This is a two faced island platform terminus on the western seaboard of Scotland. Nearby is the Caledonian MacBrayne pier for Armadale Pier in Skye. A number of locations are served from Mallaig Pier. The station building is at the north (buffer) end of the station. It is of two storeys and in house style. The terminus building lost its glazed platform canopy in 1977. A sea wall protected passengers from the element, but this was lost in 1987 during new road preparation works.
There had been a locomotive shed, Mallaig Shed, and sidings continued to the pier, but are lifted. The siding on the east side of the station was used until the 1980s to deliver oil for the Caledonian MacBrayne vessels.
The signal box was south of the station and on the east side of the line. It was considered to have the best view from any signal box in Scotland with its view out to the islands. It became a ground frame in 1982 and has since been replaced with a ground frame.
With the building of the new road into Mallaig in the late 1980s the railway no longer borders the rocky shoreline and the new road has absorbed the area of the sidings on the west side of the station.
Despite the reduction in facilities this is a fine station which retains its station building. In summer it can be very busy with the Jacobite and during other train arrivals. A turntable to allow steam engines to turn would be a good addition.
Near the station a double row of railway cottages are now privately owned.
The bay is an ancient harbour. Before the coming of the railway the bay was called Acairseid na Coille Moire with a small pier on its west side, Port Faochagach (built in 1846, to improve for local people after the potato famine, by Lord Lovat the landowner). Mallaig itself was a few scattered buildings to the north east. The hill of Cnoc na Malaidh or Cruach Mhalaig is above.
Just before the arrival of the railway a small village with a post office was developing on the west side of the bay which had become Mallaig Harbour.
The railway approached the harbour from the south, running along the coast. The railway built an additional pier to the north of the existing pier on the west side of the bay.
A breakwater was later added north of the railway pier.
In recent years the village has undergone a transformation from an almost shanty town utilitarian location to a tourist destination, which still supports the fishing industry and a port for the isles.
Mallaig Pier is the port for Armadale Pier on Skye, Lochboisdale Pier on South Uist, Inverie in Knoydart and the Small Isles; Eigg, Muck, Rum and Canna. Caledonian MacBrayne
The Jacobite steam train operates in the summer between Fort William and Mallaig. The Jacobite
Mallaig Heritage
Mallaig Harbour Authority
Nearby stations Morar Arisaig Beasdale Lochailort Lech-a-vuie Platform Glenfinnan Kyle of Lochalsh Duirinish Locheilside Plockton Duncraig Stromeferry Loch Eil Outward Bound Corpach Banavie | Mallaig Shed Morar Viaduct Larichmore Viaduct Tourist/other Mallaig Pier Glasnacardoch Bay Morar Lodge Camusdarrach House Traigh Golf Course Armadale Pier Creag Mhor Level Crossing Stoul Easter Stoul Inverie Pier Arisaig Slip Knock Castle [Skye] |
Location names in dark blue are on the same original line. |
/ /1896 | West Highland Railway
Mallaig Extension (West Highland Railway) West Highland Railway (Guarantee) Act passed, setting up the guarantee for the Mallaig extension. A second West Highland Railway Act then passed, specifying completion to Mallaig by 31/07/1902. |
08/12/1897 | Mallaig Extension (West Highland Railway) In poor weather, the SS Clansman [II] arrived at Mallaig carrying 2,200 navvies for the railway's construction. (Some possibly ex of the Kyle of Lochalsh Extension, opened 11/1897). |
30/03/1901 | West Highland Railway Mallaig Extension (West Highland Railway) Banavie Junction [2nd], Banavie Canal Bridge, Tomonie Signal Box, Glenfinnan, Lochailort, Arisaig, Mallaig signal boxes opened. Banavie Junction [1st] signal box and junction renamed Mallaig Junction. |
01/04/1901 | Mallaig Extension (West Highland Railway) Line opened from Banavie (Banavie Junction [2nd]), over the Caledonian Canal and on through Banavie, Corpach, Locheilside, Glenfinnan, Lochailort, Beasdale, Arisaig and Morar to Mallaig, extending the West Highland Railway to the western seaboard. There was no official opening ceremony. |
31/12/1908 | North British Railway
West Highland Railway
Mallaig Extension (West Highland Railway) North British Railway formally takes over the West Highland Railway line from Craigendoran to Fort William [1st], Mallaig and the branch to Banavie [1st]. |
/ /1955 | West Highland Railway British Aluminium Co Ltd erects the Inverlochy Footbridge, roughly where the temporary line of the Lochaber Narrow Gauge Railway passed over the Mallaig line, in order to link housing at Inverlochy to the Aluminium Smelter. |
/ /1956 | Mallaig Extension (West Highland Railway) Former 'Coronation' 'Beaver Tail' observation car introduced on trains between Fort William [1st] and Mallaig. |
/ /1963 | Mallaig Extension (West Highland Railway) The The Reshaping of British Railways (Beeching) report proposes the closure of Banavie, Locheilside and Mallaig but retaining a limited stop Fort William [1st] to Mallaig service. |
14/03/1982 | Mallaig Extension (West Highland Railway) Mallaig signal box becomes a ground frame only with one-engine-in-steam working. |
/ /1987 | Mallaig Extension (West Highland Railway) Mallaig station's screening wall, which protected passengers from the elements, removed. Mallaig Shed demolished. Both removed for road development. |
/06/1988 | Mallaig Extension (West Highland Railway) The railway owned dormitory at Mallaig was demolished after a fire (in June). This dormitory was formerly used by staff handling the considerable fish traffic. |
10/02/1998 | Mallaig Extension (West Highland Railway) Part closure due to flooding. With closure of the Lochy Viaduct [Fort William] a stranded Sprinter operates between Mallaig and Loch Eil Outward Bound until the line re-opens on the 18th. |
05/03/2005 | West Highland Railway
Mallaig Extension (West Highland Railway) Class 50s reach Mallaig on a Pathfinders tour for the first time (50031 Hood and 50049 Defiance). Arrived Fort William on the 4th, Mallaig on the 5th (having to run to Arisaig and back to pass a Sprinter due to its length before the return journey) and to Dundee from Fort William on the 6th. |