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The Lynn and Dereham Railway was a standard gauge single track railway running between King's Lynn and Dereham in the English county of Norfolk. The Lynn to Dereham line opened in 1846 and closed in 1968, although the section between Middleton Towers and King's Lynn remains open to freight. ==History== The Lynn & Dereham Railway, which weaved a route to East Dereham via Narborough and Swaffham, was given the Royal Assent on 21 July 1845, opening in stages between 1846 and 1848;〔Oppitz 2002, p. 17.〕 this later became part of the Great Eastern Railway. Only the section of line between King's Lynn and Narborough was opened under the L&DR, on 17 October 1846. The remainder of the line was opened in stages by the L&DR's immediate successor, the East Anglian Railway. The original intention of the company had been to extend their line to Great Yarmouth, via Norwich, but this plan was blocked by the rival Wymondham to Dereham scheme proposed by the Norfolk Railway.〔Jenkins, 1999, page 19〕 A reported case in the Court of Common Pleas in 1850 〔Heyhoe v. Burge (1850) S. C. 19 L. J. C. P. 243〕 reported that a five-mile section of the railway was constructed at a cost of £41,029. The case concerned a mason and bricklayer (Mr. Heyhoe) suing for his fees after the two of the partners (a Mr. Fry and a Mr. Frost) of the firm to whom the railway had subcontracted the job had become bankrupt, the issue being whether a third person (Mr. Burge) was also a partner and thus liable for the partnership debts. The case is still considered an authority in English law on when a person who has not signed a partnership deed can treated as regards outsiders as a partner in the firm by reason of the conduct of the parties.〔Halisbury's Laws of England〕 Diesel units were introduced in 1955, based at Dereham. Services increased from 5 or 6, to twelve a day and journey time was cut to an average of 54 minutes. Prior to that passenger trains were mostly worked by D16s and freight by J17s.〔Railway Magazine June 1958 pp. 376-380 Donald J Gordon: The Lynn & Dereham Railway〕 The line was closed to passenger and freight services by the Eastern Region of British Railways on Saturday 7 September 1968, save for a three-mile〔To be precise, . See 〕 section for sand freight from King's Lynn to Middleton,〔Oppitz 2002, p. 18.〕 however Wendling station and its road bridge became immortalised on film for all time in several episodes of the British situation comedy Dad's Army, as it continued for a short while as a filming location. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Lynn and Dereham Railway」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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