map showing the bridge and branch line. The bridge carried a
single-track railway line. When it came into service, it took approximately off the journey from
Bristol to
Cardiff, with trains no longer having to pass through
Gloucester. The bridge predated the construction of the
Severn Tunnel, around downstream, by seven years. The opening ceremony for the bridge took place on 17 October 1879; nearly 400 dignitaries travelled in twenty-three first class carriages across the bridge and back again, with
fog detonators exploding on each of the spans during the return trip. A banquet followed at the Pleasure Grounds near
Sharpness station. During construction, it was anticipated that the Severn Bridge Railway would mainly receive its revenue from carrying coal from the Forest of Dean. However, the company ran into financial difficulties as coal was not carried in the volumes that had been anticipated, nor had tourist travel risen to the expected levels. Miners in the Forest of Dean went on strike about low pay and poor conditions and the coal trade there continued to be depressed. The opening of the
Severn Tunnel, providing an alternative route from England into South Wales, was a serious blow to the bridge. By 1890, the company was unable to pay the interest on its
debentures and faced bankruptcy. As a result, it was taken over jointly by the
Great Western Railway and the
Midland Railway in 1893, becoming the Severn and Wye Joint Railway. Several fatalities occurred during the construction of the bridge. A baulk of timber fell on one man when a rope slipped, and another died when he fell from the part-completed structure, injuring himself on the staging as he fell. Only a few days after the bridge's opening, a rowing boat trying to pass underneath was caught in a giant eddy and capsized, one occupant being drowned. Over the succeeding years a number of incidents happened at the bridge involving larger vessels. The
trow Brothers was lost after a collision with one of the piers in 1879, and the
Victoria, employed in the bridge's construction, was wrecked in the 1880s. In 1938, a tug and two barges got into difficulties and were carried along broadside by the tide into the bridge; a connecting
hawser snagged one of the piers and the vessels capsized, with several fatalities. In 1943, a flight of three
Spitfire fighter aircraft was being delivered by
ATA pilots, including one woman,
Ann Wood, from their factory in
Castle Bromwich to
Whitchurch, Bristol. As it was low tide, the lead pilot Johnnie Jordan flew under the bridge. Some time later, Ann Wood repeated this underflying – without realising that this time it was high tide and there was less headroom but she just squeezed through. These were not the only instances of pilots buzzing the bridge, and on one occasion a
Vickers Wellington bomber, a much larger aircraft, was seen to fly under it. The practice became so common that
RAF police were called in and tasked with the recording of serial numbers of offending aircraft. After a few
courts-martial the incidents ceased. ==Railway operation==