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{{Short description|Heritage railway in Wales}}
[[Image:Ffestiniog-Railway-07419u.jpg|thumb|Two trains passing at Tan-y-Bwlch, ca. 1900]]
{{redirect|Festiniog|the town|Ffestiniog}}
[[image:Merddyn_Emrys_with_train.jpg|Double fairlie ''Merddyn Emrys'' with train|thumb|right]]
{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2020}}
[[image:Earl_of_Merionedd_at_Tanybwlch.jpg|thumb|right|Double Fairlie ''Earl of Merionedd'' at Tanybwlch]]
{{Infobox heritage railway
[[image:Ffen_rlwy_at_bf_1.jpg|thumb|right|At Blaenau Ffestiniog]]
| name = Ffestiniog Railway<br />{{small|''Rheilffordd Ffestiniog''}}
[[image:Minffordd station.jpg|thumb|right|Minffordd Station]]
| image = [[File:Ffestiniog-Railway-07419u.jpg|center|280px]]
[[Image:Ffestrail coaches at Tanybwlch.jpg|thumb|right|Historic coaches, including 1897-built ex-[[Lynton and Barnstaple Railway]] no 14 (centre) at Tanybwlch.]]
| caption = Two trains passing at Tan-y-Bwlch, c. 1900
[[Image:Taliesin and Blanche at Tan-y-Bwlch.jpg|thumb|Single Fairlie ''Taliesin'' with ''Blanche'']]
| locale = Wales
The '''Ffestiniog Railway''' (in [[Welsh language|Welsh]] ''Rheilffordd Ffestiniog'') is a [[narrow gauge|narrow-gauge]] [[heritage railway]], located in North West [[Wales]]. It is one of the most popular [[tourist attraction]]s in Wales, as it weaves in and out of the [[Snowdonia National Park]].
| terminus = [[Porthmadog Harbour railway station|Porthmadog]]
| linename = Festiniog Railway Company
| builtby = Festiniog Railway Company
| originalgauge = {{Track gauge|1ft11.5in|lk=on}}
| preservedgauge = {{Track gauge|1ft11.5in}}
| operator = Festiniog Railway Company
| stations = 10
| length = {{convert|13.5|mi|km}}
| originalopen = 20 April 1836
| closed = 1 August 1946
| stageyears = 1954
| stage = Restoration started at [[Boston Lodge]] works 20 September 1954
| years = 1955
| events = Reopened from {{stnlnk|Portmadoc Harbour}} to {{stnlnk|Boston Lodge}} – 23 July
| years1 = 1956
| events1 = Reopened to {{stnlnk|Minffordd}}
| years2 = 1957
| events2 = Reopened to {{stnlnk|Penrhyn}}
| years3 = 1958
| events3 = Reopened to {{stnlnk|Tan-y-Bwlch}}
| years4 = 1965
| events4 = Start of the Deviation construction work
| years5 = 1968
| events5 = Reopened to {{stnlnk|Dduallt}}
| years6 = 1974
| events6 = Restoration of [[Rhiw Goch]] [[passing loop]]
| years7 = 1977
| events7 = Reopened to [[Llyn Ystradau]]
| years8 = 1978
| events8 = Reopened to {{stnlnk|Tanygrisiau}}
| years9 = 1982
| events9 = Reopened to {{stnlnk|Blaenau Ffestiniog}}
|embedded={{Infobox UNESCO World Heritage Site
|child = yes
|Part_of = [[Slate industry in Wales|The Slate Landscape of Northwest Wales]]
|ID = 1633-005
|Year = 2021
|Criteria = Cultural: ii, iv
}}}}
{{Ffestiniog RDT}}
The '''Ffestiniog Railway''' ({{langx|cy|Rheilffordd Ffestiniog}}) is a [[heritage railway]] based on {{Track gauge|1ft11.5in|lk=on}} [[Narrow-gauge railway|narrow-gauge]], located in [[Gwynedd]], Wales. It is a major [[tourist attraction]] located mainly within the [[Snowdonia#Snowdonia National Park|Snowdonia National Park]].
 
The railway is aboutroughly {{convert|13.5 miles (21.5 +1/2|mi|km)|1}} long and runs from the harbour at [[Porthmadog]] to the [[Slate industry in Wales|slate mining]] town of [[Blaenau Ffestiniog]]., The line travelstravelling through spectacularforested and mountainous sceneryterrain. andThe hasline ais single track gaugethroughout ofwith {{1ft11.5in}}four intermediate passing places. The first partmile of the line out of Porthmadog runs alongatop an embankment called "''the Cob"'', which is the [[dike (construction)Levee|dyke]] of the [[Traeth Mawrpolder]] "known as [[polderTraeth Mawr]]".
 
The Festiniog Railway Company, which owns the railway, is the oldest surviving railway company in the world. It also owns the [[Welsh Highland Railway]], which was re-opened fully in 2011. The two railways share the same track gauge and meet at Porthmadog station, with occasional trains working the entire {{convert|40|mi|adj=on}} route from Blaenau Ffestiniog to [[Caernarfon]].
== History ==
The railway company is properly known as the "Festiniog Railway Company" and this contemporary spelling (correct for the period) is still the official title of the company as defined by the Act (2 William IV cap.xlviii) that created the railway. It is the oldest surviving railway company in the world, having been founded by the Act of Parliament on [[23 May]] [[1832]] with capital mostly raised in the Dublin area. Most British railways were amalgamated into four large groups in 1921, and then into [[British Rail|British Railways]] in 1948, but the Festiniog Railway Company, in common with most narrow gauge railways, remained independent: in 1921 this was due to political influence, whereas in 1947 it was left out of British Railways because it was closed for traffic despite vigorous local lobbying for it to be included.
 
== History {{anchor|Festiniog Railway Act 1832}}==
The line was constructed between 1833 and 1836 to transport [[slate]] from the quarries around the inland [[town]] of Blaenau Ffestiniog to the coastal town of Porthmadog, where it was loaded onto [[ship]]s. The railway was graded so that loaded wagons could be run by gravity downhill all the way from Blaenau Ffestiniog to the port. The empty wagons were hauled back up by horses, which travelled down in special 'dandy' wagons. There is good evidence for tourist passengers being carried as early as 1850, without the blessing of the Board of Trade. In October 1863 steam locomotives were introduced, to allow longer slate trains to be run, and this also enabled the official introduction of passenger trains in 1865: the Ffestiniog was the first narrow-gauge railway in Britain to carry passengers. In 1869 the line's first double [[Fairlie]] [[articulated locomotive]] was introduced, and these double-ended machines have since become one of the most widely recognised features of the railway.
{{Infobox UK legislation
| short_title = Festiniog Railway Act 1832
| type = Act
| parliament = Parliament of the United Kingdom
| long_title = An Act for making and maintaining a Railway or Tramroad from a certain Quay at Portmadock, in the Parish of Yngs-cynhaiarn in the County of Carnarvon, to certain Slate Quarries called Rhiw-bryfder and Dyffws, in the Parish of Festiniog in the County of Merioneth.
| year = 1832
| citation = [[2 & 3 Will. 4]]. c. xlviii
| introduced_commons =
| introduced_lords =
| territorial_extent =
| royal_assent = 23 May 1832
| commencement =
| expiry_date =
| repeal_date =
| amends =
| replaces =
| amendments =
| repealing_legislation =
| related_legislation =
| status =
| legislation_history =
| theyworkforyou =
| millbankhansard =
| original_text = https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukla/Will4/2-3/48/pdfs/ukla_18320048_en.pdf
| revised_text =
| use_new_UK-LEG =
| UK-LEG_title =
| collapsed = yes
}}
The railway company is properly known as the "Festiniog Railway Company". The single ''F'' spelling is in the official title of the company in the local act, the '''Festiniog Railway Act 1832''' ([[2 & 3 Will. 4]]. c. xlviii), that created the railway. It is the oldest surviving railway company in the world<ref name="Burton2017">{{cite book |last=Burton |first=Anthony |title=A Steam Engine Pilgrimage |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=g746DgAAQBAJ&pg=PT89 |date=28 February 2017 |publisher=Pen & Sword Books |isbn=978-1-4738-6047-6|page=89}}</ref> (although not the oldest working railway – a record that goes to the [[Middleton Railway]], in Leeds),<ref>There is also a funicular dating back to the 16th century: see [[Reisszug]]</ref> having been founded by the [[Act of Parliament (UK)|act of Parliament]] on 23 May 1832 with capital mostly raised in [[Dublin]] by [[Henry Archer]], the company's first secretary and managing director. Most British railways were [[Railways Act 1921|amalgamated into four large groups in 1921]] and then into [[British Rail]]ways in 1948 but the Festiniog Railway Company, like most narrow-gauge railways, remained independent. In 1921, this was due to political influence, whereas in 1947 it was left out of British Railways because it was closed for traffic, despite vigorous local lobbying for it to be included.
 
Various important developments in the railway's early history were celebrated by the firing of [[rock cannon]] at various points along the line. Cannon were fired, for instance, to mark the laying of the first stone at Creuau in 1833,<ref>Carnarvon Herald, 2 March 1833</ref> the railway's opening in 1836,<ref>Carnarvon Herald, 23 April 1836</ref> and the opening of the Moelwyn Tunnel in 1842.<ref>Carnarvon and Denbigh Herald, 4 June 1842</ref> The passing of the later '''{{visible anchor|Festiniog Railway Act 1869}}''' ([[32 & 33 Vict.]] c. cxli) for the railway also saw cannon celebrations, but on this occasion, a fitter at Boston Lodge, who was assisting with firing, lost the fingers of one hand in an accident.<ref>North Wales Chronicle, 17 July 1869</ref>
By the 1920s the demand for slate as a roofing material dropped owing to the advent of newer materials and to the loss of the overseas trade in [[World War I]]. As a result, the railway suffered a gradual decline in traffic. In 1923, the FR was linked with the new [[Welsh Highland Railway]] (WHR), which went bankrupt in 1933, and the FR leased it. The WHR proved to be a financial liability and closed in 1937. Ordinary passenger services ceased on the FR on [[15 September]] [[1939]], shortly after the outbreak of [[World War II]]. The workmen's passenger service ran for the last time on Saturday [[16 September]] [[1939]] and slate traffic ceased on [[1 August]] [[1946]], apart from the section from Duffws to the North Western yard through Blaenau Ffestiniog town centre, which was leased on [[7 October]] [[1946]] to the quarry owners and provided the railway company, that retained the services of a resident manager at Porthmadog, with a small income throughout the moribund years.
 
===Horse and gravity operation===
The original Act of Parliament which permitted the building of the line made no provision for its closure or abandonment. Although the line had ceased functioning, the company could not dismantle the railway, so the track and infrastructure were left in place. However without any maintenance, it soon became overgrown and unusable.
[[File:Composite map of Festiniog Railway OS old series 1 63360.jpg|thumb|left|One-inch map of the route of the Ffestiniog Railway about 1840, showing the inclined plane that was used until the Moelwyn tunnel was built in 1842]]
 
The line was constructed between 1833 and 1836 to transport [[slate]] from the quarries around the inland town of Blaenau Ffestiniog to the coastal town of Porthmadog where it was loaded onto ships. The railway was graded so that loaded wagons could be [[Gravity railway|run by gravity]] downhill all the way from Blaenau Ffestiniog to the port. The empty wagons were hauled back up by horses, which travelled down in special [[Dandy waggon|'dandy']] wagons. To achieve this continuous grade (about 1 in 80 for much of the way), the line followed natural contours and employed [[Cutting (transportation)|cuttings]] and [[Embankment (transportation)|embankments]] built of stone and slate blocks without mortar. Prior to the completion in 1842 of a long tunnel through a spur in the [[Moelwyn Bach|Moelwyn Mountain]], the slate trains were worked over the top via [[cable railway|inclines]] (designed by [[Robert Stephenson]]), the site of which can still be seen although there are few visible remnants.
From 1949, various groups of rail enthusiasts attempted to revitalise the railway. Eventually, in 1954 a group of volunteers funded by Alan Pegler purchased the company to run it as a tourist attraction, and gradually restored the line to working order. This was not helped by a decision by the CEGB ([[Central Electricity Generating Board]]) in 1954 to build the Ffestiniog Pumped Storage Scheme, including the Tan y Grisiau reservoir (Llyn Ystradau), which flooded part of the northern end of the line. The Festiniog Railway Company was able to obtain compensation in 1972, after the second-longest legal battle in British legal history, having taken eighteen years and two months. Two years later, as a result of the case, the British [[Parliament]] passed the Land Occupancy Act 1973.
 
Up to six trains daily were operated in each direction and a printed timetable was published on 16 September 1856 by [[The Spooners of Porthmadog|Charles Easton Spooner]] who, following his father, served as Manager and Clerk for 30 years. It shows departures from the Quarry Terminus (later referred to as Dinas, sometimes as Rhiwbryfdir or Rhiw) at 7:30, 9:28, 11:16, 1:14, 3:12 and 5:10. Trains waited ten minutes at the intermediate stations called Tunnel Halt, Hafod y Llyn and [[Rhiw Goch]]. The fastest journey time from Quarry Terminus to [[Boston Lodge]] was 1 hour 32 minutes, including three stops. From Boston Lodge, the slate wagons were hauled to and from Porthmadog harbour by horses. Up trains took nearly six hours from Boston Lodge to the Quarry Terminus and each train ran in up to four sections, each hauled by a horse and comprising eight empty slate wagons plus a horse dandy. This timetable gave a maximum annual capacity of 70,000 tons of dressed slate.<ref>{{cite book |title=Festiniog Railway Gravity Trains ed. |first=Peter |last=Johnson |author-link=Peter Johnson (railway historian) |publisher=Festiniog Railway Heritage Group |date=1986 |isbn=0-949022-00-4 |page=4}}</ref> Two brakesmen travelled on each down train, controlling the speed by the application of brakes as needed. At passing loops, trains passed on the right and this continues to be a feature of Ffestiniog Railway operation.
The work of restoration began on [[September 20]] [[1954]] when Morris Jones the foreman fitter who had last worked for the railway in March 1947 rejoined the staff to complete the rebuilding of the locomotive 'Prince' on which he had been engaged when the works closed. He was joined at [[Boston Lodge]] works by two volunteers. The first Passenger train from [[Porthmadog Harbour railway station|Porthmadog]] to [[Boston Lodge railway station|Boston Lodge]] ran on [[July 23]] [[1955]]. The passenger service was extended to [[Minffordd railway station|Minffordd]] on [[May 19]] [[1956]], to [[Penrhyn railway station|Penrhyn]] on [[June 5]] [[1957]] and to [[Tan-y-Bwlch railway station|Tan-y-Bwlch]] on [[April 5]] [[1958]]. A long period of consolidation followed before the extension to [[Dduallt railway station|Duallt]] on [[April 6]] [[1968]].
 
There is evidence for tourist passengers being carried as early as 1850<ref>Cliffe's Book of North Wales, 1850</ref> without the blessing of the [[Board of Trade]], but these journeys would also observe the timetable.
Between 1965 and 1978, a 'Deviation' route from Dduallt to [[Tanygrisiau railway station|Tanygrisiau]] (reopened on [[June 24]] [[1978]]), including the only [[Spiral (railway)|rail spiral]] in Britain and a tunnel, was built around the reservoir largely by volunteer labour. The through route to Blaenau Ffestiniog was completed in 1982; the group building this deviation were officially called the ''Civil Engineering Group'', but were usually called the ''[[Deviationist]]s''. The new joint station with [[British Rail]] at [[Blaenau Ffestiniog railway station|Blaenau Ffestiniog]] was officially opened on [[April 30]] [[1983]] by [[George Thomas, 1st Viscount Tonypandy|George Thomas]], Speaker of the [[House of Commons]], who unveiled a plaque at the station recording his visit.
 
Hafod y Llyn was replaced by Tan y Bwlch around 1872. Dinas (Rhiw) Station and much of that branch is now all but buried under [[Spoil tip|slate waste]]; the rest of the Dinas branch line was removed about 1954–55. Occasional confusion arises because places named Hafod y Llyn Isaf and Dinas also exist on the [[Welsh Highland Railway]], albeit {{convert|10|mi}} or more to the northwest of those on the FR.
In the late 1980s the Festiniog Railway Company was involved in a highly controversial plan to stop the neighbouring Welsh Highland Railway being rebuilt. The plan would have involved the Company buying the original track bed of the Welsh Highland Railway from the old company's receiver and giving it to Gwynedd County Council, as long as no railway-related developments were allowed on the land. This, and other actions, may have delayed the start of rebuilding of the Welsh Highland Railway by upto to 10 years.
 
===Steam and gravity operation===
From 1990 the Festiniog Railway Company has been totally committed to the reopening of the [[Welsh Highland Railway]] and following protracted legal procedures the first section from [[Caernarfon railway station|Caernarfon]] to [[Dinas railway station|Dinas]] was opened and operated by the FR on [[October 11]] [[1997]]. Restoration to [[Waunfawr railway station|Waunfawr]] was completed in 2000 and to [[Rhyd Ddu railway station|Rhyd Ddu]] in 2003. Reconstruction of the remaining section through to Porthmadog is in progress from both ends. In 2009 the Ffestiniog Railway intends to reconnect with the Welsh Highland Railway, comprising parts of the former [[London and North Western Railway]] (1867), [[North Wales Narrow Gauge Railway]] (1877-81), [[Portmadoc, Beddgelert and South Snowdon Railway]] and Welsh Highland (1922-3) Railway when the ''Rheilffordd Eryri'' (its Welsh name) is completed from [[Caernarfon]] to [[Porthmadog]]. The link would join the FR at Harbour Station, with the rebuilt WHR at Pen-y-Mount Station, north of Porthmadog.
[[File:Ffestiniog PDold 3.jpg|thumb|left|George England locomotive ''[[Festiniog Railway Princess|The Princess]]'' with passenger train at Porthmadog harbour station circa 1870]]
[[File:JamesSpooner.jpg|thumb|Double Fairlie locomotive ''James Spooner'']]
[[File:Little Giant locomotive engine, Ffestiniog railway NLW3363951.jpg|thumb|''Little Giant'' at Duffws, circa 1875]]
During the late 1850s it became clear that the line was reaching its operational capacity, while the output of the Blaenau Ffestiniog slate quarries continued to rise. In 1860, the board of the company began to investigate the possibility of introducing [[Steam locomotive|steam locomotives]] to increase the carrying capacity of the railway. Although narrow-gauge steam locomotives had been tried before this, very few had been built to so narrow a gauge. In 1862 the company advertised for manufacturers to tender to build the line's first locomotives. In February 1863, the bid of [[George England and Co.]] was accepted and production of the first locomotives was begun.<ref name=QUI>{{Quine-FR}}</ref>
 
The first of these locomotives, ''Mountaineer'' was delivered to Porthmadog on 18 July 1863, followed a few days later by ''The Princess''.<ref name=QUI/> After a number of trials and some modifications (notably the addition of [[Steam dome|domes]]) to the locomotive, the first official train ran on 23 October 1863. These steam locomotives of the [[Festiniog Railway 0-4-0TT|0-4-0 type]] allowed much longer slate trains to be run and this also enabled the official introduction of passenger trains in 1865: the Ffestiniog was the first narrow-gauge railway in Britain to carry passengers. In 1869, the line's first double [[Fairlie locomotive|Fairlie]] [[articulated locomotive]] was introduced and these double-ended machines have since become one of the most widely recognised features of the railway.
==Locomotives==
For more detailed information on current and past locos, visit the Railways own [http://www.frheritage.org.uk./cgi-bin/wiki.pl?Home_Page Heritage Group Wikipedia]
 
Down trains continued to run entirely by gravity but faster up journeys and longer trains increased line capacity. A new timetable dated October 1863 shows six departures daily from each terminus at two-hour intervals, starting at 7:00 am and taking 1 hour 50 minutes including stops (totalling 20 minutes) at [[Tanygrisiau railway station|Tanygrisiau]], Hafod-y-Llyn and [[Penrhyn railway station|Penrhyn]]. Trains passed only at Hafod-y-Llyn (from 1872 [[Tan-y-Bwlch railway station|Tan-y-Bwlch]]). When passenger services started, the usual practice was for locomotive-hauled up trains to consist of loaded general goods and mineral wagons, followed by passenger carriages, followed by empty slate wagons with brakesmen. Down trains were run in up to four separate (uncoupled) portions: loaded slate wagons, goods wagons, passenger carriages and the locomotive running light. This unusual and labour-intensive method of operation was highly dangerous, at least as far as passengers were concerned; consequently, the down passenger and goods portions were combined into a single train headed by the locomotive.
Where the name of the locomotive is linked, the link points to the person or place that the locomotive is named after.
 
The loaded slate trains continued to operate by gravity until the end of passenger services in 1939. Slate trains eventually became very long – trains of less than eighty slate wagons carried two brakesmen but over eighty wagons (and this became common) required three brakesmen. About one wagon in every six was equipped with a brake, the others being unbraked. Trains continued to pass at Tan-y-Bwlch and, to a lesser extent, at Minffordd. The Summer timetable for 1900 had nine trains daily in each direction and trains had been accelerated to one hour from Porthmadog to {{rws|Duffws|FR}} including stops at [[Minffordd railway station|Minffordd]], Penrhyn, Tan-y-Bwlch, [[Dduallt railway station|Dduallt]] (request), Tanygrisiau, [[Blaenau Ffestiniog (LNWR) railway station|Blaenau (LNWR)]] and [[Blaenau Ffestiniog (GWR) railway station|Blaenau (GWR)]]. Speeds in excess of {{convert|40|mph|km/h|abbr=on}} were then normal.<ref>The Festiniog Railway, [[James I. C. Boyd]], 1959, Volume II (page 372)</ref>
These are the existing locomotives that are owned by or are permanently housed at the Ffestiniog Railway:-
 
The original passenger coaches (some of which survive) were small four-wheeled vehicles with a very low [[centre of gravity]], which led to them being nicknamed 'bug boxes'. In 1872, the FR introduced the first [[bogie]] carriages to operate in Britain, Nos 15 and 16, which were also the first iron-framed bogie coaches in the world and are still in service.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Festiniog Railway, 1836-1966: 130 years in pictures |year=1966 |publisher=The Festiniog Railway Company}}</ref> The continuous [[vacuum brake]] was installed in 1893. The line was fully signalled with [[electric telegraph]] and [[staff and ticket]] working. Electric Train Staff instruments were introduced in 1912 and they continue in use to the present day.
===Steam Locomotives===
{| cellspacing="0" border="1" bgcolor="white"
!Number
!Name
!Wheel arrangement
!Date built
!Builder
!Notes
|-
|1
|Princess
|0-4-0ST
|1863
|[[George England]]
|Currently on static display at Porthmadog Harbour Station
|-
|2
|Prince
|0-4-0ST
|1863
|[[George England]]
|In service
|-
|4
|Palmerston
|0-4-0ST
|1864
|[[George England]]
|In service
|-
|5
|Welsh Pony
|0-4-0ST
|1867
|[[George England]]
|Out of service, cosmetically restored to 1930s light blue livery.
|-
|10
|Merddin Emrys
|0-4-0+0-4-0T
|1879
|[[Boston Lodge]]
|In service. The oldest operating [[Fairlie|Double Fairlie]] on the railway. Named after the 6th century Welsh poet [[Merlin (wizard)|Merddyn Emrys]].
|-
|11
|Livingston Thompson
|0-4-0+0-4-0T
|1886
|[[Boston Lodge]]
|Withdrawn and restored as a static display at the [[National Railway Museum]] in [[York]].
|-
| -
|[[Earl of Merioneth]]
|0-4-0+0-4-0T
|1979
|[[Boston Lodge]]
|In service. The first [[Fairlie|Double Fairlie]] built by the restored Ffestiniog Railway.
|-
|12
|[[David Lloyd George]]
|0-4-0+0-4-0T
|1992
|[[Boston Lodge]]
|In service. The most recent [[Fairlie|Double Fairlie]] in the world.
|-
|9
|Taliesin
|0-4-4T
|1876/1999
|[[Vulcan Foundry]]/ [[Boston Lodge]]
|In service. The railway's only [[Fairlie|Single Fairlie]]. The original 1876 locomotive was scrapped in the 1930s and a replica built in 1999 using a few parts from the original. Named after the 6th century Welsh poet [[Taliesin]].
|-
| -
|Blanche
|2-4-0ST
|1893
|[[Hunslet Engine Co.]]
|In service. Originally an 0-4-0ST running on the [[Penrhyn Quarry Railway]], purchased by the Ffestiniog Railway in 1963.
|-
| -
|Linda
|2-4-0ST
|1893
|[[Hunslet Engine Co.]]
|Under overhaul. Originally an 0-4-0ST running on the [[Penrhyn Quarry Railway]], bought by the Ffestiniog Railway in 1962. Named after [[Linda Blanche Douglas-Pennant]].
|-
| -
|Mountaineer
|2-6-2T
|1917
|[[American Locomotive Company|ALCO]]
|Withdrawn for overhaul. Built for the British Army's use in [[World War One|WWI]], later ran on the [[Tramway Pithivers à Toury]] in [[France]], purchased by the Ffestiniog Railway in 1967.
|-
| -
|Britomart
|0-4-0ST
|1899
|[[Hunslet Engine Co.]]
|Withdrawn for overhaul. Originally built for [[Pen-yr-orsedd]] slate quarry at [[Nantlle]]. Bought by a private group in 1965 and runs occasional specials on the Ffestiniog Railway.
|-
| -
|Lilla
|0-4-0ST
|1891
|[[Hunslet Engine Co.]]
|Withdrawn for overhaul. Originally built for the [[Cilgwyn Quarry]] tramway, later ran at [[Penrhyn Quarry]]. Purchased for private preservation in the 1960s and was purchased by a private consortium for the Ffestiniog Railway in the 1990s.
|-
| -
|Lyd
|2-6-2T
|under construction
|[[Boston Lodge]]
|Replica of a [[Manning Wardle]] locomotive of the [[Lynton and Barnstaple Railway]].
|}
 
===Decline of slate and development of tourism===
===Diesel Locomotives===
By the 1920s, the demand for slate as a roofing material dropped owing to the advent of newer materials and to the loss of the overseas trade during World War I. As a result, the railway suffered a gradual decline in traffic.
{| cellspacing="0" border="1" bgcolor="white"
 
!Name
In 1921, the Aluminium Corporation at [[Dolgarrog]] in the [[Conwy River|Conwy Valley]] bought for £40,000 (£{{formatnum:{{Inflation|UK|40000|1921|{{Inflation-year|UK}}|r=-4}}}} in {{Inflation-year|UK}}),{{Inflation-fn|UK|df=y}} a controlling interest in the FR and Henry Jack became chairman, the FR company's financial administration moving to Dolgarrog. Jack was also chairman of the new [[Welsh Highland Railway]]. He was instrumental in getting government backing for its completion on the understanding that the FR and the WHR would be jointly managed from Porthmadog, with maintenance undertaken at Boston Lodge and with other economies of scale. In 1923, the FR line was joined to the WHR line at a station called ''Portmadoc New''. The Welsh Highland line was almost totally dependent on tourism, but this proved slow to develop for several reasons: two slumps in the early 1920s and early 1930s; the rise of road traffic including [[charabanc]]s; and the unreliability of the railway with its (even then) ancient carriages and increasingly decrepit locomotives.
!Type
[[File:Composite map of Festiniog Railway OS Popular Edition 1 63360.jpg | thumb|left | Ordnance Survey one-inch map from 1921-2 showing the route of the 'Welsh Highland & Ffestiniog Rly']]
!Built
 
!Builder
Light railway operation was being introduced on the FR and WHR to cut operating overheads. In 1923, to gain additional expertise in this, Colonel [[H. F. Stephens]] was appointed as part-time engineer to both companies. Stephens became chairman and managing director of both companies in 1924. When the WHR was taken into receivership in 1927, Colonel Stephens was appointed as receiver for the WHR and financial administration of both companies moved to [[Tonbridge]] in [[Kent]]. The fortunes of the WHR, despite great efforts, failed to improve and it became [[bankrupt]] in 1933. To protect their investments, the joint owners of both companies arranged for the WHR to be leased by the FR. However the WHR losses continued with the loss of the Moel Tryfan slate traffic in 1935, and it closed to passengers at the end of the 1936 season and to goods in 1937.
!Notes
 
|-
The FR continued to operate its slate traffic, a workmen's train on weekdays throughout the year and a summer tourist passenger service. Ordinary passenger services ceased on the FR on 15 September 1939, shortly after the outbreak of World War II. The workmen's passenger service ran for the last time on Saturday, 16 September 1939. Slate trains were from then onwards operated three days each week but gravity operation was discontinued. Slate traffic ceased on 1 August 1946, apart from the section from Duffws to the North Western yard through Blaenau Ffestiniog town centre, which was leased on 7 October 1946 to the quarry owners. This provided the railway company, which retained the services of a resident manager at Porthmadog, with a small income throughout the moribund years.
|Mary Ann
 
|4wd
The original act of Parliament which permitted the building of the line made no specific provision for its closure or abandonment. Although the main line had ceased functioning, the company could not dismantle the railway, so the track and infrastructure were left in place. An amending act of Parliament could have been sought to repeal the old one, but the company did not have the money. However, without maintenance, the line soon became overgrown and unusable.
|1917
 
|[[Motor Rail]]
===Restoration===
|The first locomotive to work the revived Ffestiniog Railway in 1954. Built for British Army use in [[World War One|WWI]] and [[bought]] by the Ffestiniog Railway in 1923.
From 1949, various groups of rail enthusiasts attempted to revitalise the railway. In 1951, railway enthusiast [[Alan Pegler]] was approached by friends to buy and clear the outstanding debt on the derelict Ffestiniog Railway, to enable its purchase. Lent £3,000 by his father, he and the volunteers obtained control of the company on 24 June 1954.<ref name=GuardObit/> Pegler was appointed the new company's first chairman,<ref name=GuardObit/> with the objective to operate the railway as a tourist attraction and gradually restore the line to working order. The first meeting of the revivalists was held at a [[Bristol]] college on 8 September. Amongst the twelve in attendance were [[Allan Garraway]], [[Harold Holcroft]] and [[Vic Mitchell]]. Mitchell would later be appointed a director of the company. Pegler later released complete control of the company without any personal financial gain to the Ffestiniog Railway Trust, which still owns and runs the railway today.<ref name=GuardObit/><ref name=TelgObit/><ref name=TimesObit/><ref name=RM0618p33-37>{{cite magazine |title=617 publications so far... |first=Howard |last=Johnston |magazine=The Railway Magazine |date=June 2018 |publisher=Mortons Media Ltd |___location=Horncastle |pages=33–37 |issn=0033-8923 }}</ref>
|-
 
|Moelwyn
In 1954, the [[Central Electricity Generating Board]] (CEGB) built the [[Ffestiniog power station|Ffestiniog Pumped Storage Scheme]]. This included a new reservoir, Llyn Ystradau which flooded a mile of the line north of the Moelwyn Tunnel. In 1972, after the second-longest court case in British legal history,<ref>{{cite book |title=British railway enthusiasm |page=152 |first=Ian |last=Carter |publisher=Manchester University Press |date=3 Oct 2017}}</ref> the Festiniog Railway Company obtained compensation for the loss of its route. Two years later, the case influenced the writing of the [[Land Compensation Act 1973]].<ref>{{cite book |title=Law of Compulsory Purchase and Compensation |first=Keith |last=Davies |publisher=Butterworths |date=1975}}</ref>
|2-4-0d
 
|1918
On 18 August 1954, Colonel McMullen of the [[Department for Transport|Ministry of Transport, Railways Inspectorate]] inspected the line from Blaenau Ffestiniog to Porthmadog, accompanied by Pegler, several directors and other supporters. Restoration began on 20 September 1954 when Morris Jones, the foreman fitter who had last worked for the railway in March 1947, rejoined the staff. Jones worked to complete the rebuilding of the locomotive ''Prince'' which he had been working on when the railway closed. He was joined at [[Boston Lodge]] works by two volunteers, Bill Harvey and [[Allan Garraway]].<ref>{{cite journal |work=Festiniog Railway Magazine (FR Society) |number=86 |page=32}}</ref> The completion of sixty years service with the FR by Robert Evans (for almost 25 years as Manager) was marked on 6 November 1954 and a special train was run from Minffordd to Porthmadog to celebrate the occasion and convey Evans, his wife, Alan Pegler (company chairman) and guests en route to a clock presentation ceremony.<ref>{{cite journal |work=Festiniog Railway Magazine (FR Society) |number=85 |page=22}}</ref> Evans continued in service as Manager until his retirement on 1 June 1955 when Garraway was appointed as Manager.
|[[Baldwin]]
 
|Another ex-[[World War One|WWI]] locomotive, purchased by the Ffestiniog Railway in 1925.
The first public passenger train from [[Porthmadog Harbour railway station|Porthmadog]] to [[Boston Lodge Halt railway station|Boston Lodge]] ran on 23 July 1955. ''Prince'' returned to service on 3 August 1955. After extensive boiler repairs, Double Fairlie ''Taliesin'' returned to service on 4 September 1956. The passenger service was extended to [[Minffordd railway station|Minffordd]] on 19 May 1956, to [[Penrhyn railway station|Penrhyn]] on 5 June 1957 and to [[Tan-y-Bwlch railway station|Tan-y-Bwlch]] on 5 April 1958. Increasing traffic put severe demands on the track – over {{convert|7|mi|km|0}} had been reopened in four years. A long period of consolidation, rolling stock restoration and track renewal followed before the extension to [[Dduallt railway station|Dduallt]] on 6 April 1968. This extension was celebrated on 28 May 1968 by the re-introduction of the [[Ffestiniog Railway Letter Service]].
|-
 
|Upnor Castle
===The Llyn Ystradau Deviation===
|4wd
[[File:Ffestiniog old route Tanygrisiau.jpg|thumb|The old route of the Ffestiniog Railway towards the northern portal of the first Moelwyn Tunnel. It was permanently blocked with a concrete/stone plug during the completion of [[Ffestiniog Power Station|Llyn Ystradau]] in the late 1950s/early 1960s. The replacement FR line is in the foreground.]]
|1954
 
|[[F.C. Hibberd]]
Between 1965 and 1978, the Ffestiniog Railway Deviation, a {{convert|2+1/2|mi|km|0|adj=on}} long diversionary route, was constructed between Dduallt and Tanygrisiau to avoid the [[Ffestiniog Power Station|Ffestiniog]] [[Pumped-storage hydroelectricity|hydro-electric]] power station and its reservoir (Llyn Ystradau).<ref name=hollingsworth>{{cite book |last1=Hollingsworth |first1=James Brian |title=Ffestiniog Adventure: The Festiniog Railway's Deviation Project |date=1981 |publisher=David & Charles}}</ref> The Deviation (this is the conventional name for such railway works) was built mostly by volunteers. At the southern end is the Dduallt [[spiral (railway)|spiral formation]] which is unique on a public railway in the United Kingdom.<ref>{{cite book |title=British railway enthusiasm |first=Ian |last=Carter |page=131 |publisher=Manchester University Press |date=3 October 2017 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=s3ACEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA131}}</ref> Including a bridge, it was constructed entirely by volunteers, and gains an initial height rise of {{convert|35|ft|m|1}} in order (after a further {{convert|1|mile|spell=in}} of new volunteer-built railway and a new tunnel) to clear the flooded [[track bed]] north of the former Moelwyn tunnel, which is plugged near its usually-submerged northern end. Between Dduallt and the old tunnel, parts of the old railway formation can be clearly seen below the new route.
|Built for the [[Chattenden and Upnor Railway]] to 2&nbsp;ft&nbsp;6&nbsp;in gauge, bought from the [[Welshpool and Llanfair Light Railway]] in 1968. Now sold to the [[Welsh Highland Railway]].
 
|-
[[File:Composite map of Festiniog Railway Ordnance Survey 1 25000.jpg|thumb|left|Ordnance Survey 1:25,000 composite map showing the Ffestiniog railway about 1953, after the construction of the Llyn Ystradau reservoir flooded a section of the route, but before the deviation was built to carry the railway around the west bank of the reservoir]]
|[[Moel Hebog]]
 
|4wd
The new {{convert|310|yd|m|adj=on}} tunnel was constructed between 1975 and 1977 by three [[Cornwall|Cornish]] [[tin mining]] engineers with a small team of employees. It had to be [[explosive|blasted]] through a [[granite]] spur of the Moelwyn mountain. The tunnel plant included stone crushing and grading equipment, which produced [[track ballast]] and other aggregates from the spoil for use on the railway. Before it opened to rail traffic, the new tunnel had to be lined throughout its length with liquid cement reinforced with steel mesh in a process called '[[shotcrete|shotcreting]]'.
|1955
 
|[[Hunslet Engine Co.]]
From 26 May 1975, and over two summers, a [[push-pull train|pull and push]] service, officially called ''The Shuttle'', powered by diesel locomotive ''Moel Hebog'' with carriage 110, was operated from Dduallt to [[Gelliwiog railway station|Gelliwiog]], to enable tourists to experience the Deviation route before the new Moelwyn Tunnel was opened.
|Originally built for the [[National Coal Board]] as a [[flameproof]] mines locomotive. Purchased in 1969 and mainly used for [[permanent way]] maintenance trains.
 
|-
North of the new tunnel is a long stretch of track along the west bank of the new reservoir. On 25 June 1977, full-length passenger trains first ran from Dduallt through the new tunnel to a now-dismantled temporary terminus known as ''Llyn Ystradau''. That station was alongside Llyn Ystradau but, because it was on Central Electricity Generating Board land without public access, passengers could not leave the station other than by train.
|[[Conwy Castle]]
 
|4wd
The remaining section included some specialised engineering work at its summit ({{convert|668|ft|m|0}}) where the new line passes over the power station pipelines. This was followed by two public road crossings with automatic signalling, on the FR's only reverse or down gradient, to rejoin the old route in [[Tanygrisiau railway station|Tanygrisiau]] station ({{convert|640|ft|m|0}}), which was reopened on 24 June 1978.
|1958
 
|[[F.C. Hibberd]]
The largely volunteer group building the Deviation was officially called the Civil Engineering Group, but its members were popularly known (and are still remembered) as the "Deviationists", who completed an enormous task over 13 years.{{CN|date=March 2025}}
|Built for the [[Admiralty]]'s line at [[Ernsettle]], purchased in 1991. Now in use at the [[Welsh Highland Railway]].
 
|-
===Project Blaenau===
|Ashover
[[File:Ffestiniog DLG BF.JPG|thumb|right|[[Double Fairlie]] locomotive ''David Lloyd George'' at [[Blaenau Ffestiniog railway station|Blaenau Ffestiniog station]]]]
|4wd
[[File:Taliesin.jpg|thumb|Steam locomotive ''Taliesin'' at [[Porthmadog Harbour railway station|Porthmadog]]]]
|1948
[[File:Livingston Thompson (6683835547).jpg|thumb|right|''Livingston Thompson'' at the [[National Railway Museum|NRM]]]]
|[[F.C. Hibberd]]
[[File:Britomart.jpg|thumb|Locomotive "Britomart" on the Ffestiniog Railway, at a Drive an Engine Event]]
|Built for the [[Ashover Light Railway]] and purchased by the Ffestiniog Railway in 1981.
The completion of the railway through to Tanygrisiau (height {{convert|640|ft|0|abbr=on|disp=or}}) left the FR with just {{convert|1+1/2|mile|spell=in}} to go to its goal of Blaenau Ffestiniog (height {{convert|710|ft|0|abbr=on|disp=or}}) but the complexities of reconstructing that unique but rather derelict urban section of narrow-gauge railway took a further four years. As well as {{convert|1+1/2|mi|km}} of new track and its formation, which was the responsibility of the FR permanent way department and its volunteers, much other work needed to be done. Most of the work, like the deviation itself, was undertaken by volunteers who, in many cases, assumed full responsibility for the design as well as the execution of discrete projects, each under a volunteer project leader. There were four decrepit footbridges each needing to be demolished and rebuilt to the new FR [[loading gauge]]. The decrepit steel bridge across the Afon Barlwyd required total replacement, with timber (Karri) beams using the original abutments and piers. The new deck is formed of old rails. Walls and fences throughout had to be repaired or replaced. These and the many other varied tasks formed Project Blaenau.
|-
 
|Diana
One major task near Tanygrisiau was the responsibility of [[Gwynedd County Council]], which had at some time after 1955 taken advantage of the absence of trains to demolish what was probably Britain's lowest road under railway bridge.{{citation needed|date=June 2020}} In early 1980, therefore, they replaced Dolrhedyn bridge and even managed to give it a few inches extra headroom for road vehicles.
|4wd
 
|1957
Civil engineering contractors were employed in conjunction with [[British Rail]] and Gwynedd County Council for the new route with its bridges and roadworks and the new joint station on the former [[Great Western Railway]] station site. British Rail commenced using the new station on 22 March 1982. Ffestiniog trains returned to Blaenau on Tuesday, 25 May 1982, thus marking the 150th Anniversary of royal assent to the Festiniog Railway Act 1832. The new joint station with [[British Rail]] at [[Blaenau Ffestiniog railway station|Blaenau Ffestiniog]] was officially opened on 30 April 1983 by [[George Thomas, 1st Viscount Tonypandy|George Thomas]], Speaker of the [[British House of Commons|House of Commons]], who unveiled a plaque that records his visit.
|[[Motor Rail]]
 
|Purchased by the Ffestiniog Railway in 1974.
With the major project of track restoration to Blaenau finally complete, attention could be turned to other matters. More [[Fairlie locomotive]]s were built or restored and new carriages were built. At Minffordd, a new hostel was built for volunteers who support the permanent staff by working in every department of the railway. Stations were given new buildings, canopies and platforms, often replacing the previous temporary structures and improving the image of the railway for the future.
|-
 
|The Colonel
After fully reopening in 1982 and carrying 200,000 passengers annually, the railway became the second largest Welsh tourist attraction after [[Caernarfon Castle]]. Many saw this as the result of Pegler's drive and ability to inspire others with his unquenchable enthusiasm to fulfil his dream. Pegler, who remained fully involved with the railway until his death in 2012 as President, was appointed OBE in the [[2006 New Year Honours]] in recognition of his contribution.<ref name=GuardObit>{{cite news|last=Johnson|first=Peter|title=Alan Pegler obituary|url=https://www.theguardian.com/theguardian/2012/mar/25/alan-pegler-obituary|newspaper=The Guardian|date=25 March 2012}}</ref><ref name=TelgObit>{{cite web|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/9156363/Alan-Pegler.html|title=Obituary – Alan Pegler|work=[[The Daily Telegraph]]|date=25 March 2012|access-date=25 May 2013}}</ref><ref name=TimesObit>{{cite web|url=http://www.whrsoc.org.uk/WHRProject/2012/AlanPeglerTheTimesObituary.pdf|title=Obituary – Alan Pegler|work=[[The Times]]|date=25 March 2012|access-date=25 May 2013|archive-date=15 December 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131215095923/http://www.whrsoc.org.uk/WHRProject/2012/AlanPeglerTheTimesObituary.pdf|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book
|4wd
| last = le Vay |first=Benedict
|1943
| title = Britain from the Rails: A Window Gazer's Guide
|[[Motor Rail]]
| publisher = Bradt Travel Guides
|Built for the [[St. Albans Sand and Gravel Company]], purchased by Colonel Campbell of [[Dduallt Manor]] for his private use on the Ffestiniog Railway. Purchased by the railway in 1982.
| year = 2008
|-
| page = 15
|[[Criccieth Castle]]
}}</ref>
|6wd
 
|1995
===Welsh Highland Railway===
|[[Boston Lodge]]
{{Main|Welsh Highland Railway|Welsh Highland Railway restoration}}
|Built by the railway from parts supplied by [[Baguley Drewry]]. Used on passenger services.
In 1988, the Festiniog Railway Company was involved in a controversial plan to stop the neighbouring Welsh Highland Railway (WHR) being rebuilt, as it was concerned at the effect a nearby heritage railway competitor could have on the FR business. The initial plan would have involved the FR Company buying the original track bed of the WHR from the old company's receiver and giving it to Gwynedd County Council, provided no railway-related developments were allowed on the land. This was greeted with dismay by the WHR (1964) Company, which had been attempting to preserve the line since the 1960s.
|-
 
|[[Harlech Castle]]
This action may have delayed the start of rebuilding of the Welsh Highland Railway, although the alternative plan was dependent on the continued co-operation of Gwynedd County Council to ensure that the track bed was used solely for railway purposes. This was not guaranteed, as pressure from various groups who objected to the rebuilding of the railway was significant and it was the stated intention of the council to apply for an abandonment order on gaining the track bed. This would have left the track bed open for seizure by adverse possession ('squatters' rights') by farmers, use in other ways such as footpaths, road improvement schemes etc., as the statutory designation of the track bed as a railway would have been discontinued. Over the years, the presence of plans for footpaths and roads had indeed made it difficult for anyone wishing to rebuild the line.
|6wd
 
|1983
This led a group to form 'Trackbed Consolidation Limited' (TCL) and, after some detective work, TCL managed to trace and purchase shares and debentures in the original WHR company. They felt that an alternative plan was available, one where the original company could be brought out of receivership. It was originally the intent of TCL to provide the track bed to the WHR (1964) Company to rebuild the line, but they refused the offer.
|[[Baguley Drewry]]
 
|Built for service in [[Mozambique]], but purchased by the Ffestiniog Railway in 1998 after the order was cancelled.
TCL were introduced to the FR and decided that the aims and objectives of TCL and the FR were similar thus, since 1988, the FR company has been totally committed to the reopening of the [[Welsh Highland Railway]]. All TCL-owned shares/debentures were transferred to the FR on the condition that they would be returned if the railway was not built.
|-
 
|Harold
The next few years were marked by protracted legal procedures before the assets of the old company could be transferred and before final consent to rebuild the railway was given. The first section from [[Caernarfon railway station|Caernarfon]] to [[Dinas railway station|Dinas]], the Caernarfon Light Railway, was opened and operated by the FR from 11 October 1997. This section was not hampered by these extended legal procedures and was built with a [[light railway order]], as it was not part of the original Welsh Highland Railway route; the site of Dinas station had been sold off and thus was not part of the assets of the old WHR company. Other powers under a [[Transport and Works Act Order]] enabled restoration to [[Waunfawr railway station|Waunfawr]] in 2000 and to [[Rhyd Ddu railway station|Rhyd Ddu]] in 2003. [[Hafod y Llyn railway station|Hafod y Llyn]] was reached in 2009 and [[Pont Croesor railway station|Pont Croesor]] in 2010. By 2010, the tracks of the WHR and Ffestiniog Railway had been reconnected at Harbour Station, linking [[Caernarfon]] to [[Porthmadog]] and passenger services started in 2011.
|4wd
 
|1979
The completed Welsh Highland Railway or ''Rheilffordd Eryri'' (its Welsh name) comprises parts of the former [[London and North Western Railway]] (1867), [[North Wales Narrow Gauge Railways]] (1877–81), [[Portmadoc, Beddgelert and South Snowdon Railway]] and Welsh Highland (1922-3) Railway. The FR also links with the WHR (Porthmadog) at Pen-y-Mount Station, north of Porthmadog.
|[[Hunslet Engine Co.]]
 
|Built for the railway at [[North Bierley]] [[sewage farm]] and bought by the Ffestiniog in the early 1990s.
=== Rails ===
|-
Rails increased in weight and strength as traffic changed.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article70494275 |title=The Festiniog Railway. |newspaper=[[Australian Town and Country Journal]] |___location=NSW |date=27 April 1872 |access-date=19 December 2012 |page=17 |via=National Library of Australia}}</ref>
|Vale of Ffestiniog
* 16&nbsp;lb/yd original rails for horse drawn operation
|B-Bd
* 30&nbsp;lb/yd rails for early steam locomotive operation found to be too light.
|1967
* 48.66&nbsp;lb/yd rails for later steam operation
|[[Funkey]]
 
|Built for the [[South African Railways]], purchased by the Ffestiniog Railway in 1996 and extensively rebuilt. Used for passenger services.
==Tourism and heritage==
|}
[[File:Steam 150- '1863 and All That' (10316037176).jpg|thumb|'Merddin Emrys' at Tan-y-Bwlch during Steam 150 - '1863 and All That']]
One of the earliest references to tourism is in the LNWR Tourist Guide for 1876, which waxed lyrical about the Ffestiniog Railway, which it illustrated with a drawing of a lady in [[Traditional Welsh costume|Welsh National Dress]] (then still in regular local use) travelling on an FR up train (since many empty slate wagons – with two standing brakesmen – were attached at the rear) with the caption "On the Ffestiniog Railway". The guide uses the "double F" spelling throughout.<ref>Festiniog Railway Magazine (FR Society), No.90, Page 2</ref> It was, however, in the inter-war years from 1919 to 1939 that tourism, though always valued, came to acquire a major importance.
 
Since restoration commenced in 1954, tourism has been the only significant source of income. The role of the Ffestiniog Railway in the promotion and fulfilment of tourism and in preserving railway heritage has been recognised many times, and notable mentions have included:
*1964 Wales Tourist Board certificate for conspicuous service to Welsh tourism.<ref>Festiniog Railway Magazine (FR Society), No.90, Page 6</ref>
*1972 Wales Tourist Board lists the FR as fifth most popular tourist site in Wales, after Caernarfon Castle, the Swallow Falls, the National Museum of Wales at Cardiff and Conwy Castle.<ref>Festiniog Railway Magazine (FR Society), No.58, Page 18</ref>
*1979 The FR was one of only six sites in Wales to receive the British Tourist Authority's Golden Jubilee Award.<ref>Festiniog Railway Magazine (FR Society), No.87, Page 13</ref>
*1987 The FR was the outright winner of the Independent Railway of the Year award.<ref>Festiniog Railway Magazine (FR Society), No.119, Page 13</ref>
*2004 The "Talking Train" (an internal audio guide) was awarded the Heritage Railway Association 'interpretation' Award.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ats-heritage.co.uk |title=ATS-heritage.co.uk |publisher=ATS-heritage.co.uk |access-date=2013-04-17}}</ref>
 
Recognition of the railway's importance to tourism and heritage has been increasingly marked by financial assistance given to the company towards capital expenditure. Prior to September 1987, the FR had received £1,273,127 in gifts and grants. Of this: £450,476 was gifts from the FR Society and FR Trust and other supporters; £379,335 from Wales Tourist Board; £134,320 from EEC grants and £308,996 from other public sources.<ref>Ffestiniog Railway Company – Offer for Subscription (Prospectus) Ocean Asset Management Ltd, 1987, Page 24</ref>
 
Major grants received subsequently have been: In 1989 a grant of £430,000 (£{{formatnum:{{Inflation|UK|430000|1989|{{Inflation-year|UK}}|r=0}}}} in {{Inflation-year|UK}}),{{Inflation-fn|UK|df=y}} mainly from the [[European Community|EEC]] (National Programme of Community Interest for the promoting of tourism in Dyfed, Gwynedd and Powys);<ref>Festiniog Railway Magazine (FR Society), No.125, Page 191</ref> in 1995 a grant of £500,000 (£{{formatnum:{{Inflation|UK|500000|1995|{{Inflation-year|UK}}|r=0}}}} in {{Inflation-year|UK}}),{{Inflation-fn|UK|df=y}} to promote work in Blaenau Ffestiniog<ref>Ffestiniog Railway Magazine (FR Society), No.148, Page 135</ref>
and in 1998 a [[Heritage Lottery Fund]] grant of £375,000 (£{{formatnum:{{Inflation|UK|375000|1998|{{Inflation-year|UK}}|r=0}}}} in {{Inflation-year|UK}}),{{Inflation-fn|UK|df=y}} for the construction of workshops to facilitate the restoration of historic vehicles.<ref>Ffestiniog Railway Magazine (FR Society), No.163, Page 285</ref>
 
Today the railway is promoted as one of [[The Great Little Trains of Wales]], a joint marketing scheme launched in 1970 that encompasses ten narrow-gauge railways in the country, mostly found in north and mid Wales.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.greatlittletrainsofwales.co.uk|title=The Great Little Trains of Wales website |access-date=6 April 2008 |author=Yarborough, Bruce |publisher= Great Little Trains of Wales}}</ref>
 
== Rolling stock ==
{{main|List of Ffestiniog Railway rolling stock}}
[[File:Ffestiniog Railway locomotive Linda 04.jpg|thumb|right|''Linda'', one of the Ffestiniog Railway's steam locomotives]]
 
==Stations and halts==
{{main|List of stations and halts on the Ffestiniog Railway}}
{| cellspacing="0" border="1" bgcolor="white"
 
!Station
At Porthmadog, the original line came via the streets and across the Britannia bridge from the 1836 terminus at the northernmost end of the Welsh Slate Company's Wharf where the FR officially started. This was the second datum point for all pre-1954 mileage calculations. (the first being in Blaenau Ffestiniog). The line over the bridge also connected with the [[Gorseddau Tramway|Gorseddau]] and [[Croesor Tramway]]s and was later used by [[Welsh Highland Railway]] passenger trains from 1923 to 1936. The line over the bridge was last used in 1958 and then dismantled. It was reopened as part of the WHR in 2011.
!Place
 
!Opened
===The Cob ===
!Closed
Between Porthmadog Harbour station and Boston Lodge, the railway runs on [[Porthmadog|the Cob]], the [[dike (construction)|dyke]] of the [[Traeth Mawr]] [[polder]]. The Cob was built between 1807 and 1811 by [[William Madocks]] and, in addition to its land reclamation function in conjunction with sluice gates at the Britannia bridge, it serves also as a roadway (which, since 1836, has been at a lower level on the landward side) and as a bridge across the Afon Glaslyn. Tolls were charged with a tollgate at [[Boston Lodge]] until 2003, when the rights were purchased by the [[National Assembly for Wales]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://new.wales.gov.uk/news/archivepress/environmentpress/enviropress2003/713902/?lang=en |archive-url=http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20071204130131/http://new.wales.gov.uk/news/archivepress/environmentpress/enviropress2003/713902/?lang=en |url-status=dead |archive-date=2007-12-04 |title=[ARCHIVED CONTENT&#93; Welsh Assembly Government &#124; Assembly abolishes toll on Porthmadog Cob |publisher=Webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk |access-date=2013-04-17 }}</ref>
!Distance from Porthmadog
 
!Notes
The higher, original, section of the Cob carries, in addition to the railway, a public footpath throughout virtually its entire length. There is no fencing between the footpath and the railway, because the railway does not own the top of the Cob, but used a wayleave{{citation needed|date=March 2021}} under the local act of Parliament, the [[Portmadoc Harbour Act 1821]] ([[1 & 2 Geo. 4]]. c.cxv){{efn|An Act to alter and amend an Act of his late Majesty’s Reign, intituled An Act to enable his Majesty to vest the Sands of Traeth Mawr, dividing the Counties of Carnarvon and Merioneth, in William Alexander Madocks Esquire, and for building Quays and other Works, for the Purpose of facilitating the landing, loading and unloading of Ships and Vessels frequenting the Harbour of Port Madoc, in the said County of Carnarvon.}} for improving Porthmadog Harbour. This act was repealed by the Porthmadog Harbour Revision Order 1998 ([[SI 1998]]/683)<ref>{{cite web |title=The Porthmadog Harbour Revision Order 1998 |url=https://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/1998/683/made |website=legislation.gov.uk |access-date=21 July 2021}}</ref> and is no longer in force.
|-
 
|[[Porthmadog Harbour railway station|Porthmadog Harbour]]
== Quarries served by the railway ==
|[[Porthmadog]]
 
|1865
{{main|List of quarries served by the Ffestiniog Railway}}
|Open
 
|0
The Ffestiniog Railway was built primarily to connect the slate quarries in the mountains around what is now Blaenau Ffestiniog with the harbour at Porthmadog. In all at least 23 quarries were directly or indirectly connected to the railway, often by [[cable railway|inclines]]. They sent their finished products over the railway in [[slate waggon]]s to be transferred onto ships or, later, onto the [[standard-gauge]] railway at Minffordd.
|
 
|-
==Train operation since 1955==
|[[Pen Cob Halt]]
 
|[[Boston Lodge]]
===Infrastructure===
|1956
[[File:Ffestiniog & Welsh Highland Railway (48366696341).jpg|thumb|right|Signals at Porthmadog Harbour Station]]
|1967
As the line was extended, passing loops were brought into operation at Minffordd, Penrhyn and Tan-y-Bwlch. Due to the restrictions to the length of trains that could be passed at Penrhyn, Rhiw Goch was opened on 14 May 1975. Penrhyn loop remained in service for several more years before it was closed. By the end of the 1970s, the passing loops were at Minffordd, Rhiw Goch, Tan-y-Bwlch and Dduallt, and an intensive service was run in the peak summer seasons (although there were empty "slots" in the timetable which could be used by works trains). From the early 1980s, the peak summer timetable had three train sets in operation, generally passing at Rhiw Goch and Dduallt.
|1 mile (1.61 km)
 
|opened 19 May 1956 used regularly only until 5 November 1957.
Automatic [[Railway signalling|signalling]] was installed at Tan-y-Bwlch in 1986. By the 1988 season, in part due to the challenges in maintenance of the top end points at Dduallt and the planned automation of Minffordd, the loops at Dduallt and Rhiw Goch had been taken out of service for crossing trains. At the end of May 1988, Dduallt ceased to be a token station and Dduallt loop was taken out of service altogether and became a siding. Rhiw Goch ceased to be used except on odd occasions and was taken out of use as a means to cross passenger trains in 1989. The short section [[Token (railway signalling)|token]] instruments and the signal heads were removed, although the loop could still be used as a refuge for Engineers' trains. Minffordd and Tan-y-Bwlch therefore became the usual passing loops, both automated.
|-
 
|[[Boston Lodge railway station|Boston Lodge]]
In the late 1990s, Rhiw Goch was recommissioned as a passing loop. From the 2005 season, the box has been regularly manned during the summer to provide additional operational flexibility. In 2006, an appeal was launched, through the FR Society, for funds to replace the life-expired signal box with a building of more traditional appearance. Fundraising went well and work was completed during the closed season of 2006/07.
|[[Boston Lodge]]
 
|1928
Elsewhere, Tanygrisiau had been provided with a run-round loop whilst it had been the terminus between June 1978 and May 1982. This loop was removed when the line was reopened to Blaenau Ffestiniog. In the mid-1990s, a project was launched to install a fully signalled passing loop. This proceeded as a volunteer project, including the building of a signal box. However, prior to commissioning, the project was abandoned in 2001. The trackwork (apart for the siding off the Up Loop) remained in situ. In June 2002, the loop was once again used to run trains around as part of the 2002 Gala to celebrate the twentieth anniversary of the restoration of services to Blaenau Ffestiniog. The intended platform starter signals (posts, brackets and arms) have been recovered and some are now in use on the Isle of Man Railway, whilst others are destined for the resignalling of Harbour Station. In 2004, with new disc starter signals and spring-loaded points installed, Tanygrisiau became a passing loop for the first time.
|Open
 
|1 mile 5 chains (1.71 km)
===Train control and regulation===
|temporary terminus 23 July 1955 to end of 1955 season.
 
|-
[[File:FR Cob Observation.jpg|thumb|A Ffestiniog Railway train leaves Porthmadog and heads towards Blaenau Ffestiniog along the Cob]]
|[[Minffordd railway station|Minffordd]]
The Ffestiniog Railway operates on the electric [[Token (railway signalling)|token]] system (ETS) using a mixture of miniature and large train staffs, under the overall control of the duty controller based at [[Porthmadog Harbour railway station|Porthmadog]].
|[[Minffordd]] (near [[Portmeirion]])
 
|1872
Miniature train staffs are provided for:
|Open
* Porthmadog to Minffordd (Intermediate Instrument at Boston Lodge)
|2 miles 5 chains (3.31 km)
* Minffordd to Tanybwlch – Long Section (Intermediate Instrument at Rhiw Goch)
|Joint station with the [[Cambrian Line]]. Temporary FR terminus 19 May 1956 to end of 1956 season.
* Tanybwlch to Tanygrisiau (Intermediate Instrument at Dduallt)
|-
* Tanygrisiau to Blaenau Ffestiniog (Intermediate Instrument at Glan-y-Pwll)
|[[Pen y Bryn Halt]]
 
|[[Penrhyndeudraeth]]
Large train staffs are provided for:
|1957
* Minffordd to Rhiw Goch – Short Section
|1967
* Rhiw Goch to Tanybwlch – Short Section
|3 miles (4.83 km)
 
|opened 20 April 1957 used regularly only until 5 November 1957.
The Short Section train staffs are brought into service by opening Rhiw Goch Signalbox, hence trapping the Minffordd to Tanybwlch Long Section Miniature train staff in the lever frame, when the signal box is opened and manned by a signalman.
|-
 
|[[Penrhyn railway station|Penrhyn]]
The signalling and ETS equipment is primarily designed for train crew operation. To obtain permission to withdraw a train staff to enter a single line section, Control has to be contacted.
|[[Penrhyndeudraeth]]
 
|1865
The Control Office regulates train running, giving permission for trains to enter the single line sections, recording train movements on the Train Graph, ensuring trains are formed of an appropriate number of carriages (depending on the expected train loadings), acting as the single point of contact in the rare event of a failure occurring with rolling stock, and making station announcements at Porthmadog
|Open
 
|3 miles 8 chains (4.99 km)
The Control Office is also responsible for the Train Operation on the [[Welsh Highland Railway]] and it also regulates trains from the [[Welsh Highland Heritage Railway|Welsh Highland Railway Limited]], including the interface with the Network Rail [[ERTMS]] signaller (in Shrewsbury) to clear the WHR route where it crosses the main [[Cambrian Line|Cambrian Coast]] (standard gauge) line at grade between Pont Croesor and Porthmadog. This is the only mixed narrow/standard-gauge level crossing in the UK, and an interface between 19th and 21st century signalling systems.
|temporary terminus 20 April 1957 to 5 November 1957.
 
|-
== See also ==
|[[Rhiw Goch]]
{{Portal|Trains}}
|[[Rhiw Goch]]
* [[British narrow-gauge railways]]
|1836
* [[Fairlie locomotive]]
|Open
* [[Gloddfa Ganol]]
|4 miles 16 chains (6.76 km)
* [[Llechwedd Slate Caverns]]
|Passing loop for horse-drawn trains until 1863 and for at least the next two years by steam trains. Re-instated as a passing loop for use by passenger trains in 1975.
 
|-
==Notes==
|[[Plas Private Station]]
{{notelist}}
|[[Tan y Bwlch]]
|1865
|c. 1920
|6 miles 2 chains (9.70 km)
|used only by the Oakeley household at Plas Tan y Bwlch.
|-
|[[Plas Halt railway station|Plas Halt]]
|[[Tan y Bwlch]]
|1963
|Open
|6 miles 19 chains (10.04 km)
|opened 31 May 1963.
|-
|[[Hafod y Llyn]]
|[[Tan y Bwlch]]
|1836
|1873
|?
|used for passing slate trains until 1865 and as passenger station 1865 to 1873.
|-
|[[Tan-y-Bwlch railway station|Tan-y-Bwlch]]
|[[Tan y Bwlch]]
|1873
|Open
|7 miles 35 chains (11.97 km)
|temporary terminus 5 April 1958 to 5 April 1968.
|-
|[[Coed y Bleddiau]]
|[[Coed y Bleddiau]]
|1865?
|Open
|?
|private platform serving Coed y Bleddiau cottage which is only accessible by rail or footpath.
|-
|[[Campbell's Platform railway station|Campbell's Platform]]
|[[Y Dduallt]]
|1968
|Open
|9 miles 7 chains (14.62 km)
|Private halt serving [http://www.snowdoniamanor.co.uk/accommodation/index.htm Plas y Dduallt], a 15th Century Welsh Manor House.
|-
|[[Dduallt railway station|Dduallt]]
|[[Moel Dduallt]]
|1880?
|Open
|9 miles 44 chains (15.37 km)
|temporary terminus 6 April 1968 to 24 June 1978.
|-
|[[Gelliwiog]]
|[[Moel Dduallt]]
|1975
|1978
|?
|temporary terminus of push-pull shuttle trains from Dduallt 26 May 1975 to 24 June 1978.
|-
|[[Tunnel South loop]]
|[[Moelwyn Mawr]]
|1842
|c1865
|?
|used for passing horse drawn trains and early steam trains.
|-
|[[Tunnel Halt]]
|[[Moelwyn Mawr]]
|1920's?
|1939
|10 miles 60 chains (17.30 km)
|at the northern end of the old Moelwyn tunnel.
|-
|[[Llyn Ystradau]]
|[[Tanygrisiau reservoir]]
|1977
|1978
|?
|temporary terminus 25 June 1977 to 23 June 1978.
|-
|[[Tanygrisiau railway station|Tanygrisiau]]
|[[Tanygrisiau]]
|1866
|Open
|12 miles 10 chains (19.51 km)
|temporary terminus 24 June 1978 to 24 May 1982.
|-
|[[Dinas (FR)|Dinas]]
|[[Blaenau Ffestiniog]]
|1865
|1870
|13 miles 2 chains (20.96 km)
|the original northern terminus opened 6 January 1865 until Duffws opened in 1866. Until closure in 1870, alternate trains continued to run to Dinas.
|-
|[[Blaenau Ffestiniog (LNWR)]]
|[[Blaenau Ffestiniog]]
|1881
|1939
|13 miles 2 chains (20.96 km)
|‘''Stesion Fein’'' (narrow station) - transit station for LNWR/LMS
|-
|[[Blaenau Ffestiniog (GWR)]]
|[[Blaenau Ffestiniog]]
|1883
|1939
|13 miles 50 chains (21.93 km)
|joint station with GWR. Terminus from 31 May 1931.
|-
|[[Duffws]]
|[[Blaenau Ffestiniog]]
|1866
|1931
|13 miles 75 chains (22.43 km)
|alternate trains only ran to Duffws until 1870 when Dinas was closed to passengers.
|-
|[[Blaenau Ffestiniog railway station|Blaenau Ffestiniog]]
|[[Blaenau Ffestiniog]]
|1982
|Open
|13 miles 50 chains (21.93 km)
|Joint station with [[British Rail]] ([[Conwy Valley Line]]) opened 25 May 1982.
|-
|}
 
==References==
{{Reflist|colwidth=35em}}
#Ove Arup & Partners; Report on a Rock Fall at Penlan, Ffestiniog Railway, 1979
#E.Beazley; Madocks and the Wonder of Wales, 1967
#R.F.Bleasdale; Spooner Album, 1887, also repub. with commentary by A. Gray, 2003
#D.Blenkinsop; Linda & Blanche 1993
#J.I.C.Boyd; Narrow Gauge Rails to Portmadoc, 1949
#J.I.C.Boyd; On the Welsh Narrow Gauge, no date (1970s)
#J.I.C.Boyd; The Festiniog Railway, 1959, revised edns 1965,1975
#J.Buck; Didcovering Narrow Gauge Railways, 1972
#D.J.Charlton; FR Spotter's Guide; 2001
#C.F.Cliffe; Book of North Wales, 1850
#W.J.K.Davies; Narrow Gauge Railways, 1962
#R.Edwards & P.Moss (eds); Festiniog Railway Historic Drawings, 1997
#R.F.Fairlie; Battle of the Gauges renewed, 1872
#R.F.Fairlie; Locomotive Engines, what they are and what they should be, 1881, reprint 1969
#Ffestiniog Railway Co.; Share prospectus, Traveller's Guides, Stock Books, Guide Books (about 40 in all), 1957-2005
#Festiniog Railway Society; Newsletters 1954-7;
#Ffestiniog Railway Society; FR Magazine, quarterly since 1958
# A. Gray; The Spooner Album, 2003. See also Bleasdale.
#N.F.Gurley; Narrow Gauge Steam out of Portmadoc, 1980
#L.Heath-Humphrys; letter to Railway Gazette, 27 July 1951
#G.T.Heavyside; Narrow Gauge into the 80s, 1980
#B.Hollingsworth; Ffestiniog Adventure, 1981
#F.H.Howson; Narrow Gauge Railways of Britain, 1948
#P.N.Jarvis; Adeiladu Muriau Cerrig Sych - dry stone walling on the Ffestiniog Railway, 1993, revised edn 1995
#P.Johnson; Ffestiniog Railway - a View from the Past, 1997
#P.Johnson; Immortal Rails; the Story of the Closure and Revival of the Ffestiniog Railway 1939-1983 Vol.1 2004, 2004, ISBN 1-9000622-08-4 £35; Vol II 2005 ISBN 1-900622-09-2 £35. Rail Romances, Chester.
#P.Johnson; Portrait of the Ffestiniog, 1992
#P.Johnson; Welsh Narrow gauge; a view from the past, 1992
#P.Johnson; Welsh Narrow Gauge in colour, 1992
#P.Johnson & C.M.Whitehouse; Ffestiniog mewn lliw, 1995
#J.R.Jones & A.Pritchard; Great Little Steam Railways of Wales, 1991
#F.Jux; British Narrow gauge Steam, 1960
#R.W.Kidner; Narrow Gauge Railways of Wales, 1947
#M.Kington; Steaming through Britain, 1990
#C.E.Lee; Narrow Gauge Railways in North Wales, 1945
#M.J.T.Lewis; How Ffestiniog got its Railway, 1965, revised edn 1968
#J.G.V.Mitchell & A.G.W.Garraway; Ffestiniog in the Fifties, 1997
#J.G.V.Mitchell & A.G.W.Garraway; Ffestiniog in the Sixties, 1997
#J.G.V.Mitchell & A.G.W.Garraway; Return to Blaenau 1970-82, 2001
#J.C.V.Mitchell, Smith, Seymour, Gray; Branch lines around Porthmadog, 2 vols, 1993
#F.H.Pole (ed); Welsh Mountain Railways, 1924, reprint 1985
#J.D.C.A.Prideaux; Welsh Narrow Gauge Railway, 1976
#P.J.G.Ransom; Narrow Gauge Steam, 1996
#P.J.G. Ransom; Locomotion, 2001
#A.Roberts; Gossiping Guide to North Wales, 1879 (the 5/- version is much superior to the 6d. edition)
#L.J.Roberts; Festiniog & Welsh Highland Holiday book, 1923
#H.R.Schwabe; Mit Volldampf nach Ffestiniog, 1978
#C.E.Spooner; Narrow Gauge Railways, 1871, revised edn 1879
#H.Stretton; Past & Present Companion; Ffestiniog Railway, 1998
#M.J.Stretton; Festiniog Railway in Camera, 1971-1971, revised edn 1999
#'Taliesin' (C.R.Weaver et al.); Festiniog Railway locomotives, 1988
#J.Timpson; Little Trains of Britain, 1992
#E.Vignes; Étude technique sur le chemin de fer Festiniog, 1878, English translation by Don Boreham 1986
#F.T.Wayne; When Accounts become misleading Nonsense, Accountancy, Nov 1961
#P.B.Whitehouse; Festiniog Railway Revival, 1963
#P.B.Whitehouse; Welsh Narrow Gauge Album, 1969
#P.B.Whitehouse & P.C.Allen; Round the World on Narrow Gauge, 1966
#P.B.Whitehouse & P.C.Allen; Narrow Gauge the World over, 1976
#C.Winchester & C.J.Allen,(eds.); Railway Wonders of the World, Vol 2, pp.1224-28. ca.1938.
#J.Winton; Little Wonder, 1975, revised edn 1986
 
==See alsoBibliography==
{{refbegin|20em}}
* [[Conwy Valley Line]]
*{{Boyd-FR1}}
* [[Welsh Highland Railway]]
*{{Boyd-FR2}}
* [[List of British Narrow Gauge Railways]]
*Ove [[WorsleyArup Works]]& producePartners; kits''Report foron thosea whoRock modelFall theat Penlan, Ffestiniog Railway'', 1979
*E. Beazley; ''Madocks and the Wonder of Wales'', 1967
*R. F. Bleasdale; ''Spooner Album'', 1887, also repub. with commentary by A. Gray, 2003
*D. Blenkinsop; ''Linda & Blanche'' 1993
*J. I. C. Boyd; ''Narrow Gauge Rails to Portmadoc'', 1949
*J. I. C. Boyd; ''On the Welsh Narrow Gauge'', no date (1970s)
*J. Buck; ''Discovering Narrow Gauge Railways'', 1972
*D. J. Charlton; ''FR Spotter's Guide;'' 2001
*C. F. Cliffe; ''Book of North Wales'', 1850
*W. J. K. Davies; ''Narrow Gauge Railways'', 1962
*R. Edwards & P. Moss (eds); ''Festiniog Railway Historic Drawings'', 1997
*R. F. Fairlie; ''Battle of the Gauges renewed'', 1872
*R. F. Fairlie; ''Locomotive Engines, what they are and what they should be'', 1881, reprint 1969
*Festiniog Railway Co.; Share prospectus, Traveller's Guides, Stock Books, Guide Books (about 40 in all), 1957–2005
*Festiniog Railway Society; Newsletters 1954-7;
*Festiniog Railway Society; ''FR Magazine'', quarterly since 1958 – Ffestiniog since 1994
*A. Gray; ''The Spooner Album'', 2003. See also Bleasdale.
*N. F. Gurley; ''Narrow Gauge Steam out of Portmadoc'', 1980
*L. Heath-Humphrys; letter to [[Railway Gazette International|Railway Gazette]], 27 July 1951
*G. T. Heavyside; ''Narrow Gauge into the 80s'', 1980
*B. Hollingsworth; ''Ffestiniog Adventure'', 1981
*F. H. Howson; ''Narrow Gauge Railways of Britain'', 1948
*P. N. Jarvis; ''Adeiladu Muriau Cerrig Sych – dry stone walling on the Ffestiniog Railway'', 1993, revised edn 1995
* {{cite book |author-link=Peter Johnson (railway historian) |first=Peter |last=Johnson |title=Ffestiniog Railway – a View from the Past |date=1997}}
* {{cite book |author-link=Peter Johnson (railway historian) |first=Peter |last=Johnson |title=An Illustrated History of the Festiniog Railway 1832–1954 |date=2007}}
* {{cite book |author-link=Peter Johnson (railway historian) |first=Peter |last=Johnson |title=Immortal Rails; the Story of the Closure and Revival of the Ffestiniog Railway 1939–1983 |volume=I |date=2004 |isbn=1-900622-08-4 |publisher=Rail Romances |___location=Chester}}
* {{cite book |author-link=Peter Johnson (railway historian) |first=Peter |last=Johnson |title=Immortal Rails; the Story of the Closure and Revival of the Ffestiniog Railway 1939–1983 |volume=II |date=2005 |isbn=1-900622-09-2 |publisher=Rail Romances |___location=Chester}}
* {{cite book |title=Portrait of the Ffestiniog |first=Peter |last=Johnson |author-link=Peter Johnson (railway historian) |date=1992}}
* {{cite book |title=Welsh Narrow gauge; a view from the past |first=Peter |last=Johnson |author-link=Peter Johnson (railway historian) |date=1992}}
* {{cite book |title=Welsh Narrow Gauge in colour |first=Peter |last=Johnson |author-link=Peter Johnson (railway historian) |date=1992}}
*[[Peter Johnson (railway historian)|P. Johnson]] & C.M. Whitehouse; ''Ffestiniog mewn lliw'', 1995
*J. R. Jones & A. Pritchard; ''Great Little Steam Railways of Wales'', 1991
*F. Jux; ''British Narrow gauge Steam'', 1960
*R. W. Kidner; ''Narrow Gauge Railways of Wales'', 1947
*M. Kington; ''Steaming through Britain'', 1990
*C. E. Lee; ''Narrow Gauge Railways in North Wales'', 1945
*M. J. T. Lewis; ''How Ffestiniog got its Railway'', 1965, revised edn 1968
*[[Vic Mitchell|J. C. V. Mitchell]] & A.G.W. Garraway; ''Festiniog in the Fifties'', 1997
*J. C. V. Mitchell & A.G.W. Garraway; ''Festiniog in the Sixties'', 1997
*J. C. V. Mitchell & A.G.W. Garraway; ''Return to Blaenau 1970–82'', 2001
*J. C. V. Mitchell, Smith, Seymour, Gray; ''Branch lines around Porthmadog'', 2 vols, 1993
*F. H. Pole (ed); ''Welsh Mountain Railways'', 1924, reprint 1985
*J. D. C. A. Prideaux; ''Welsh Narrow Gauge Railway'', 1976
*{{Quine-FR}}
*[[P. J. G. Ransom]]; ''Narrow Gauge Steam'', 1996
*[[P. J. G. Ransom]]; ''Locomotion'', 2001
*A. Roberts; ''Gossiping Guide to North Wales'', 1879 (the 5/- version is much superior to the 6d edition)
*L. J. Roberts; ''Festiniog & Welsh Highland Holiday book'', 1923
*H. R. Schwabe; ''Mit Volldampf nach Ffestiniog'', 1978
*C. E. Spooner; ''Narrow Gauge Railways'', 1871, revised edn 1879
*H. Stretton; ''Past & Present Companion; Ffestiniog Railway'', 1998
*M. J. Stretton; ''Festiniog Railway in Camera, 1971''-1971, revised edn 1999
*'Taliesin' (C. R. Weaver et al.); ''Festiniog Railway locomotives'', 1988
*J. Timpson; ''Little Trains of Britain'', 1992
*E. Vignes; ''Étude technique sur le chemin de fer Festiniog'', 1878, English translation by Don Boreham 1986
* {{cite book |last1=Waite |first1=James |title=Narrow Gauge Through Porthmadog |series=Narrow Gauge Album No. 6 |date=2023 |publisher=Mainline & Maritime |___location=Chippenham, Wilts, UK |isbn=9781900340861 |url={{GBurl|3cOWzgEACAAJ}}}}
*F. T. Wayne; "When Accounts become misleading Nonsense", ''Accountancy'', November 1961
* {{cite book |first=P. B. |last=Whitehouse |title=Festiniog Railway Revival |date=1963 |author-link=Patrick Whitehouse}}
* {{cite book |first=P. B. |last=Whitehouse |title=Welsh Narrow Gauge Album |date=1969 |author-link=Patrick Whitehouse}}
* {{cite book |first1=P. B. |last1=Whitehouse |first2=P.C. |last2=Allen|title=Round the World on the Narrow Gauge |date=1966 |author-link1=Patrick Whitehouse}}
* {{cite book |first1=P. B. |last1=Whitehouse |first2=P.C. |last2=Allen|title=Narrow Gauge the World over |date=1966 |author-link1=Patrick Whitehouse}}
*C. Winchester & C.J. Allen,(eds.); ''Railway Wonders of the World'', Vol 2, pp.&nbsp;1224–28. c. 1938.
*J. Winton; ''Little Wonder'', 1975, revised edn 1986
{{refend}}
{{coord|52.92405|-4.12664|name=Porthmadog, Ffestiniog Railway|format=dms|display=title}}<!-- needed so KML on Category:Heritage railways in Wales will display the line on the map -->
 
==External links==
*[http://www.festrail.co.uk/ The{{commons category|Ffestiniog Railway's website]}}
*[http://www.festrail.co.uk The Ffestiniog Railway's website]
*[http://www.ffestiniograilway.org.uk/ The Ffestiniog Railway Society]
*[http://www.festrail.co.uk/timetable-fr.htm Ffestiniog Railway Timetables] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120926001820/http://www.festrail.co.uk/timetable-fr.htm |date=26 September 2012 }}
*[http://www.frheritage.org.uk/index.html The Festiniog Railway Heritage Group]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20050312074151/http://www.frheritage.org.uk./cgi-bin/wikiindex.pl?Home_Pagehtml The Festiniog Railway Heritage Group's Wiki]
*[http://www.festipedia.org.uk/wiki/Home_Page The Festiniog Railway Heritage Group's Wiki] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121208080600/http://www.festipedia.org.uk/wiki/Home_Page |date=8 December 2012 }}
*[https://www.railwaywondersoftheworld.com/festiniog-railway.html The Festiniog Railway] - Railway Wonders of the World
 
{{Festiniog Railway Company}}
{{British heritage railways}}
{{Ffestiniog Railway}}
{{Heritage railways in Wales}}
{{Historical Welsh railway companies}}
{{Authority control}}
 
[[Category:EarlyFfestiniog BritishRailway| railway companies]]
[[Category:Transport in GwyneddFfestiniog]]
[[Category:Narrow gauge railwaysLlanfrothen]]
[[Category:Visitor attractions in WalesMaentwrog]]
[[Category:Penrhyndeudraeth]]
[[cy:Rheilffordd Ffestiniog]]
[[Category:National Transport Trust Red Wheel sites]]
[[Category:Porthmadog]]
[[Category:Heritage railways in Snowdonia]]
[[Category:Narrow-gauge railways in Snowdonia]]
[[Category:HF Stephens]]
[[Category:Railway inclines in Wales]]