The Mildenhall Branch
- The Mildenhall Branch

- The Mildenhall branch was a relative latecomer to the East Anglian railway network. The line was essentially the brainchild of Chrales Allix of Swaffham Prior who advocated a railway to serve the fen shore villages to the north-east of Cambridge in an effort to ease the agricultural depression. With other local landowners and farmers he was dismayed to find the Eastern Counties, Newmarket and other railway routes bypassing the area but with the advent of the Great Eastern Railway Allix hoped for greater success. Unable to raise the neccessary capital, however, he repeatedly approached the GER authorities for backing and finacial support. His proposals were constantly refused so much so that in desperation an unsuccessful approach was also made to the London & North Western Railway.
- Salvation finally came when the GER encountered serious flooding on the Ely to Norwich main line near Lakenheath. Suffering considerable traffic losses, the authorities at Bishopsgate resurrected Allix's proposals and plans quickly came to fruition for a direct route from Cambridge via Mildenhall to Thetford and thence to Norwich, avoiding the area prone to flooding.
- The GER directors were reluctant to finance the total scheme and initially authorised construction only as far as Mildenhall branch was destined to become a mere backwater serving an area of sparse population so that the majority of receipts came from agricultural traffic. The branch survived World War Two but then declined rapidly so that passenger services were withdrawn in 1962 and freight finally three years later.
- 1988, Hardback, 152 pages, 8¾" x 11"
- Wild Swan Publications
- ISBN 0906867681
- New — Out Of Print
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