Following the early success of the St Helier to St Aubin line, which opened on 25 October 1870, a new route was soon being planned running east from St Helier. On 18 January 1871 a Bill was put before the States for a line to be known as the Jersey Eastern Railway, running from St Helier to Gorey. The line was approved on 16 March 1871 and confirmed by Order in Council on 19 March 1872.
The route was authorised from Snow Hill, St Helier, to Gorey, and from there to St Catherine’s Bay. One of the Articles required the line to be completed with a service operating to Gorey within three years of the registration of the relevant Order in Council, with the remainder of the line finished within ten years.
The section of line between Gorey and St Catherine was never built.
Landowners satisfied
On 15 May 1871 the committee appointed by the States met to consider objections by landowners; the majority were satisfied if they received fair compensation. Fencing along the route began on 1 May 1872, but within two weeks there was an industrial dispute, with navvies demanding a pay rise and a reduction in hours. The contractor, Daniel Baldwin, from Weybridge in Surrey, was forced to agree to these demands to avoid harsh financial penalties if the line was delayed, but he made it clear that if there was any industrial action he would be forced to bring labour from England.
The first turf was dug by Mrs Mourant, wife of Edward Mourant, the chairman of the board of directors, at a private ceremony on 17 September 1872. By this time preparations for the line were already progressing well with rails, sleepers, fishplates and spikes being placed along the route ready for the track to be laid.
The standard gauge line between Snow Hill and Gorey was 5¾ miles long, and single track throughout, with two passing places. An engine shed was built at Green Street, to the south of Snow Hill, together with a temporary station, as it was unlikely the terminus at Snow Hill would be ready for another year. In order to reach the centre of St Helier it was necessary to excavate a deep cutting through Mont de la Ville. This proved a hazardous undertaking with a number of serious accidents and at least one fatality during the excavation.
There were further delays caused by bad weather, with work suspended for several months. As a result, in March 1873 Mr Baldwin was given more time to complete the line, so it came as a surprise when, on 17 April, he laid off his workforce without notice as the line was nearing completion.
The company immediately took control, announcing that work would restart at once, and on 2 July 1873 a special train consisting of 14 trucks, each loaded with two tons of stone and ballast, ran between Green Street and Grouville to test the permanent way. This was followed by a passenger train carrying the Main Roads Committee, company chairman and engineer, who had taken over the building of the line after the departure of Daniel Baldwin.
After a few minor changes were implemented, the line was inspected by an engineer appointed by the States on 9 July 1873. That afternoon a special train carried guests of the company to Grouville. On its return to Green Street, the locomotive failed to stop at the correct place, was derailed, and collided with a stationary carriage when it ran on to rails that had been laid but not properly secured.
Passenger service starts
The first section of the line between Green Street and Grouville passed its inspection and opened on 6 August 1873, with a train of six carriages taking States Members and their wives along the track to Grouville station in 15 minutes, stopping at all intermediate stations: Georgetown, Samarès, Le Hocq, Pontac, La Rocque and Les Marais (later renamed Fauvic). At that time Georgetown and Les Marais were not quite finished, and did not open to the public until the following week.
The line was an immediate success, and passenger traffic grew steadily, especially at weekends and bank holidays. The next section of the line to Gorey was opened on 27 August. The western terminus at Snow Hill opened on 6 May 1874, and the temporary station at Green Street was closed. In the early years of the line some cattle were carried, but a coal depot that was proposed for the redundant Green Street station site was never built. The expected freight traffic failed to materialise, apart from some fish traffic between La Rocque and Snow Hill from the 1880s until 1914, in an open wagon or an additional brake van attached to the back of a passenger train.
Initially there were 28 trains running between Snow Hill and Gorey each day, with only two locomotives, but this was later reduced to around 15, with some trains running non-stop between Snow Hill and Gorey on Sundays. In 1877 there were traffic receipts of £4,860 and, although no ordinary dividend was paid to investors during this period, debenture interest was paid in 1876/77, but not again until 1881 or later.
Following the opening of the Carteret to Carentan Railway in France in 1881, a steam ferry service was established between Carteret and Gorey which brought an immediate influx of passengers, with through tickets to Paris and other principal stations in Northern France being available from all stations. On 1 February 1884 a dividend was declared for the first time.
Extension to harbour
As Gorey Village Station was some distance from the ferry terminal, the line was extended along the sea wall for half a mile, to a new terminus at Gorey Pier. This opened on 25 May 1891, bringing the final line length to 6 ¼ miles. On 1 June 1896 two new stations were opened at St Luke and Grève D'Azette, replacing Georgetown, which was closed. Into the 20th century the line continued to be profitable with a regular dividend of 4% paid on ordinary shares.
Traffic from the continent continued to flourish in the early years of the new century, and the Great War had little effect on the railway, although there was an increase in traffic from French reservists returning to France on the Gorey ferry. Weekend and holiday excursion traffic dropped dramatically. With inflation after the war, the company found it difficult to maintain standards of service, and a Bill was put before the States to increase fares. This was approved, but with new bus services being established between St Helier and Gorey in the early 1920s, passenger numbers were soon in decline.
In an attempt to halt this slump and reduce running costs there was a proposal to use steam railcars, and in February 1925 it was announced that a number of halts were to be built, together with a new station at Le Bourg, which opened on 25 March 1925. Only one of the proposed halts (at Pontorson Lane) was built, and a delay in introducing railcars probably hastened the eventual closure of the line. Railcars would only have delayed the inevitable. There was some improvement in passenger receipts in 1926, and there was a proposal to purchase a further five rail cars, as well as the one that was already on order to replace the ageing locomotives and carriages. Fierce competition from the Jersey Bus Company continued, and in May 1926 the railway company started its own bus service between Snow Hill and Fauvic. This came too late to arrest the downturn. 1926 was a very bad year for the company, which made a net loss of £853, although it still paid a dividend taking money from the reserve fund.
Sentinel railcars
A Sentinal steam railcar finally arrived from London on 2 July 1927, and another followed shortly afterwards. Although these were quickly brought into service, they arrived too late to save the line.
On 7 August 1928 Jersey Eastern Railway proposed a merger with the Jersey Railway, but this was rejected by its directors. The Jersey Eastern Railway then approached a Mr Hunter, who wanted to acquire a controlling interest and electrify the line. Nothing came of this, and the board felt their only option was to close the line and withdraw the bus service from 21 June 1929. The following day the company was placed into voluntary liquidation.
Demolition began in November 1929, with the locomotives and much of the track being shipped to Poland as scrap. Most of the land was sold to landowners whose properties bordered the track. During the German Occupation part of the Jersey Eastern Railway was brought back into use. The first German line on the island was narrow gauge (60cm) which brought sand from Grouville Bay for building fortifications. This was carried by rail to a transhipment yard at the former Gorey Village station, where it was transferred to a large fleet of requisitioned lorries. To aid this transport, the Germans began constructing a line from Gorey to St Helier in March 1942. This was built on the track of the JER between Grouville and Pontac, then followed the main road to Le Hocq to rejoin the old line to Grève D'Azette, where an engine shed was built.
Following the liberation of Jersey on 9 May 1945 this track was quickly removed.
Today the course of the railway is clearly visible for much of it length on maps and aerial photographs, as many of the original boundaries have been retained, although it is harder to follow on the ground. Station buildings still survive at Gorey Village, Grouville, Fauvic, Le Hocq and Samarès, although the buildings at Gorey Village and Fauvic have been extended. Platforms can also be seen at Fauvic and Grève D'Azette, with a short section at Le Hocq.