Isle of Man vintage railways passenger numbers rise despite suspension

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Tram on the Isle of Man
Image caption,

Services on the Snaefell Mountain Railway were suspended in September after an incident during a descent

Passenger numbers have increased year-on-year on four vintage railways despite one service being suspended after a tram became "out of control".

Four services, which run from March to November on the Isle of Man, drew in 512,847 people in 2017 - a rise of 65,949 customers or 13% from 2016.

In September the Snaefell Mountain Railway service was suspended for a health and safety investigation.

Transport director Ian Longworth the record numbers were "fantastic news".

George W. Hales/FoxImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Horse drawn trams have been ferrying tourists in Douglas for 140 years

The island has four vintage railways - the Steam Railway, Manx Electric Railway, Snaefell Mountain Railway and Douglas Bay Horse Tram.

Despite it running a shorter season, the railway that joins Laxey village with the summit of Snaefell, saw the biggest increase in 2017 with an additional 16,770 customers - a rise of 27%.

The Isle of Man Steam Railway was boosted by an extra 32,355 passengers - a 22% increase while both the Douglas Bay Horse Tram and Manx Electric Railway also saw small rises in passenger numbers at 6% and 5% respectively.

The Manx Electric Railway saw the most customers with 227,826 using the service this season.

The government said a growing market in group travel through coach trips and cruises was a contributing factor.

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