That's interesting, it would head under Knox Street and head towards the Monks Ferry Tunnel. This must be the one that was used as a drawing office I think, its somewhere around there.
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I think we are looking at two different things here.
There does seem to have been a tunnel under Monks Ferry (even though it shows as Ivy St on Google Earth) to the old Monks Ferry station (which was later used as a coal terminal). The square shape seen in the ariel photo could mean it was made by the cut and cover method. It seems too small to take an engine. It starts at the top end of the buildings running parallel to Church St, on their easterly side.
Also, there seems to have been two entrances from the shipyard going under Abbey St. when looked at from another ariel photograph. Although the path to it curves with the railway lines, I think it's down an embankment from them.
There's no trace of any of these now, but there is plenty of info on this site regarding the making of the dock and the loss of the graveyard etc.
I've attached another ariel photo on which I've marked in orange the line to Monks Ferry terminal and put green dots at either end of the Monks Ferry tunnel. The purple dots mark what look like round tunnel entrances going under Abbey St.
A former Lairds employee once told me that a tunnel was started somwhere in the yard, but it wasn't very long & came to a dead end. It wasn't a railway tunnel, but something to do with drainage or the like.
The tunnel in the 1912 OS map (post 4) is clearly a rail tunnel. It joins rail tracks at the yard end and at the other end at Monks' Ferry, terminates in a turntable.
Map images below are before and after Princess Dry Dock,other tunnels on these maps are clearly marked. No tunnel is marked at Abbey Street, so was it a tunnel in the planning that was scrapped?
Last edited by bert1; 21st Feb 20157:28am.
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It must have been a tunnel at some point, they aren't going to dig the cutting and lay the line for nothing, its the only line that goes to the Abbey St wall. And we even have a picture of the tunnel entrance above.
We don't do charity in Germany, we pay taxes. Charity is a failure of governments' responsibilities - Henning Wehn
I might be wrong, but looking at the Britain from above pic it looks as though the Tunnel is bricked up and is just buffer stop. Maybe it was intended to be a tunnel, if it was would it have been a link or branch off from monks tunnel (If that was the case then there would be a bricked up area or branch off Monks Tunnel, which there doesn't seem to be). Shame there isn't a recent pic.
Very interesting - I have researched this area quite extensively and only knew of the Monks Ferry tunnel. I think this tunnel was used to move single wagonloads of 'steam coal' into Lairds - for the boilers of ships under construction/test to be steamed on.
Can add a little to the puzzle - on a 1950 Britain from above image - there is a definite buffer stop.
Also and perhaps crucially the line is not a British Railway run one - as it is separated from them by fencing and also it branches from the Lairds line that runs next to the BR line over the bridge on Chester Street.
So it is a private line within the Lairds site...
Also as hinted at above, it is situated in a cutting - on a downward gradient towards the 'tunnel mouth' - so at least it looks like it was meant to go through there at some point.
If it was pre-steam railway (which it isn't) - there were tunnels at much lower heights - just enough to get a horse and wagon through - known as tramways - it initially looks like that may be the case - but the destination of the line is then the issue !
Very interesting - I have researched this area quite extensively and only knew of the Monks Ferry tunnel. I think this tunnel was used to move single wagonloads of 'steam coal' into Lairds - for the boilers of ships under construction/test to be steamed on.
I will look at my maps for the area again !
Now that's a strong possibility. Because of the turntable shown on the 1911 O.S. map it's clear that only one wagon at a time could be transferred from the main line at Monks' Ferry to the line at 90 deg. leading into Laird's.
If the map below is correctly dated, 1850. The rail lines are already in place. The Monks Ferry Tunnel, Chester & Birkenhead railway opened in 1844. Could the tunnel in question(Abbey St) be the one in The Daily News, February 18, 1846. Additional Monks Ferry Tunnel will not be proceeded with.
God help us, Come yourself, Don't send Jesus, This is no place for children.