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Oakamoor Tunnel

1849 establishments in EnglandNorth Staffordshire RailwayRailway tunnels in EnglandTunnel stubsTunnels completed in 1849
Tunnels in StaffordshireUse British English from January 2017
Oakamoor tunnel
Oakamoor tunnel

Oakamoor Tunnel is a disused 497-yard (454 m) long tunnel located north of Oakamoor railway station on the former Uttoxeter to North Rode section of the North Staffordshire Railway. The tunnel opened with the line in 1849. The tunnel was closed in 1964 with the withdrawal of passenger and freight service between Uttoxeter and Oakamoor Sand Sidings (just north of the tunnel). The tunnel is complete, in quite good condition.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Oakamoor Tunnel (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Oakamoor Tunnel
Churnet Valley Cycleway, Staffordshire Moorlands Oakamoor

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Wikipedia: Oakamoor TunnelContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 52.9976 ° E -1.9219 °
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Address

Churnet Valley Cycleway
ST10 3AG Staffordshire Moorlands, Oakamoor
England, United Kingdom
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Oakamoor tunnel
Oakamoor tunnel
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Nearby Places

The Old Furnace
The Old Furnace

The Old Furnace is a colloquial name given to an historic site in Oakamoor, Staffordshire, England, that supported the development of medieval and post-medieval iron smelting. The furnace was situated in the Churnet Valley in the Staffordshire moorlands. A later Elizabethan-era blast furnace once stood on the site of the present Old Furnace Cottage. That furnace, the first in the north of England, was constructed in 1592 by Lawrence Loggin. The stone was brought three miles from Hollington by mule down an ancient trackway. This path can still be seen in the field next to the cottage. Problems arose from the outset, and after nine months the site was abandoned, which gave way to its old furnace name. An archaeological evaluation undertaken in 2004, in unison with an episode of the British archaeology television programme Time Team, revealed that iron smelting using the bloomery process, with associated pottery of the 13th and 14th century dates, was well established on the site in the medieval period. An "unstratified sherd of late Saxon pottery" hinted that iron working on the site may date back to the 10th or 11th centuries.George Talbot, 6th Earl of Shrewsbury, whose seat was two miles away, owned rights to many mineral-extraction sites in the area. His business affairs passed to his wife, Bess of Hardwick, upon his death in 1590.The firm of Thomas Bolton, a copper extruder, had a works at Oakamoor. In 1869 he built the home now known as Old Furnace Cottage for his workers.