Cavan and Leitrim Railway

Gauge: 3ft (915mm)

The Cavan & Leitrim Railway was situated in Southern Ireland, close to the Northern Ireland border. It ran for 34 miles, connecting the towns of Belturbet and Dromod, both served by Irish broad gauge railways. There was a 15 mile branch from Ballinamore to Arigna. Opened in 1887, it remained open years after most of the other 3ft gauge lines closed, finally closing in 1959.

A section of the line at Dromod was reopened by preservationists in 1994.

In 1883 the Cavan, Leitrim and Roscommon Light Railway and Tramway Co. was founded under the terms of the Tramways (Ireland) Act. Its first section, some 34 miles long, and 3ft gauge, was opened in 1887 linking the Midland and Great Western broad gauge station at Dromod to the corresponding Great Northern facility at Belturbet. A branch from Ballinamore to Arigna was opened the next year.

For the first 20 years or so passenger traffic, both regular and excursion, ran well. Light freight including tea, sugar, alcohol and cloth was big business, carried to local stations to be collected by merchants from the surrounding districts. Heavy freight consisted mainly of cattle. Huge fairs like the Monaghan Fair and the twice-yearly fair at Ballymagovern were the mainstay of the narrow gauge as northern buyers were able to move stock readily via the local station and the G.N.R.

The railway became the Cavan and Leitrim in 1895. At the start of the twentieth century the railway possessed nine locomotives, all built by Robert Stephenson and Co.

At this time the directors faced hostile public opinion and struggled vainly for many years to extend its line to the Arigna coal fields. When the extension was finally built in 1920 the political temperature in Ireland was rising, and the initiative was taken by the Government. It was fortuitous that the Arigna line opened when it did. In 1922, the C&L suffered a considerable loss in its trading, with the imposition of partition which cut off a large part of its cattle business. As it was the extension greatly enhanced the railway. Coal was carried to the main lines heading for Limerick and the cement works at Drogheda. Transhipment was a logistical problem since, when the coal arrived at Dromod and Belturbet via the Cavan and Leitrim, it had to be shovelled manually from its wagons into the wagons of the broad gauge.

In 1924, the new Free State Government introduced a Railways Act in an attempt to rationalise and protect the railway sector. All railways were merged into a State run company called Great Southern Railways. The once proudly independent Cavan and Leitrim Railway Company was no more. It was reduced to the role of a subsidiary. During the thirties the line maintained a precarious existence.

The war years led to a respite as coal proved to be a lifeline, and the railway coped successfully with coal traffic of often mammoth proportions. In 1945, a new State transport company incorporating both road and rail transport was set up, replacing the GSR. Cutbacks in the rail service followed but the narrow gauge held out. In the 1950s the old Cavan and Leitrim line was virtually dependent on the coal traffic to Irish Cement at Drogheda. In its last days it made use of engines and rolling stock sent from narrow gauge systems which had closed. However, by 1956, coal carriage was no longer viable. The railway finally succumbed on March 31st 1959, the penultimate Irish narrow gauge system to go (the last being the West Clare Railway).

A section of the line at Dromod was reopened by preservationists in 1994.

Number / NameManufacturerTypeNotes
1 Isabel Robert Stephenson and Co. No.2612 of 18874-4-0TScrapped 1949
2 KathleenRobert Stephenson and Co. No.2613 of 18874-4-0TIn service until closure 1959. Survives at Ulster Folk and Transport Museum
3 Lady Edith Robert Stephenson and Co. No.2614 of 18874-4-0TIn service until closure 1959. Survives at New Jersey Museum of Transportation
4 VioletRobert Stephenson and Co. No.2615 of 18874-4-0TIn service until closure 1959. Scrapped
5 Gertrude Robert Stephenson and Co. No.2616 of 18874-4-0TScrapped 1925
6 May Robert Stephenson and Co. No.2617 of 18874-4-0TScrapped 1927
7 OliveRobert Stephenson and Co. No.2618 of 18874-4-0TScrapped 1945
8 Queen VictoriaRobert Stephenson and Co. No.2619 of 18874-4-0TIn service until closure 1959. Scrapped
9 King EdwardRobert Stephenson and Co. No.3136 of 19040-6-4TScrapped 1934
101A Black, Hawthorn & Co. 0-4-2TIn service 1920-21
102ABlack, Hawthorn & Co. 0-4-2TIn service 1920-21
10L Neilson, Reid & Co. No.5561 of 19002-4-2TEx Cork, Blackrock and Passage Railway 1933. In service till closure 1959
11LNeilson, Reid & Co. No.5562 of 19002-4-2TEx Cork, Blackrock and Passage Railway 1933. Scrapped 1939
12LNeilson, Reid & Co. No.5563 of 19002-4-2TEx Cork, Blackrock and Passage Railway 1933. In service till closure 1959
13LNeilson, Reid & Co. No.5564 of 19002-4-2TEx Cork, Blackrock and Passage Railway 1933. Withdrawn 1954
3THunslet Engine Co. No.479 of 18892-6-0TEx Tralee and Dingle Railway 1941. In service till closure 1959. Scrapped
4TKerr, Stuart & Co. No.836 of 19032-6-0TEx Tralee and Dingle Railway 1941. In service till closure 1959. Scrapped
5THunslet Engine Co. No.555 of 18922-6-2TEx Tralee and Dingle Railway 1949. In service till closure 1959. Survives
6THunslet Engine Co. No.667 of 18982-6-0TEx Tralee and Dingle Railway 1955. In service till closure 1959. Scrapped