
Coal and machinery were the
principal exports. The
trade of Bo'ness suffered in
the Second World War cut it
off from its European
suppliers and markets. It
never really recovered from
this phase and continued to
suffer in competition with
Grangemouth. The last
passenger train set out from
the original Bo'ness Station
in May, 1956, and shortly
after that event the harbour
was officially closed. The
Bo'ness branch was severed
and the sidings were lifted
in the port. Coal traffic
from Kinneil Colliery
continued to be hauled up
the remainder of the Bo'ness
branch until recently when
part of that line too was
lifted. With the opening of
the Bo'ness and Kinneil
Railway we have come full
circle and steam hauled
trains are now back on the
foreshore after an absence
of 25 years. This is a
remarkable turn of events
and the steam centre will
undoubtedly put Bo'ness on
the tourist map and attract
attention to the town.
Dr I. A. GLEN.