Origins The opened in 1825 linking
Stockton-on-Tees with the coal fields in the
Shildon area via
Darlington, although a more direct, northerly route to Stockton had support in that town. The promoters of a competing Tees and Weardale Railway, supported by Christopher Tennant, petitioned
Parliament in 1823 for permission for a railway from the coal field south of Durham to the
River Tees to allow onward transport by sea. This application failed as the
standing orders had not been complied with, and another in 1824 failed, partly due to opposition to use of steam locomotives. By 1826 the had outgrown the port in Stockton and initially a port was proposed on the north bank of the Tees near Haverton Hill, but a branch to
Middlesbrough on the south bank was proposed at a meeting in July 1827, and this was ratified by the shareholders that October. The Tees & Weardale promoters developed a new scheme to transport coal to Haverton Hill: a main line that formed a junction the at Simpasture, a branch to the Deanery estate and a branch to Stockton that would provide a shorter route than the . This route didn't go into
Weardale, so it was named Clarence Railway after the Duke of Clarence, later
King William IV. The line was surveyed by Tennant with Edward Steel, an early assistant of Stephenson, the railway was supported by a town meeting in Stockton, and
Henry Blanshard leased Coxhoe colliery for a high price from the
Hale sisters, on condition they use their family's influence to promote the railway. The '
(9 Geo. 4. c. lxi) received royal assent on 23 May 1828, for a line from Haverton Hill to Simpasture with three branches, one to the Deanery estate near Bishop Auckland, another to Broom Hill, north of Ferryhill and a third to Stockton. The route was surveyed again, this time by George Leather, who suggested different route that was straighter and with better gradients. Samphire Batts replaced Haverton Hill as the terminus, as this would allow loaded ships in the docks at low water. Branches were planned to Sherburn via Coxhoe, Durham via Shincliffe, Byers Green and to the at West Auckland, although this last branch was not in the bill put before Parliament. Opposed by the and also the Marquis of Londonderry, who was building a port at Seaham and planning a railway to the pits at Rainton (near Houghton le Spring), the ' (
10 Geo. 4. c. cvi) received royal assent on 1 June 1829. The new railway was long; the main line to Samphire Batts was now long, the City of Durham branch was , and there were four other branches to Stockton, Deanery, Sherburn and Byers Green. Due to the objection of
Robert Surtees of Mainsforth, locomotives were not permitted on parts of the Byers Green and City of Durham branches.
Opening and early operation The '
(2 & 3 Will. 4. c. xxv) and the ' (
3 & 4 Will. 4. c. iv) allowed for two more branches and the Durham branch to be cut short at Shincliffe. Construction involved heavy earthworks, such a deep cutting through solid rock near Ferryhill and a high embankment at Whitton or Bishopton Beck. With the main line built between Simpasture and Samphire Batts, the Stockton branch complete, the Durham branch ready as far as Thrislington and the Sherburn branch as far as Quarrington, the company needed to earn some income. It started carrying coal on its main line in August 1833, and in a year had reduced the traffic over the to Stockton from over 26,000 tons to under 9,500 tons. In October 1833, the Clarence started shipping coal for export, but the continued to charge the landsale rate, rather than the lower export rate. In January 1834 the railway opened as far as Quarrington on the Sherburn branch and a staith was opened at Haverton Hill; Port Clarence opened at Samphire Batts a few months later. Traffic was low and in financial difficulty the company asked the
Exchequer Loan Commissioners to take over management in July, and the line was managed from London. A branch to Chilton Pit was authorised in 1833 and opened in 1835 and the Byers Green branch opened on 31 March 1837; the City of Durham branch was not built north of Ferryhill, and nor was the Deanery branch. The line was mainly double track, originally laid with rails, but later heavier ones weighing were used; trains ran on the right. Horses were used exclusively until 1835, when a colliery owner began trains using his locomotives after having obtained permission from Surtees; the Clarence Railway used them from the following year. A passenger service was operated over the Clarence Railway between Stockton and Coxhoe from January 1836, initially by a contractor using horse-drawn coaches. A service using steam locomotives hauling two carriages began in June 1838, a new contractor providing the carriages and two locomotives,
Victoria and
Norton. The three services a day ran the at an average speed of ; the fare was 2s outside and 2s 6d inside; a horse omnibus provided a connecting service between Coxhoe and Durham.
Locomotives In 1839 the Clarence owned twelve locomotives for hauling mineral trains; these travelled at . By 1840, locomotives included:
West Durham Railway Plans for a South Durham Railway, connecting the Clarence Railway's Byers Green branch with the collieries in Weardale, was presented to Parliament in 1836, but the bill failed in the
House of Lords and amended plans failed again the following year. In March 1837 some wagons of coal were drawn by horse on temporary track laid on the Byers Green branch to allow the Clarence Railway to show the line had been opened within the limit of time specified in the Clarence Railway Act 1829; the branch was only fully open in 1841. Work started on the West Durham Railway (WDR) in 1837, effectively an extension of the Byers Green branch to Willington Colliery; an act of Parliament for the line, the '''''' (
2 & 3 Vict. c. lxxi), received
royal assent on 4 July 1839. A section of line had opened on 12 June, although coal was not carried until 19 October, as before then locomotives were unable to be used on the Byers Green branch. From Byers Green a stationary engine was used to haul loaded wagon up a incline, the
River Wear was crossed by a bridge and there were two more inclines before the terminus. The line was primarily for minerals, although there was a Saturday market-day train to Stockton; in 1854 this was still horse-drawn to Ferryhill, a dandy cart was used by the horse after it started the train at Byers Green.
Stockton and Hartlepool Railway Christopher Tennant, who had moved to
Hartlepool, backed the
Hartlepool Dock & Railway (HD&R) and this was given permission on 1 June 1832 for a line from the coal miles in central Durham to a port at Hartlepool. With a main line, of branch and of land set aside for the docks, trains ran between Thornley pit and Castle Eden after January 1835, Hartlepool dock opened that July and on 23 November the first train ran the between
Haswell and Hartlepool. By the end of that year there was of line operational. In 1837 the
Great North of England, Clarence and Hartlepool Junction Railway (GNEC&HJR) obtained permission for a line connecting the HD&R with the Byers Green branch, thus giving access to Hartlepool Dock bypassing Stockton. The Stockton and Hartlepool Railway (S&HR) was built to keep the traffic on the Clarence by building a branch from
Billingham to Hartlepool. Work started in 1839, without an act of Parliament, and the line officially opened to passengers on 9 February 1841, although freight had travelled earlier. At Hartlepool an HD&R locomotive took trains forward to a inclined plane to a new Victoria Dock. The was incorporated by the '''''' (
5 & 6 Vict. c. xc) that received royal assent on 30 June 1842. The closed for some weeks at the beginning of 1842 as it was short of money. This had an adverse effect on the revenues of the Clarence, the Exchequer Loan Commissioners taking possession of the railway that September, to sell it by
public auction, although the debt was paid by raised by issuing and selling more shares. The Stockton and Hartlepool Railway leased the Clarence Railway for 21 years from 2 September 1844, and the Clarence paid its first dividend, of per cent, in 1845. To prevent traffic being diverted over the shorter to Hartlepool, the was linked to the Clarence Railway by line over private land; as this was not limited by requiring an act of Parliament, and the Clarence was able to change whatever toll it wished. The also found it lacked permission in the '
(7 Will. 4 & 1 Vict. c. xcv) to cross the Clarence Railway to reach the Byers Green. Unable to come to an agreement it returned to Parliament in 1843, where the was able get the ' (
6 & 7 Vict. c. lxxxii) passed that fixed a toll for traffic on the short private line and gave permission to build a bridge over the line. However, the Clarence Railway still refused to co-operate in building a bridge over the line and it was 1846 before the railway was completed.
Hartlepool West Harbour and Dock The Hartlepool West Harbour and Dock received permission in the '
(7 & 8 Vict. c. xxviii) on 23 May 1844, and this opened on the Stranton shore on 1 June 1847. Port Clarence suffered as traffic was being diverted to Hartlepool and the relationship between the and the Clarence Railway became strained. Some Clarence shareholders suggested a merger with the Stockton and Darlington Railway. Tennant had died in 1839; Ralph Ward Jackson had backed the and Hartlepool West Harbour & Dock and now negotiated a permanent lease of the Clarence from 1 January 1851. The Hartlepool West Harbour and Stockton and Hartlepool Railway were united from 1 July 1851. By an act of Parliament, the ' (
15 & 16 Vict. c. cxlii) given royal assent on 30 June 1852, the Clarence Railway, Hartlepool West Harbour & Dock and Stockton and Hartlepool Railway were merged to become the West Hartlepool Harbour and Railway (WHH&R) on 17 May 1853; Clarence Railway shareholders held the majority of the shares with voting rights. ==West Hartlepool Harbour and Railway==