Forgotten Nottinghamshire railway line could reopen after funding agreed

A forgotten Nottinghamshire railway line linking the county with Derbyshire could reopen after the East Midlands Combined Authority (EMCCA) agreed to put £500,000 towards looking into its reopening.

The Maid Marian Line between Kirkby-in-Ashfield and Pye Bridge in Derbyshire, served passengers until the 1960s, but is now only in use for freight trains.

It connects the Robin Hood Line, from Nottingham to Worksop, with the Erewash Valley Line in Derbyshire, and would allow for cross-county travel in the north of the region.

Proposals to reopen it have been going on since before the pandemic, with Ashfield and Mansfield District Council completing a joint study on its feasibility, and an outline business case report in conjunction with Derbyshire County Council in around 2020.

But after plans went quiet, they reappeared at a recent meeting of EMCCA’s transport committee, as part of a plan for the authority to commit £150 million to regional transport projects over the next three years.

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Documents say: “A revenue allocation of £500,000 has been included to develop the business case and enable the proposal to be considered as an option for capital funding in the later years of the programme.”

When asked about the funding, East Midlands Mayor Claire Ward made it clear that there was no guarantee or promise of the line reopening.

She said: “We’ve had a series of different investments that we want to put in, including looking at the Maid Marian Line, considering the feasibility of it. It’s not an agreement to do it, it’s not funding to do it. It’s simply to update that business case and see what the options are.”

The benefits and viability of reopening the Maid Marian Line as a passenger route have been researched and studied for a number of years.

It closed to regular passenger traffic in 1947 but continued in partial use until 1963, when it was shut as part of the Beeching Axe of that decade.

Currently, rail users can get to Derby city from Nottingham and back directly, but to get to anywhere else in either county, a change is required in either Chesterfield or Sheffield.

The reopening would provide train links between Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire for residents of Pinxton and Selston, whose station fell out of use when the line stopped being used for passenger trains more than 60 years ago.

At a meeting of the EMCCA transport committee on 2 April, Head of Transport Investment Alex Linton said that more than 100 projects had applied for funding available from the authority, but the Maid Marian Line was chosen at this point because proposals are far more developed than those for other rail investments.

He said: “The Maid Marian Line has a specific line because the proposal is a bit further developed. The information that has been shared with us is more detailed and a full specific request was made for that one.

“But that doesn’t mean that it’s the only (rail network proposal) we’re supporting. We’re also allocating £2 million for rail development and that (money) would be (used for) looking at what those other line options are and what those other infrastructure options around the rail line are.”

One of these other projects is the potential extension of the Robin Hood Line, between Nottingham and Worksop, back out to stations that also closed during the Beeching cuts of the 1960s, such as Warsop, Ollerton and Edwinstowe.

Sherwood Forest MP Michelle Welsh raised the issue of the opening of the stations during a Westminster Hall debate in February, arguing that transport to her historic constituency was lacking and that a re-established line would provide an important tourism boost.

At the EMCCA meeting, Alex Linton said: “The Robin Hood Line would be expected to be part of the considerations within there. But we have got that (£2 million) allocation in there that is focused entirely around the opportunity to develop rail infrastructure and those options for us within the region.

“It has the potential to be a massive game-changer in terms of the delivery of growth. So those other lines, while not specified within the programme, there is an allocation within there that will enable us to look at those and develop those options.”

The Mayor added: “There always has been an argument that we should extend those lines (the Robin Hood and Maid Marian Line), whether it be that or other lines across the region.”

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