Giffen railway station

Last updated

Giffen
Giffen station.jpg
The remains of Giffen station in 2006
LocationNear Barrmill, Ayrshire
Scotland
Coordinates 55°43′13″N4°36′45″W / 55.7202°N 4.6125°W / 55.7202; -4.6125 Coordinates: 55°43′13″N4°36′45″W / 55.7202°N 4.6125°W / 55.7202; -4.6125
Grid reference NS359505
Platforms3
Other information
StatusDisused
History
Original company Lanarkshire and Ayrshire Railway
Pre-grouping Caledonian Railway
Post-grouping London, Midland and Scottish Railway
Key dates
3 September 1888Opened as Kilbirnie Junction
1 October 1889Renamed Giffen
4 July 1932Closed

Giffen railway station was a railway station approximately one mile south-west of the village of Barrmill, North Ayrshire, Scotland. The station was part of the Lanarkshire and Ayrshire Railway.

Contents

History

Old sign for munitions traffic operations Giffen station sign.JPG
Old sign for munitions traffic operations

The station opened on 3 September 1888 and was known as Kilbirnie Junction, however it was renamed Giffen on 1 October 1889. [1] Giffen had three platforms, a small station building, and at one point at least seven members of staff. [2] A one time station master was Mr Willie Haining and his son Billy was born in the station master's house in April 1934. [3] The station had large concrete letters spelling out the name with, oddly, a triskelion or Isle of Man symbol set between the two words. Sunday school pupils would walk to the station from Barrmill for a day out in Saltcoats. [2] Giffen station closed on 4 July 1932. [4]

Today (2011) the three platforms of Giffen station still exist (although overgrown and in disrepair), and a single intact railway line runs through the station from Lugton to DM Beith. This track was used regularly to transport supplies into the base, however the track became disused in 1996 and the majority is now overgrown. The connection with the main line at Lugton was lifted in 2008 as part of the track doubling operations on the Lugton to Stewarton section of the Glasgow to Carlisle via Dumfries railway line.

The track near Lugton did see one more recent use on 2 September 2000 when it was used in a rail crash simulation in order to test emergency response times as a result of the Paddington rail crash in 1999. [5]

A footpath on old OS maps as running from the nearby Nettlehirst house down to the station and then to the Gatend and South Barr road via an overbridge.

A feature of WWII was the use of the line for what locals called the night time 'Ghost Trains' that carried injured service personnel to the Glasgow hospitals from where they had been landed at the port of Ardrossan.

Views of the station area

Workings details

In 1907 the Caledonian Railway Working Timetable (WTT) states that in relation to the nearby Gree Goods station  :

Brakesmen of Trains having work to do at this place must get the Key from him and hand it in on arrival at Giffen to the Station Master, who will return it by first train. The Signalman at Lugton Station Box will signal the train forward as per clause (b) of Block telegraph Regulations.

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Gree Goods station or Gree Depot as it was listed in the Caledonian Railway Working Timetable was a relatively short lived railway freight facility located approximately one miles south of Lugton on the A736 Lochlibo Road, North Ayrshire, Scotland. Gree Goods served the industrial and agricultural requirements for transportation in the vicinity, with the village of Burnhouse not far away, sitting on the crossroads to Barrmill, Dunlop and Irvine. Over Gree, High Gree, Nether Gree, Gree and Brownhills Farms were located nearby. Gree Goods was close to the Lugton East Junction, just south of the 11 arch Gree Viaduct. The nearest passenger station on the line north was Lugton High and to the south was Giffen.

References

Notes
  1. Butt, page 131
  2. 1 2 Reid & Monahan, Page 56
  3. Reid, Page 35
  4. Butt, page 102
  5. "Rail disaster plan test", BBC News, 2 September 2000.
Sources
  1. Butt, R. V. J. (1995). The Directory of Railway Stations: details every public and private passenger station, halt, platform and stopping place, past and present (1st ed.). Sparkford: Patrick Stephens Ltd. ISBN   978-1-85260-508-7. OCLC   60251199.
  2. Jowett, Alan (March 1989). Jowett's Railway Atlas of Great Britain and Ireland: From Pre-Grouping to the Present Day (1st ed.). Sparkford: Patrick Stephens Ltd. ISBN   978-1-85260-086-0. OCLC   22311137.
  3. Jowett, Alan (2000). Jowett's Nationalised Railway Atlas (1st ed.). Penryn, Cornwall: Atlantic Transport Publishers. ISBN   978-0-906899-99-1. OCLC   228266687.
  4. Reid, Donald L. & Monahan, I.F. (eds.) (1999). Yesterday's Beith: A Pictorial Guide, Printall, Glasgow. ISBN   0-9522720-5-9.
  5. Reid, Donald L. (2010). Beith, Barrmill & Gateside. Precious memories. ISBN   978-0-9566343-1-3.
Preceding station Historical railways Following station
Brackenhills
Line and station closed
  Caledonian Railway
Lanarkshire and Ayrshire Railway
  Lugton
Line and station closed
Auchenmade
Line and station closed
  Caledonian Railway
Lanarkshire and Ayrshire Railway