Beamish Museum

From Bradshaw, the companion guide to On Our Lines
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Beamish Museum is a Living History Museum in the North East of England approximately 8 miles NW of Durham Station and 6 miles SW of Newcastle Central Station. The museum documents life in the North East from the early 19th century to the early 20th century, through World War 2 and up to the 1950s showing the introduction of the National Health Service. The site is around 350 acres and is served by a transport system running around the nearly 2 mile road that creates a loop from the Entrance at the South to the Georgian Landscape in the East, past the new 1950s development towards the 1900s Town in the North and around to the 1940s Farm in the West, towards the centre of the site is the 1900s Pit Village.

Transport System

Trams

The various locations around Beamish are served by tram and bus routes using period transport from the early to mid 20th century. The tram line is an approximately 1.5 mile circuit around the site with 4 passing loops forming the stops. The town passing loop extends past the end of the town for about 320ft to provide a full double track experience through the town. There is also a crossover in the town extending from near the park gates to the Sweet Shop which can be useful if trams need to turn short in the Town due to engineering works. Near Home Farm tram stop is the Tram Depot which has 4 roads with rails to fit the trams on and an extra road without rails which can be used for motor vehicles and Trolleybuses.

Buses

Alongside the Tram Depot is a Bus depot which opened in 2019 and has space for 7 buses in the storage area with a narrow pit in the engineering area to fit most motor vehicles over. Also in the engineering area is a set of column lifts which can be used to lift small vehicles and vans which can't fit over the pit. The buses that regularly serve the Museum stops are a mix of replica Edwardian era buses and restored originals from the 1950s. The Edwardian replica buses follow the same route as the Tram system but once they leave Home Farm they turn down a hill and drive into the Edwardian era Pit Village where the service terminates. The 1950s buses do follow the same route as the trams and are very useful because they are quicker than the trams so can move more people per hour than the trams.

Railways

There are a number of different railways on the museum site, 3 of which are Standard Gauge (The 1900s Town Railway, The 1820s Waggonway and the Colliery Railway). In the Pit Village there is also a narrow gauge railway and a 15" gauge railway which only tend to run on special events. The Town railway is a passenger carrying line which runs from Rowley Railway station, which was taken down brick by brick and rebuilt at Beamish in the 70s, around 475 yards to the end of the line and then reverses back into the railway station. The 1820s Waggonway is also a passenger carrying railway which runs from a station next to the Waggonway shed around 200m to the end of the line and back again. When the colliery railway runs it serves as a demonstration line for shunting old Coal Chaldrons from the pit head down the line and back again, this gives visitors a chance to see how wagons and locomotives are coupled together and moved around.

Fleet Lists

Tramway

Original operator Fleet Number Year Built Livery Seats Status Notes
Gateshead 10 1925 British Railways Green 48 Undergoing Overhaul Painted in British Railways Green to show what it looked like in Service with Grimsby and Immingham
Sunderland 16 1900 Crimson and Cream 66 Operational
Blackpool 31 1901 Red, White and Teak 86 Operational
Newcastle and Gosforth 49 1880
Gateshead 51 1900
Gateshead 52 1901
Oporto 65 1933 Black and Yellow chevrons 0 Undergoing Overhaul
Newcastle 114 1901 Yellow, White and Plum 53 Undergoing Overhaul
Oporto 196 1935 Blue and Yellow 28 Operational
Sheffield 264 1907 Prussian Blue and Cream 54 Operational
Sheffield 513 1950 Cream and Prussian Blue 62 Operational On loan to the East Anglia Transport Museum

Buses

Railways