Immingham (Eastern Jetty) railway station

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Immingham (Eastern Jetty)
Location Immingham, North East Lincolnshire
England
Coordinates 53°37′51″N0°10′55″W / 53.6307°N 0.1819°W / 53.6307; -0.1819 Coordinates: 53°37′51″N0°10′55″W / 53.6307°N 0.1819°W / 53.6307; -0.1819
Grid reference TA203165
Platforms1 [1]
Other information
StatusDisused
History
Original company Great Central Railway
Pre-groupingGreat Central Railway
Post-grouping London and North Eastern Railway
Key dates
15 May 1912opened
1939closed [2] [3]

Immingham (Eastern Jetty) railway station was a special excursion station built along the port's eastern jetty [4] to cater for traffic to passenger ships on cruises to the North Cape, Norwegian Fjords and the Baltic.

Contents

The station was not much more than a long wooden platform along the jetty. It was only used for the transfer of the passengers and luggage from train to ship and vice versa so little in the way of facilities was needed or provided. The critical provision was numerous staff to guide travellers and handle their belongings. [5] [6] [7]

Traffic

The cruise ships sometimes berthed in the dock itself, [8] [9] but usually they moored at the seaward side of the jetty where they were adjacent to all-First Class, Restaurant Car special trains. [10] [11] [12] These operated along two routes:

Locomotives

Originally these trains were hauled by Great Central Railway 4-6-0 locomotives [14] but following grouping in 1922 Great Northern Railway motive power took many of them over. [15]

Spectacle

Visits by such ships drew crowds of sightseers and passed into local folklore, none more so than the vessel SS Arandora Star which was torpedoed in 1940 with heavy loss of life.

Closure

The cruises terminated in 1939, just prior to the Second World War. Although the platform remained for some time, the station was effectively closed. One source suggests GCR passenger vessels plied between here, Antwerp, Hamburg and Rotterdam. [6]

Afterlife

By 2015 the tracks on the jetty had long been lifted, but the structure remained well used, handling oils, spirits, and liquid chemicals.

Liners known to have used Immingham

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Jackson Street electric railway station was the second of five calling points on the 1 14 miles (2.0 km) eastern, "street" section of the inter-urban Grimsby and Immingham Electric Railway when travelling from Corporation Bridge, Grimsby to Immingham Dock.

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Eastern Entrance to Immingham Dock electric railway station was a temporary halt 62 chains (1.2 km) by route south east of the western terminus of the inter-urban Grimsby and Immingham Electric Railway which ran from Corporation Bridge, Grimsby with a reversal at what was euphemistically called Immingham Town.

References

Sources

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