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Digswell Viaduct

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Digswell Viaduct

The Digswell Viaduct, also known as the Welwyn Viaduct and officially the Welwyn Railway Viaduct, is a railway viaduct that carries two tracks of the East Coast Main Line over the Mimram Valley in Hertfordshire, Eastern England. A prominent local landmark, it is located between Welwyn Garden City and Welwyn North railway stations, and is located above the village of Digswell and the River Mimram. Designed by father and son William and Joseph Cubitt, and engineered by Thomas Brassey, the viaduct opened in 1850 and has been a Grade II* listed structure since 1980.

The viaduct has forty arches and was originally built from red facing bricks, with blue facing bricks added in the 1930s. Metal gantries were appended to the side of the viaduct in 1980 as part of the electrification of the Great Northern route. At 1,560 feet (475 m) in length and up to 100 ft (30 m) in height, it was one of the largest works on the Great Northern Railway when it opened.

The viaduct carries the East Coast Main Line across the Mimram Valley. Due to the width of the viaduct, the railway narrows from four tracks to two tracks, making it a bottleneck which is the limiting factor for capacity on the congested and strategically important route. This problem is exacerbated by Welwyn North railway station being situated at the northern end of the viaduct, which blocks the line while trains are stationary, and by two tunnels to the north. Various ideas to overcome the limitations of the viaduct and station without damaging the viaduct's essential historic character and rhythmic design are periodically discussed. The viaduct was styled to be similar to Roman aqueducts, and was one of the largest works on the Great Northern Railway when it was constructed. It is around 1,560 feet (475 m) in length and comprises forty arches with a maximum height of 100 ft (30 m). It is built from thirteen million red bricks, which were fired using clay that had been mined during the construction of the viaduct. Each pier was built with 65 piles driven into the ground by means of a steam-fuelled piling engine.

The waterproofing originally consisted of a bitumen membrane, which the brickwork was covered with so that the water would drain into cast iron pipes at the centre of each pier. The drainage system had become clogged over time but this could not be fixed as the pipes were inaccessibly positioned inside the viaduct. Furthermore, the membrane's efficacy had deteriorated to a point that water was leaking through and running down inside the brickwork. These systems were replaced in 1986. Due to the nature of the ground in the Mimram Valley, eleven of the forty piers were reinforced with timber, for which 19,844 cubic feet (561.9 m3) was needed. The viaduct joins embankments at both ends, which used approximately one million tons of earth to build; this was all moved by manpower and horsepower.

The viaduct has become a prominent part of local history in Welwyn and has been Grade II* listed since 4 November 1980, meaning that it is a "particularly important [structure] of more than special interest". Historic England's official list description for the viaduct describes it as "An impressively monumental and elegant railway viaduct of 40 arches for the Great Northern Railway by eminent engineers Sir William and Joseph Cubitt". According to official documents by East Herts District Council It has sometimes been referred to by locals as one of the "seven wonders of Hertfordshire".

The viaduct was built for the Great Northern Railway between 1848 and 1850, in order to carry their line between Kings Cross and Welwyn (now Welwyn North), although they planned for this to extend to York. The viaduct was designed by railway engineers William Cubitt, who at the time was the Chief Engineer of the Great Northern Railway, and his son Joseph Cubitt. However, some sources instead attribute the viaduct to the engineer Lewis Cubitt, who was of no close relation to William and Joseph. The railway engineer George Hudson opposed the viaduct's construction, saying that the viaduct would collapse into the valley due to the nature of the ground, but also because he wanted to protect his monopoly on the Midlands' railways. The construction of the viaduct came at a cost of £69,397, which was equivalent to £8,077,000 in 2025. The project was carried out by Thomas Brassey, who stayed in the Cowpers Arms while his workmen lived in temporary huts in Digswell. The workers had recently returned from a project in France, and their behaviour led to complaints from locals, who began to call them the 'tray bong' (i.e. an anglicised très bon) gang because of their use of French phrases.

The viaduct was opened along with the rest of the line between London and Peterborough on 7 August 1850. The inaugural trip left at 9:00, and involved 400 people travelling from Kings Cross to Peterborough to view the newly-built line. The train stopped at Welwyn to allow people to disembark and view the viaduct. However, there exists an urban legend that Queen Victoria opened the viaduct a day earlier on 6 August. The legend says that when her train reached the viaduct, she refused to travel on the train across it because she was scared of its height above the valley. Instead, she was purported to have left the train to cross the viaduct without her and wait at Welwyn, while she travelled across the valley on the ground by horse-drawn cart. While Queen Victoria was not in fact present at the opening of the viaduct, she did use it in 1851 when travelling to Balmoral. On this journey, which was in receipt of significant press coverage at the time, she crossed the viaduct without issue and no sources suggest that she objected to doing so.

On 7 October 1864, a Midland Railway train collided with a freight train belonging to the Great Northern Railway on the viaduct, which was being shunted at the time. The points were set incorrectly such that the train was shunted onto the main line rather than the sidings, where the collision then occurred. The Great Northern Railway immediately took responsibility for the accident, however a court case, Drakeford vs. the Great Northern, arose as to the damages owed to the Midland Railway. A jury eventually settled these damages at £500, which is equivalent to £55,000 in 2025.

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