Bridge Number Twelve
From oilworks entrance to footpath crossroads
F21007 - first published 30/08/2021
There is no footbridge at Uphall Station. To get from one platform to the other, you can walk eastward to Pumpherston road, turn and pass the two storey building that formed the entrance to the station during steam days, before returning uphill again. Or else you can head west and cross beneath the railway through a gloomy underpass that has the number “12” painted on the stonework, in old-style lettering.
No.12 bridge was installed when the Edinburgh and Bathgate rail was first built, presumably the twelfth bridge west from “Bathgate junction” near Ratho. In 1849, when the railway first opened, the area was open countryside, and the underbridge will have been used only by the occasional cart moving from field to field. This all changed when, in about 1865, the Uphall shale oil works were built immediately to the north of the railway. As these were extended, more railway sidings were installed to deliver shale and raw materials and to despatch oil products. The only road access into the works was by the little bridge 12, when opened directly into a small yard, lined with stores and offices. When workers' houses were built immediately south of the railway, the small bridge underbridge must have been chock-a-block at times, particularly when the oil workers clocked on at the start of their shift, or shuffled home afterwards.

25" OS map, c.1895, courtesy on National Library of Scotland, with route of modern pathway marked

Aerial view showing route of footpath

Uphall oil works; looking north east. The path passes near the site of the barrel mountain. See full record LVSAV2018.024

Uphall oil works, looking towards Pumpherston. The siding is now the route of the path to East Calder. See full record: LVSAV 2020.074
Uphall closed as a shale works in 1926, but continued to refine imported crude oils until about 1938. During the shale days, mineral railways often served as convenient, albeit slightly dangerous, footpaths. Once oil works closed and rails were lifted, many old routes often remained in use and some were officially recognised. A route from Uphall to Uphall station via the old mineral railway, and across the site of Uphall oil works, was sufficiently established by the 1960's to warrent the formation of an underpass when the M8 was constructed.
Today bridge 12 lies at the crossroads of paths running north to south from Uphall to East Calder, and West to east from Upahll station to Roman Camp. It's a busy place once more on a sunny Sunday morning, with a constant stream of dogwalkers and trail trekers, cyclists, tandem riders, and the occassional horse.

Plodding on - August 2021

The abutments of the original bridge, extended to carry a wider deck. August 2021

An impromtu bird table - August 2021

Dog and owner in perfect balance - August 2021

Two's company, August 2021

The bridge deck was once much wider to carry the sidings that served the oil works. August 2021

August 2021 - honestly

August 2021