£5k grant to help historic railway in Ingoldmells recover from impact of Covid-19 pandemic

A £5,000 grant will help a historic railway in Ingoldmells recover from the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic.
The 1903-vintage steam locomotive ‘Jurassic’ enters Walls Lane station on the Lincolnshire Coast Light Railway with a passenger service. Facilities at the station are being improved with the help of the grant from Lincolnshire County Council’s Business Recovery Fund. Photo: David Enefer/LCLR.The 1903-vintage steam locomotive ‘Jurassic’ enters Walls Lane station on the Lincolnshire Coast Light Railway with a passenger service. Facilities at the station are being improved with the help of the grant from Lincolnshire County Council’s Business Recovery Fund. Photo: David Enefer/LCLR.
The 1903-vintage steam locomotive ‘Jurassic’ enters Walls Lane station on the Lincolnshire Coast Light Railway with a passenger service. Facilities at the station are being improved with the help of the grant from Lincolnshire County Council’s Business Recovery Fund. Photo: David Enefer/LCLR.

The grant has been made to Lincolnshire Coast Light Railway by Lincolnshire County Council’s Business Recovery Fund.

Situated at Skegness Water Leisure Park in Walls Lane, the attraction was the first heritage railway in the world to be built by enthusiasts when it opened on its original site at Humberston, south of Cleethorpes in 1960.

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Alfter closing there in 1985. It reopened in the Skegness Water Leisure Park in 2009.

However, it was unable to celebrate or to operate any passenger services during what would have been its 60 th anniversary year – and so lost a whole summer season’s income from fares and from a planned series of special events.

Instead, those of its volunteers who were able to access the site, concentrated on repairs,

renovation and improving facilities.

LCLR Company Secretary, John Chappell, said: “The grant from Lincolnshire County

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Council will be particularly helpful in covering the cost of the new station building under

construction at a time when the railway has lost all its income.

“The number of visitors the railway was attracting from all over the country – not just

Skegness’s traditional “holiday heartland” in the East Midlands and Yorkshire – meant that

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we needed a new ticket office, shop and facilities to supplement the existing basic waiting

room.

“The grant will cover most of the cost at a time when the railway has had no income and

faces uncertainty about how many people its trains can carry, as it adapts to restrictions to

prevent the spread of Covid.

“All of us who are involved with this wonderful part of Lincolnshire’s heritage are extremely

grateful to the County Council’s Business Recovery Fund.

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"It will help our trains and our passengers steam into the future with renewed confidence and will give a further reason to visit Skegness and contribute to its economy.

“Thanks to the grant, these improved facilities for our visitors will help us overcome the

setbacks caused to what would have been the 60 th anniversary of our pioneering role in the

world’s railways”.