Kenya: old escarpment incline
Posted: 24 May 2011, 17:16
A very interesting day today. Kevin and I drove out to see the old incline down the escarpment into the Great Rift Valley. For anyone who is not familiar with the story, in order to save time by continuing to build the railway down in the valley before the long and winding route down was completed, a funicular railway was built on a steep and straight incline with trolleys on which locomotives and wagons could be lowered. It lasted in operation for only about 15 months, I believe, before the railway reached the valley floor and it became redundant.
The line of the incline can still be seen from the air, from a distance in the Rift Valley, and on Google Earth if you know where to look. A high tension electricity line now follows the route, with pylons at the two winding stations.
We began at the lower winding house, which is right by the Limuru-Mai Mahu road (the "old" escarpment road, built by Italian POWs, with a delightful little Italian chapel at the bottom). The remains of the old winding house can be clearly seen at S 01 deg 00' 48.9" E 036 deg 36' 04.8", altitude 2,058m.
We then drove back up to the main Nairobi-Nakuru road and turned off to the left just after the Uplands turn-off, at S 01 deg 03' 09.8" E 036 deg 37' 50.8". We followed a dirt road which is actually the old trackbed as far as Escarpment Primary School. The teachers were delighted to see us and they escorted us on foot to the upper winding house at S 01deg 00' 48.9" E 036 deg 36' 16.5", altitude 2,188m. We also saw the original Escarpment Station, now someone's house, a railway building from 1936 with bricks stamped "KUR" (Kenya Uganda Railway) which is now used as a school kitchen, corrugated iron houses which were used by Indian staff, a wooden house used by European staff, and an ashpit, all around S 01 deg 00' 47.7" E 036 deg 36' 58.0", altitude 2,265m.
While the incline was only in use for a few months during the construction of the railway, the main line passed through Escarpment until 1948, I believe, before being rerouted. The teachers insisted that we come back again and they will introduce us to some old men who can still remember when the railway passed through Escarpment.
If you look on Google Earth and draw a line between the two winding houses, you can see the scar on the landscape, now more than 100 years old. Just search for "Kenya Escarpment" and you'll probably see it without needing the longitude and latitude references.
No photos, I'm afraid, as I've mislaid my little camera, but Kevin took some which I hope he will send me to post here. And I will be taking the teachers up on their invitation to return, maybe with Maurice, Isaac, Francis and others, and I'll definitely take photos then.
The line of the incline can still be seen from the air, from a distance in the Rift Valley, and on Google Earth if you know where to look. A high tension electricity line now follows the route, with pylons at the two winding stations.
We began at the lower winding house, which is right by the Limuru-Mai Mahu road (the "old" escarpment road, built by Italian POWs, with a delightful little Italian chapel at the bottom). The remains of the old winding house can be clearly seen at S 01 deg 00' 48.9" E 036 deg 36' 04.8", altitude 2,058m.
We then drove back up to the main Nairobi-Nakuru road and turned off to the left just after the Uplands turn-off, at S 01 deg 03' 09.8" E 036 deg 37' 50.8". We followed a dirt road which is actually the old trackbed as far as Escarpment Primary School. The teachers were delighted to see us and they escorted us on foot to the upper winding house at S 01deg 00' 48.9" E 036 deg 36' 16.5", altitude 2,188m. We also saw the original Escarpment Station, now someone's house, a railway building from 1936 with bricks stamped "KUR" (Kenya Uganda Railway) which is now used as a school kitchen, corrugated iron houses which were used by Indian staff, a wooden house used by European staff, and an ashpit, all around S 01 deg 00' 47.7" E 036 deg 36' 58.0", altitude 2,265m.
While the incline was only in use for a few months during the construction of the railway, the main line passed through Escarpment until 1948, I believe, before being rerouted. The teachers insisted that we come back again and they will introduce us to some old men who can still remember when the railway passed through Escarpment.
If you look on Google Earth and draw a line between the two winding houses, you can see the scar on the landscape, now more than 100 years old. Just search for "Kenya Escarpment" and you'll probably see it without needing the longitude and latitude references.
No photos, I'm afraid, as I've mislaid my little camera, but Kevin took some which I hope he will send me to post here. And I will be taking the teachers up on their invitation to return, maybe with Maurice, Isaac, Francis and others, and I'll definitely take photos then.