By 1880 the Isle of Wight was well supplied with railways in its eastern and northern areas, connecting
Ryde with
Newport and
Cowes, and Ryde and Newport with
Sandown and
Ventnor. The more beautiful, but more thinly-populated west was untouched. Newport was the industrial centre on the island, and its geographical position on the
River Medina made it a natural connection point. The Cowes and Newport Railway had a junction station there. In 1868 a Bouldnor, Yarmouth and Freshwater Railway was proposed, but it did not proceed. In 1872 a Freshwater, Bouldnor and Newport Railway was promoted;
Bouldnor is a hamlet a mile or so east of Yarmouth; this venture was unsuccessful. A parliamentary bill was submitted for a line connecting
Freshwater and Newport, and this received
royal assent as the ''''
(43 & 44 Vict. c. clxxxvi) on 26 August 1880, authorising the Freshwater, Yarmouth and Isle of Wight Railway''. Share capital was £100,000. The new company was encouraged by support from the
London and South Western Railway, which operated a ferry service from
Lymington on the mainland to
Yarmouth. There were many wealthy residents in the area to be served, and some also expressed support for a railway which, they believed, would facilitate their journeys to the mainland. The line was surveyed between 1883 and 1885, a second act of Parliament, the '''''' (
46 & 47 Vict. c. cxcvi) of 20 August 1883 was passed having authorised a further £42,000 of share capital. Construction started in 1886. The relaxed pace of events indicates a serious failure to generate share subscription. The line was laid out so as to avoid major engineering works, at the expense of many curves and steep gradients; there was a trestle viaduct in length at Hunny Hill, Newport, and a concrete viaduct over the
Newtown River. The line was constructed with passing loops at
Carisbrooke,
Ningwood and Yarmouth. The line was opened for goods traffic on 10 September 1888 and for passengers on 20 July 1889. ==Opening==