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Gloucestershire Business News

Steam railway volunteers amazed as appeal raises £100k in just 10 days

More than £100,000 has poured in to the Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway Trust's (GWRT) emergency appeal fund over just ten days. 

This key milestone was passed on April 1 - just ten days after the railway called out for help.

The money is to help the popular heritage railway overcome double disaster: both an embankment landslip which is costing around £500,000 to repair, at a time when the railway has no income thanks to the Coronavirus crisis which has closed down Cotswold tourist attractions.

Glyn Cornish, chairman of the charitable GWRT that supports the volunteer-run Gloucestershire Warwickshire Steam Railway (GWSR), said he is 'stunned and deeply grateful' for the outpouring of public support for the line, which operates steam and heritage diesel trains over its 14-mile railway between Cheltenham Racecourse and Broadway.

The landslip has occurred about half a mile south of Gotherington station near Cheltenham, thanks to unstable ground beneath the embankment coupled with persistent winter rain following a dry summer.

"Frankly, the response has been astonishing and I feel very humbled at the way people have dug in to their pockets to help us through this crisis, when they have plenty of other worries facing them," said Mr Cornish.

"Donations have come from far and wide - including Europe, Australia and Canada. This kind of support underlines just how popular and loved our railway is.

"We have achieved so much over the 39 years that we first occupied a derelict Toddington station. Now we have a 14-mile line that carried over 125,000 passengers last year, making it one of the most popular tourist attractions in the Cotswolds.

"We have faced many setbacks along the way, but it's no exaggeration to say that this latest landslip and the present shut-down have combined to form one of the biggest financial challenges we have ever faced."

Specialist contractors are using a technique known as soil nailing as well as putting in piles to prevent the continuing movement of the embankment - effectively securing it to the land underneath. There were signs that the embankment was becoming unstable before Christmas, the situation worsening in January and February. This has happened despite the railway making significant drainage improvements over the past two or three years.

However, work has had to stop for the time being because of the Coronavirus clamp-down.

The GWSR is unusual for a heritage railway of its size in that it has just six employees and over 950 volunteers who manage the day-to-day operation of the railway.

Mr Cornish added: "I'd like to say a huge 'Thank You' to everyone who has responded to our call for help.

"And while we are all truly amazed at the public response to our dilemma, there is no room for complacency - we need to raise as much money as we possibly can to ensure we can resume the train services that so many people clearly enjoy, when this current crisis is over."

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