The Bullo Pill Railway was an early British railway, completed in 1810 to carry coal mined in the Forest of Dean Coalfield to a port on the River Severn near Newnham, Gloucestershire. It was later converted to a broad gauge steam line by the Great Western Railway, and was closed in the 1960s.
Western portal of Haie Hill Tunnel in 2006
The Severn and Wye Railway began as an early tramroad network established in the Forest of Dean to facilitate the carriage of minerals to watercourses for onward conveyance. It was based on Lydney, where a small harbour was constructed, and opened its line to Parkend in 1810. It was progressively extended northwards, and a second line, the Mineral Loop was opened to connect newly opened mineral workings.
A section of the Severn and Wye Railway, now in use as a cycle and footpath.
Trackbed of the 1812 Churchway branch of the Severn & Wye Railway (SO 634 152).
The remains of Coleford station.
Severn Bridge and the railway station of the same name.