Harman Patil (Editor)

Talyllyn Junction railway station

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Place
  
Llanhamlach

Grid reference
  
SO106274

1863
  
Opened

Area
  
Powys

Post-grouping
  
Great Western Railway

Talyllyn Junction railway station httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Original company
  
Brecon and Merthyr Railway

Similar
  
Moat Lane Junction railway st, Torpantau railway station, Newtown (Powys) railway st, Colbren Junction railway st, Oswestry railway station

Talyllyn Junction was a railway junction located 4 mi (6.4 km) east of Brecon, Powys, opened in 1863. The junction was triangular, with north, east and west chords, station platforms being sited at the western junction and also, until 1878, at the eastern junction. The Junction took its name from the adjacent tiny hamlet.

The junction was created where the Brecon and Merthyr Railway from the south met the Mid-Wales Railway from the north-east. Both railways were to serve Brecon, and to achieve this the latter had running powers over the former from Talyllyn into Brecon. The eastern spur of the triangle permitted through running from South Wales to mid-Wales and also to Hereford.

The northern side of the triangle followed the course of the 1816 Hay Railway, a tram-road worked by horses connecting the town of Hay with the Brecknock and Abergavenny Canal at Brecon. At the western end lay a tunnel which required widening and deepening for use by standard gauge trains.

Talyllyn Junction is often quoted as a defining feature of the Great Western Railway in Wales, namely its inheritance of junctions in unlikely and inconvenient locations. Other examples are Moat Lane Junction, Dovey Junction, Afon Wen and Barmouth Junction (renamed Morfa Mawddach in 1960).

All the railways at Talyllyn Junction were closed to passengers in 1962.

References

Talyllyn Junction railway station Wikipedia