The Railway Magazine

A Phoenix from the Ashes

n the western coast of Africa lies a small country with a fascinating but turbulent past. The last 200 years have seen Sierra Leone established as a colony for freed slaves, taken under British protection in the colonial era, achieve independence in the 1960s, survive a brutal civil war, and emerge as nation eager to move forwards.

Sierra Leone may be small relative to the vastness of the African continent (in excess of 30million square kilometres), but with a similar land mass to that of Scotland and a larger, fast-growing population, this African nation is worthy of note, not least fr its railway story.

The earliest railway proposal dates back to 1872 when Sierra Leone was a British colony and protectorate. However, it wasn't until 1893 that a suitable proposal was accepted and work could begin.

The line began in Freetown on the coast and headed in a largely south-eastern direction, stopping jut short of the border with Liberia and, including branch lines, it stretched for 300 miles. Unusually for a line of this length, the gauge was set at 2ft 6 in, and never altered. There were a number of notable viaducts, including the Orugu Bridge, a steel trestle built on a curve outside Freetown, a spectacular sight that sadly recently fell prey to scrap metal thieves. Unsurprisingly for a line built under British rule, everything required for it was built in Britain and shipped overseas for construction. The line was known as the Sierra Leone Government Railway (SLGR).

Delivered in 1897, ahead of the March opening date, the railway's first two locomotives were

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Railway Magazine

The Railway Magazine3 min readCrime & Violence
West Coast Suspends ‘Jacobite’ Operation
JUST eight days before the start of the 2024‘Jacobite’season was due to begin, the West Coast Railway Company (WCR) announced it was suspending the start of the seasonal operation over the West Highland extension. The shock announcement came on March
The Railway Magazine5 min read
Bridge In-fill Removal Costs £350,000
REMOVAL of the controversial in-filling of a bridge on a disused line at Great Musgrave bridge near Kirkby Stephen has cost the taxpayer £352,000. Work to fill the cutting under the bridge with 1600 tonnes of aggregate and concrete occurred in June 2
The Railway Magazine3 min read
Reviews
THIS collection of photographs covers two decades of the changing scene along the coastal route to Holyhead (including the breakwater Class 01s), documenting the locomotives and units that worked in the area during the second half of the BR period. T

Related