Jedburgh Railway | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The Jedburgh Railway was a 9+1⁄2-mile (15 km) single-track branch railway in the Borders, Scotland, built by the Jedburgh Railway Company. It ran from a point south of Roxburgh Junction on the Kelso Line to Jedburgh via three intermediate stations, Kirkbank, Nisbet and Jedfoot.
Authorised in 1855, the line was opened in July of the next year. It was run by the North British Railway from its opening and was absorbed by that company in 1860. The line closed to passengers on 13 August 1948, the day after large-scale flooding took out the bridge over the Teviot at Nisbet. The line closed to freight on 10 August 1964.[1]
The track where the rails lay is now part of the Borders Abbeys Way walking route.[2]
The Kelso and Jedburgh railway branch lines