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Dartmoor granite was quarried extensively during the 19th century and was used in the building of many famous buildings including London Bridge, Nelsons column, the Thames Embankment, Vauxhall Bridge, Nelson’s Column, British Museum, Goldsmiths Hall and the National Gallery. Swelltor quarry was one of the larger of the disused granite quarries in the group that lies near Princetown; some of the others being Foggintor, Kings Tor, Ingra Tor, Heckwood Tor, Crip Tor and Merrivale. It employed up to 90 men before the First World War but closed in the 1920s. It briefly re-opened in 1937, but has not been worked since 1938. Stone from Swell Tor quarry was used in the rebuilding of London Bridge at the end of the 19th century and you can still find unused beautiful corbels carved for the widening of the old London Bridge in 1902. These, for reasons not known, were never collected and have lain here since 1902.

Below Swelltor Quarry lies the line of the old Princetown - Yelverton railway line. This was originally a horse drawn tramway completed in 1823 to transport granite to Plymouth. This tramway was replaced by the Plymouth to Princetown railway line which was first proposed by the South Devon and Tavistock Railway Company in 1852 but did not open until 1883. The line was operated by the Great Western Railway, but owned by the Princetown Railway Company until 1922 when the line became part of the Great Western Railway network. The line passed to British Railways in 1948 and closed in 1956. Today, the disused track is a popular walking route across the moor.

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