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Cipero Tramway

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

TheCipero Tramway (also known as theCipero Tramroad) was a railway connecting the town ofPrinces Town (then known as the Misson of Savana Grande) andSan Fernando in south Trinidad. Built in the 1850s, it was eventually absorbed into theTrinidad Government Railway in the 1920s.

History

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TheTrinidad Railway Company was established in 1846 with the goal of building a railway, but were unable to raise money for construction.[1] The first operational railway in Trinidad was the Cipero Tramway, which began operations between Princes Town and San Fernando in 1859.[2][fn 1]

The Cipero Tramway was built to connect sugar plantations and mills in south Trinidad with the port in San Fernando. In response to a petition from sugarcane planters, theLegislative Council established a committee to plan and build the tramway. A budget of £29,160 was established, including an £8,400 levy on planters whose estates would be serviced by the tramway, and at least £8,000 from government funds, with the remainder being borrowed from theColonial Bank.[3] The driving force behind the project wasWilliam Eccles,[2] a wealthy Scottish planter.[4]

The tramway opened on Saturday March 5, 1859.[2][5] It was horse-drawn and used to transportedsugar cane and other produce.[4] In response to demand from the public, passenger service was added, and beginning in 1866 the tramway added mail delivery between San Fernando and Princes Town.[2] Horse-drawn trams were replaced by a steam locomotive in 1864.[6]

After the Trinidad Government Railway acquired the Guaracara tram line and began expanding it to handle trains and extended it to Princes Town, theColonial Company and the Cipero Tramway Commissioners objected, claiming it was "unfair competition, interfering with their private rights and unjustly depreciating the value of their line".[7]

In the 1920s the Cipero Tramway was absorbed into the Trinidad Government Railway.[1][2]

Route

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The tramway began in what is now Princes Town. It passed through the village of Sainte Madeleine and entered San Fernando at the Cipero Cross, where the road running south from San Fernando crossed theCipero River. The point where the tramway crossed the road came to be known as Cross Crossing.[2]

The tramway continued to the embarcadere (improvised shipping wharf) on the Cipero River, wheresugar canes were unloaded for shipping, and then continued to Harris Promenade. In 1876 the tramway was extended to King's Wharf in San Fernando.[2]

Notes

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  1. ^Richard Charan and Allen Morrison give a starting date of 1839, but Michael Anthony and Daniel Hart give 1859 as the start date, and Anne Hardgrove cites minutes of the Cipero Tramroad Preliminary Proceedings from 1857.

References

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  1. ^ab"History". Public Transport Service Corporation on. Archived fromthe original on 2013-04-10. Retrieved2013-10-20.
  2. ^abcdefgAnthony, Michael (2004). "The First Railway in Trinidad (1859)".First in Trinidad (Third ed.). Cascade, Trinidad and Tobago: Paria Publishing Company. pp. 81–83.
  3. ^Hardgrove, Anne (2018)."Roads, Railways and the Language of Politics".Journal of Caribbean History.52 (1):30–67.doi:10.1353/jch.2018.0001 – viaProject MUSE.
  4. ^abCharan, Richard (2018-07-27)."Life on the line".Trinidad and Tobago Express. Retrieved2021-02-28.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  5. ^Hart, Daniel (1865).Historical and Statistical View of the Island of Trinidad. London: Judd and Glass. p. 53.
  6. ^"Trinidad and the age of steam".Trinidad and Tobago Guardian. 2012-06-09. Retrieved2026-01-04.
  7. ^Beadon, Glen (2021-11-10)."The two railways into Princes Town".Trinidad and Tobago Express. Retrieved2025-11-30.
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