Please *SUBSCRIBE* *SHARE* and *COMMENT* You can also *FOLLOW* on Instagram @rediscoveringlostrailways. Exploring what remains and what there is to rediscover of the lost branch line to Hadleigh (Suffolk).

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00:00 Prologue
01:18 Route Overview
01:49 Bentley
03:15 Junction to Hadleigh
04:05 Bentley Church
05:26 Capel
07:00 Raydon Wood
07:53 Along the trackbed
09:33 Hadleigh

Through this sylvan glade,  there once ran a railway. Crossing red-brick bridges… …Cutting through woodland… …And calling at ornately fashioned stations. It is all but gone today,  lost to both nature and time. Let us go then, together, to seek out  its route and to locate its relics… …to take in views from the past…

…and and to journey where trains once ran… …and where rails once lay. Located south-west of the Anglian port  of Ipswich, the line in question ran for   seven and a half miles between the Suffolk  village of Bentley and the town of Hadleigh. Hadleigh was renowned for  its wool and cloth making;  

It was these industries that partly  gave rise to the railway itself   so that this valuable product could be  distributed with greater ease nationwide. Ultimately closing in 1965,   traces of this rural line are still  to be found several decades hence… Our journey begins at Bentley  on the Great Eastern Main Line.

Here’s the station in 1963 as a Class 37  powers through with a London bound express. From a similar position today. The station  closed in 1966 as part of wider economies. Not visible in the previous picture, the bay  platform which served the line to Hadleigh.

Here with Brush Type 2 No.D5544 which  headed the ‘Lockie Add-on Rail Tour’ of   the 20th of April 1962. This train will  be taking us down the branch shortly. Notice, too, the signal box which,  along with this platform and the   surrounding yard, have all been swept away.

The aforesaid platform was located on the other  side of the fence, where the trees now grow. Trains would then travel north by half  a mile before taking the points and   diverting in a north-westerly  direction towards Hadleigh. We see this moment in action from  the same rail tour of April 1962.

It is worth spending a few moments examining  this junction. The Great Eastern Mainline   runs north and we can see where the Hadleigh  Branch diverged from the mainline due west. Until 1875 this was in fact a triangular junction,   which allowed services to travel  to and from Ipswich directly.

After the spur’s closure, trains from  Ipswich had to reverse at Bentley. In the years since closure, it  is little wonder that nature has   reclaimed the site of this northward  spur but relics are still to be found. Before long, our first stop  occurs at Bentley Church

Opened for 7 years between 1846 and 1853,  photographs of the station are difficult   to come by, but it was certainly located near  this delightful rossing keeper’s cottage… …and and this building remains secluded in this  quiet lane, guarded by the woodland all around.

So our journey continues and the line’s  rural character becomes ever more pronounced. Camouflaged in the intervening  years since it last saw trains,   this plate layer’s hut becomes  ever more consumed by nature… …but if you know what you’re looking for, then  the railway’s course is still easily found…

…and among these naturally framed sylvan scenes,   the relics of this railway  continue to stand undisturbed. Two miles after departure from  Bentley, we approach the next station. Capel served the village of Capel St Mary. Like a great many similar stations, it was  located at a reasonable distance from the  

Village it served, and indeed, six years into  the line’s opening, that village had only 651   residents. It is little wonder that such stations  and such routes became financially unsustainable. But what a shame to have lost the  delightfully ornate station building,   where now stands a more conventional structure.

Indeed as we continue west, the rural character is   briefly and abruptly lost as the A12  bisects what was once the track bed… …imagine the ire of motorists today if the level   crossing continued to be in  place now as it was then… …luckily, two miles later the  balm of songbirds and the buzz of  

Insects returns and we encounter this  occupation bridge standing strong and   with its characteristic red brick colour,  the signature of this line’s architecture. Trains continued west. And here on Bottle Bridge Road passed  beneath a bridge which has long since   been demolished and filled in,  with only the ghostly tree-lined  

Traces of the track bed betraying  the railway’s westward journey. Thus, three miles from Capel, we arrive at  Raydon Wood, our penultimate point of calling. We view the station’s north  side in this photograph. Like other stations along the route, passenger  traffic did very little to pay the line’s bills,  

Though like Capel during the Second World  War, the station was used a great deal,   bringing personnel and supplies to the vast  US Air Force Base to the south of the station. Today as viewed from its south side,  the station has benefited from partial  

Restoration and we can see just how ornate and  characterful were the buildings on this route. Here’s a fine picture of the same from 2008. Time to leave. Between Raydon Wood station and Hadleigh,  the track bed is now a foot and cycle path…

…but here’s how the same part of the  route looked on a spring day in 1962. Few structures were built for this section  of the line, but this occupation bridge,   which connects the two sides  of Raydon Great Wood, remains. We pass over Kate’s Hill embankment,  

Close to where the first sod was  cut in the railway’s construction. What the trees mask here is that in  places this embankment is about 40   ft high and the slopes on either  the side are quite precipitous. Here we find the bridge on Hook  Lane, over which the railway crossed.

Indeed the end of the cycle path is marked by this   installation which alludes to the  history of this stretch of land… …as does this upright length of rail. And so beyond the trees we the final station. As mentioned, Hadleigh was an important  centre for the wool and clothing industry  

And like any reasonably prosperous town of  the mid 19th century it saw the coming of   the railway as an opportunity  to strengthen its prospects. Seen here after closure, the station is no less  attractive than those which populated the route.

Eequipped with sizable goods sidings serving the  giant malt houses, it is no wonder that goods   continued to serve the town for three decades  after the cessation of passenger services. Sadly the story of the Hadleigh  branch line is not unfamiliar. Noble early ambitions gave  way to economic realities and,   as outgoings increased, incomes faltered.

Of course this focus on the economics  loses sight of the great social benefits   of these little lines, but this was not a  column to be found in the balance sheets. Today the station building in  Hadleigh is a private residence,   and a fine architectural legacy  of a railway which closed in 1965.

I hope you enjoyed this film.  Please do like, share, subscribe,   comment and perhaps even consider buying  me a coffee and join me again so that we   might continue rediscovering lost railways.

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28 Comments

  1. Another wonderful video, thanks. I pass Capel Station Garage on the A12 when visiting my son in Colchester and your pictures in the video showing its location and former glory really opened my eyes to how much we have lost.

  2. As an historian and collector of artifacts of the Hadleigh branch it's good to see you've done your research. A well put together project.
    There's quite a few more hidden treasures along the line if you know where to look. Thankfully through the permission of local landowners I've also got to visit some parts that are off limits to the public. This included a recent visit inside Raydon station.
    I also recently met with someone who lived in Capel station until it's demolition. It was great to get his memories of life on the branch line.

  3. Totally enjoyed again and thank you.
    We enjoyed a day at the MIDDY about 2 years ago which is recreating the time of such branch lines. With their history evolving nicely. "I have a friend with 60 feet of track… I know a bloke with 60 feet as well!" said another. "We know someone with a waggon!" and so assembled a little railway. Then a Steam Locomotive turned up. D & L.

  4. Another great video as ever walked that line about 10 years ago so was good to see it again. Good to see Raydon Wood done up so well now. Thanks

  5. Well done! An enjoyable interlude. The point where the line left the main line north-east of Bentley was not a junction, at least after WW2. The junction was at Bentley station and the Hadleigh branch ran alongside the main line until the point of divergence

  6. What a gem often on a Sunday in mid sixties used to walk route with my parents and siblings went on to work for British Railways at Ipswich upon leaving school in 1969.Became a signalman at Bentley,meet a young lady from the village and consequently married at Bentley church .Sadly resigned from B R in 1973/4 pay insufficient for us to buy house and start a family.When Bentley signal box was demolished ,(during electrification of G E main line) I received one of the name boards and original L N E R signal box diagram which I still treasure.We had no running water at the box ( early shift always filled canisters from the crossing hut) and doughnut Tilley lamps supplied lighting.After branch closed a signal box from l believe Raydon became a builder’s office in Capel village and if memory serves me correctly is now at Bressingham steam museum near Diss.Hadleigh would benefit from branch reopening as would Ipswich as a commuter route Thankyou for posting fantastic film.

  7. One of the great points of the original railway companies competetive streaks was the wonderful range of architecture within the buildings as thye tried to outdo each other in grandeur.
    But it's also good the Nature is taking back what was wrested from her all those years ago. 😊

  8. Lovely video. I live not far away (Colchester) and have walked the line between Raydon and Hadleigh, though I don't remember finding Hadleigh station building on that occasion. Have also explored the area around Bentley and the junction, taken some photos of today's trains there. You can see where the branch line ran parallel to the mainline until 'the island'.

  9. Having ridden along the old trackway from Raydon to Hadleigh a few times I found this video absolutely fascinating especially the old photos of a bygone era, which along with the excellent narration, bring the whole subject to life. Although I’ve never really had an interest in trains (bizarre considering I grew up close to where David Shepherd kept his ‘toys’ & rode on them as a kid in the late 60’s) I find nowadays I really enjoy exploring old abandoned railway lines. I hasten to add using a mountain bike does make it somewhat easier to cover what are sometimes distances that aren’t really feasible on foot in a day. Of note these are the ‘Marriotts Way’ which runs from Aylesham north of Norwich and heads west before it then loops all the way back into Norwich. The Cuckoo Trail running from Heathfield in Sussex down to Eastbourne and also the ‘Down’s Link’ running from Guildford in Surrey down to Shoreham on the Sussex coast. Finally the ‘Flitch Way’ running from Braintree in Essex to Bishop’s Stortford in Hertfordshire – would love to see any one of these given the ‘Rediscovering Lost Railways’ treatment. Now to sit & watch your entire catalogue. Keep up your excellent work 👍

  10. I think you got one of the bridges in the wrong location. Or you're missing a bridge and added one I don't know about.
    But the video itself was very good. I've lived in Hadleigh and Capel since 1995, grew up as a kid playing in the woods along the branch line and learn a few things from the video.

  11. Thank you for this. The stations on that line were lovely buildings. It's a shame that the railway didn't go in a useful direction, so passengers were tempted away by motor buses very early – in the 1930s, I believe. Even by rural East Anglian standards, that was early.

  12. Another lovely film, beautifully produced as ever. I loved the photos of the 1962 railtour, with passengers just standing in those goods trucks as they trundled along. Not exactly in line with modern-day health and safety procedures!

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