The idea of a form of transport to carry passengers up and down Lincoln's Steep Hill had been around since the early 1890s. This was the idea of William Lilly, a surveyor and City Sheriff in 1908.
The plan was to build a terminus at the east end of St Martin's churchyard at the top of the High Street; it would have meant knocking down houses in the Drapery, courts and yards off St Martin's Lane, the worst slums in Lincoln. The track would then enter a tunnel under Michaelgate and emerge at the upper terminus behind 2 Exchequergate.
St Martin's Lane, the railway would have a tunnel about 200 feet from this point. |
The total length of the railway was planned to be 1,000 feet and it would rise 142 feet.
The Dean & Chapter at Lincoln Cathedral were consulted on the plans about 1900, they were in favour along with all the Cathedral dignitaries. The Ecclesiastical Commissioners granted an easement under the Precentory garden for 999 years at £1 per year.
There was a new impetus to build the railway in 1908. Three twenty-foot deep holes were dug to inspect the geology of the ground where the tunnel would pass beneath; at Birdcage Walk on Michaelgate, near the Harlequin and in the grounds of the Precentory. Harley Hugh Dalrymple-Hay was an engineer working on the London Underground, he visited Lincoln to inspect the ground where the trial holes were dug, he descended the Birdcage Walk and Harlequin holes, he was satisfied that the land was stable for the digging of the tunnel.
The upper terminus would have been behind this building. |
- A funicular railway, using an electrically powered winding drum at the head of the track to pull a car up on a steel cable while releasing a second car to travel down on a second cable.
- Using cars similar to the electric trams running on the High Street.
The Intended Route of the Railway |
Saltburn Funicular Railway http://www.engineering-timelines.com/ |
5 comments:
Should that read "In November 1909 Lincoln City Council voted against the Steep Hill railway proposed by William Lilly" ?
Yes it should, thank you for your comment.
Could you please list the refences that you used in your research.
Could you please list the sources that you used in your research.
Hello Paul, The information was taken from newspaper reports.
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