Aberdeen Ferryhill railway station

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Aberdeen Ferryhill
General information
Location Ferryhill, Aberdeen
Scotland
Coordinates 57°08′04″N2°05′52″W / 57.1344°N 2.0978°W / 57.1344; -2.0978 Coordinates: 57°08′04″N2°05′52″W / 57.1344°N 2.0978°W / 57.1344; -2.0978
Other information
StatusDisused
History
Original company Aberdeen Railway
Key dates
1850Opened
1854Closed

Aberdeen Ferryhill railway station was the temporary terminus of the Aberdeen Railway and the first railway station to serve the city of Aberdeen. Regular passenger service began on 1 April 1850. As the station is located some distance south of the city centre, omnibuses and luggage vans were employed to complete the journey into the city. [1] In 1853, the Deeside Railway was opened, which also used Ferryhill as a terminus. [2] In 1854, the railway was extended and a new terminus, Aberdeen Guild Street railway station, was opened on 2 August. [3] This station was located closer to the city centre, approximately where the present-day Aberdeen railway station (joint station) was later built.

The station was situated to the west of Wellington Suspension Bridge.

Preceding station Historical railways Following station
Cove Bay
Line open, station closed
  Aberdeen Railway  Terminus
Cults
Line and station closed
  Deeside Railway  Terminus

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Cults railway station was opened on 8 September 1853 by the Deeside Railway and served part of Cults with mansion houses such as Southfield, Wellwood, Woodbank, Inchgarth, Drumgarth and Norwood nearby. The Deeside Railway station was replaced in 1855 by a new GNoSR that remained open, despite the 1937 closure of many other stations on the Aberdeen suburban service, until 1966 as an intermediate station on the Deeside Railway that ran from Aberdeen (Joint) to Ballater. Cults is located in the parish of Peterculter, Aberdeenshire, Scotland.

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References

  1. "Aberdeen Railway". Aberdeen Journal, and General Advertiser for the North of Scotland. 3 April 1850. Retrieved 3 June 2020.
  2. "Opening of the Deeside Railway". Aberdeen Journal, and General Advertiser for the North of Scotland. 14 September 1853. Retrieved 3 June 2020.
  3. "Aberdeen Railway Company". Aberdeen Journal, and General Advertiser for the North of Scotland. 1 November 1854. Retrieved 3 June 2020.