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Shannonvale Mill Diorama

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Posted
7 hours ago, Westcorkrailway said:

Not sure if I ever posted these here. But this is from a local modeller who wishes to be anonamous. @Mol_PMB noted that many industrial lines were in the cork/Kerry region. And while I can’t speak for the rest of the network. The West Cork System had a number of private sidings. Beamish had one in Bandon. A small branch for the mills at Desert, Allmans Distillery famously had its own locomotives, Coffeepot and latterly a Peckett 0-4-0 which later became GSR 495. Ironically this locomotive was not only purchased for its age (being less then 10 years old at the time of purchased versus the rest of the aging GSR fleet!) and used for the Fords/Dunlop siding. The tight curves on some Cork City Railway Curves around the quays and the Corn Mills on the marina making it ideal 

 

anyways I’m missing a major one here. Shannonvale mill in between Ballinascarthy and Clonakilty still stands tall, it closed a year or two after the railway line that served it closed. Shannonvale mills had its own 400 odd meter siding off the Clonakilty branch. Rather than a private locomotive, a horse worked the branch. The last horse work the line known as paddy, who retired to a local farm rather then facing the scrap! Gravity would work the wagons into to Mill while paddy would bring them back out. A deadly dangerous quick release system would engage at the top of the gradient and paddy, along with the workers would have to dash out of the way. the track may have been lifted by CIE funnily enough as according the local accounts was lifted by a rail tractor (which CIE used to lift the T&C branch line among other light track 

 

 

some footage of paddy 

https://youtube.com/clip/UgkxL5hDnFAZ6geNU215dcVm84m_Tt7wHGfk?si=6t1xIjELaKddy9Dp

 

https://youtube.com/clip/UgkxYZD5EQbx7WjEFkncZEAksHxedcphB8wA?si=O9mofvztnjWiukhZ


interestingly Cork and Bandon Railway are recorded as saying that locomotives did end up going down there. Impossible the verify other then word of mouth and one recorded interview from the 1960s. Beet was certainly stored down there during a particularly busy season in the 1950s according to Ray Good  


IMG_3100.thumb.jpeg.2c0817a0b667bd0e1e7ab97c5e5332f6.jpeg

31/03/1961 taken from the cab of the last Ex-Clonakilty mixed train the pulls up to the mills where the last wagons will be taken (C) Brian Baker 

anyways this layout is supposed to capture the mill, not long after closure. Enjoy! 
IMG_3099.thumb.jpeg.4101bdf42ad79aaa39410f7d157ec800.jpegIMG_3098.thumb.jpeg.348a129666c41945b19e8ef67688c558.jpegIMG_3097.thumb.jpeg.a1878e138fdffffe63b56acf649bb488.jpegIMG_3096.thumb.jpeg.9649def9444b37af3ab4c33b124ad4c6.jpegIMG_3095.thumb.jpeg.753bf46199ab935819d54a014eb7c1b5.jpegIMG_3093.thumb.jpeg.c1b852d02a05726fb09684b6b8d07c0d.jpeg

I like sidings, and these photos are just brilliant. The photo with the overgrown laneway and the abandoned wagon is  superb. 

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