This line will re-open between Thornton North Junction and East of Fife Central Junction as a re-doubled and electrified railway. The portion between the junction and new Levenmouth terminus will make use of a formerly freight route. The site of the original Leven [1st] terminus is not available for reopening. A new station at Cameron Bridge will open (replacing the original Cameron Bridge [1st] to the west).
It is hoped that the Cameronbridge Distillery may be served by rail again.
The line has been mothballed for several years. The last use of the line was for
- loading of opencast coal at the Earlseat Loading Pad (opened 2012, brief use)
- coal slurry Methil Power Station (ceased 1990s)
- traffic to the Cameronbridge Distillery (ceased 1990s)
- woodpulp at Methil Dock No 1 (ceased late 1980s)
Cameron Bridge and Leven [2nd] stations closed in 1969. The portion from East Fife Central Junction to Leven [2nd] closed completely in 1969 and the station site was redeveloped.
The Kingdom of Fife Railway Preservation Society have a depot, the Fife Heritage Railway , at the site of the former Kirkland Yard. The Leven and Methil docks were not part of the original line. Originally single track, it was later doubled and was later reduced to a single track. It formed a part of the Fife Coast Railway.
This line is divided into a number of portions.
Thornton Junction to Leven [1st].
This is a four way junction. To the north the main line runs north to Ladybank and the line branch to Cameron Bridge and Levenmouth, which is being re-doubled and electrified, runs off to the north east.. (This formerly ran to Leven [2nd] and the Fife Coast railway to St Andrews [2nd].) To the south the Dunfermline Branch heads west from the main line which runs south to ...
More detailsThis signal box was on the northern approaches to Thornton North Junction.
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This loading pad opened in 2012 for loading of opencast coal which was extracted, by opencast, at the site of the former Earlseat Colliery, to the south. A loop was laid on the south side of the former Leven Railway railway 2/3 of a mile north east of Thornton North Junction. The site was just south of the former Balgonie Colliery Julian Pit bing.
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This grain distillery opened in 1824. It was rail served, the Leven Railway having reached Cameron Bridge [1st] in 1854.
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This was an island platform station surrounded by the Cameronbridge Distillery, for which there were many sidings.
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This new two platform station will be located east of the original Cameron Bridge [1st] station (closed 1969) and the former junction for the Muiredge Goods branch. It will be located on the former Leven Railway which will be re-doubled and electrified.
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This was a four way junction between the 1854 Leven Railway and the 1898 East Fife Central Railway and Kirkland Yard (North British Railway) (around 1910).
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This level crossing was west of Leven [1st]. Initially it crossed the west end of that station's loop, and the Kirkland siding on its south side which gave access to Leven Dock.
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This was the original terminus of the Leven Railway. It was just west of Leven [2nd] which replaced it when the line was extended east by the East of Fife Railway to Kilconquhar.
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Cameron Bridge to Muiredge Goods.
This was an island platform station surrounded by the Cameronbridge Distillery, for which there were many sidings.
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This was the terminus of a short goods and mineral branch from Cameron Bridge [1st] built by the Leven and East of Fife Railway. The location has a complex history going through a number of different layouts.
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