Dearne Valley Railway

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Dearne_Valley_Railway an entity of type: Abstraction100002137

The Dearne Valley Railway (DVR) was a railway line which ran through the valley of the River Dearne in South Yorkshire, England. It was incorporated by an Act of Parliament on 6 August 1897, which authorised the building of a line between Brierley Junction, on the main line of the Hull and Barnsley Railway, to junctions with the Great Northern Railway and the Great Northern and Great Eastern Joint Railway south-east of Doncaster. Although the line was considered an independent company it was worked by the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway (LYR). It opened in sections over seven years from 1902. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Dearne Valley Railway
xsd:integer 7725290
xsd:integer 1092379244
rdf:langString left
rdf:langString The central section in 1910
rdf:langString The eastern end in 1914
rdf:langString The western end in 1911
rdf:langString horizontal
rdf:langString Railway Clearing House diagrams showing the L&Y connection from Wakefield Kirkgate and the line of the Dearne Valley Railway from Brierley to Black Carr junction
rdf:langString Applehurst, Askern, Doncaster, Kirk Sandall, Shaftholme, Stainforth & Thorne RJD 23.jpg
rdf:langString Bierley%2C_Cudworth%2C_Monk_Bretton%2C_Nostell%2C_Shafton_%26_Stairfoot_RJD_109.jpg
rdf:langString Hemsworth- Hickleton South- Mexboro'- Moorhouse- South Elmsall- South Kirkby- Swinton- Wath- ath Road & Lowfield RJD 44.jpg
xsd:integer 175
rdf:langString The Dearne Valley Railway (DVR) was a railway line which ran through the valley of the River Dearne in South Yorkshire, England. It was incorporated by an Act of Parliament on 6 August 1897, which authorised the building of a line between Brierley Junction, on the main line of the Hull and Barnsley Railway, to junctions with the Great Northern Railway and the Great Northern and Great Eastern Joint Railway south-east of Doncaster. Although the line was considered an independent company it was worked by the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway (LYR). It opened in sections over seven years from 1902.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4720

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