The tramway was built in 1879-80 as a 3ft6in (1,067mm) line to connect the paper mills run by James Cropper and Co in Burneside and Cowan Head.[2] Wagons were hauled by horse power.
It was converted to 4ft8+1⁄2in (1,435mm) in 1924, and in the same year, the Motor Rail and Tram Car Company in Bedford provided a 4wPM locomotive called Rachel which was used to transfer wagons between the mill and Burneside railway station.[3] In 1951 Rachel was replaced by a diesel Ruston 48 No.294266.[4]
The line to Cowan Head closed in 1965, with the section between Burneside Mill and Burneside railway station still operating until it closed in 1974.[5]
The Ruston was named Flying Flea at Carnforth before moving south to Sir William McAlpine's Fawley Hill Railway, where it was named Sir William. The locomotive was not in regular use, and was sold on to Lawrie Rose, who moved the engine to the Mid-Suffolk Light Railway. The locomotive was renamed Sir William McAlpine by dowager Lady Judith McAlpine. The locomotive is now based at the Whitwell and Reepham Railway, and appears often on Lawrie's YouTube Channel.
References
↑Joy, David (1983). A Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain: The Lake Counties. David and Charles. p.231. ISBN9780946537020.