Galway to Clifden Railway
The Galway to Clifden Railway or Connemara Railway was a railway line opened in Ireland by the Midland Great Western Railway in 1895. It led from Galway to Clifden, the chief town of the sparsely populated Connemara region in western County Galway. It was closed by the MGWR's successor, the Great Southern Railways in 1935.
History
Initial suggestions for developing the sparsely populated region of Connemara with a railway line go back to the early days of the railways in Ireland when it became foreseeable that the railway network would reach the provincial centre, Galway. The town of Clifden was mainly connected by sea, with a stagecoach and wagons providing limited overland transport links. These connections were completely inadequate, especially in severe winters, and such weather conditions led to crop failures in the 1880s. The impoverishment of the population in Connemara rose dramatically and calls for a rail link as a structural measure were loud, the project even described as "a matter of national importance". However, all initiatives initially failed due to the financial resources.Financing and construction
Under Arthur Balfour, the Light Railway Act from 1889 onwards enabled state financial support for railway projects with little prospect of profit and thus the development of the sparsely populated Irish west on a larger scale. For the MGWR this meant the realization of two projects. In addition to the railway to Clifden, this also made it possible to build the route from Westport to Achill Sound in County Mayo, and both routes were subsequently marketed jointly for tourism.After the decision to build the railway, the route had not yet been finalized. The majority of the population, around 60,000 people, lived along the coast and since there was an urgent need to open up better markets for local fisheries, a coastal route was preferred from Oughterard. For reasons that are not considered to be fully clarified today, however, a route further inland was chosen. The most likely assumption is that the owner of Ballynahinch Castle made a large amount of land available free of charge for the construction of the railway and thus significantly influenced the decision. This variant was shorter, but led through a noticeably less populated area, and because of the swampy subsoil, a more massive substructure had to be built in some sections.
The government approved an amount of £ 246,000 for the Connemara route. Since the construction of the railway was also an emergency measure, every job seeker should be accepted and the first preparatory work began in the winter of 1890/91. Strikes broke out in Clifden for the first time in March 1891. Charles Braddock's contracted construction company accepted all job seekers as requested, but turned out to be a defaulting payer. The further away from Galway, the more irregularly the workers were paid their wages so that further strikes followed. In July 1892, the railway company withdrew the project from Braddock and handed it over to TH Faulkner, under whom the work was now reliably, but no longer as planned in 1893, due to the previous strikes. The further away from Galway, the more irregularly the workers were paid their wages so that further strikes followed. In November 1893, 1,500 workers were employed, not without social tensions with the population, which were often caused by the illegal serving of alcohol on the construction sites.
The operation
The first section from to Oughterard opened on 1 January 1895. Apart from Joseph Tatlow, General Manager of the MGWR, and guests of honour, there was hardly any audience, since New Year's Day was a strict church holiday and was reserved for attending church services. On 1 July 1895, the remainder of the line to Clifden was put into operation, though the stations at and Ballynahinch where not felt sufficiently completed to be initially opened to the public.Due to the distance from the coast, the freight traffic did not take on the originally desired extent but brought the developed region the hoped-for reliable connection to the provincial capital Galway and more distant sales markets. This development prompted the railway company to rely heavily on tourist passenger transport. At the end of the 19th century, the wild and romantic loneliness of Connemara was already enjoying a certain popularity as a summer destination with the aristocracy and the upper classes. Starting in 1903, the Midland Great Western Railway ran direct express trains with dining cars from Dublin to Clifden during the summer season, and an upscale hotel was built at station. Motorized cabs developed as a forerunner of later bus routes the line from Clifden to Westport and established a connection with the other branch line of the railway company. Celebrities and members of the aristocracy who owned summer houses in Connemara or came on fishing holidays aroused the interest of the general public in the region as a travel destination.
The First World War, the Irish War of Independence, and the resulting Irish Civil War cut the tourism business. During the civil war, the railway line was badly damaged in several places, which resulted in a shutdown of seven months.