Tywyn Wharf railway station
Tywyn Wharf railway station is the western terminus and principal station of the Talyllyn Railway in Tywyn, Gwynedd in mid-Wales.
Edward Thomas in Tywyn Wharf Station. 29 April 2005.
Tywyn Wharf station in 1905
Wharf station in 2008, showing the original slate loading wharf
The Talyllyn Railway is a narrow-gauge railway in Wales running for 7+1⁄4 miles (12 km) from Tywyn on the Mid-Wales coast to Nant Gwernol near the village of Abergynolwyn. The line was opened in 1865 to carry slate from the quarries at Bryn Eglwys to Tywyn, and was the first narrow gauge railway in Britain authorised by Act of Parliament to carry passengers using steam haulage. Despite severe underinvestment, the line remained open, and in 1951 it became the first railway in the world to be preserved as a heritage railway by volunteers.
Talyllyn Railway - geograph.org.uk - 866546
The remains of Bryn Eglwys quarry in 2008
Talyllyn posed on Dolgoch Viaduct around 1867, the earliest known photograph of the Talyllyn
Talyllyn at the foot of the Alltwyllt incline, the present site of Nant Gwernol station, 1890