Winchcombe | |
---|---|
Station on Heritage Railway | |
General information | |
Location | Greet, Tewkesbury England |
Coordinates | 51°57′59″N1°57′48″W / 51.96645°N 1.96345°W |
Grid reference | SP027297 |
Operated by | Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway |
Platforms | 2 |
History | |
Original company | Great Western Railway |
Post-grouping | Great Western Railway Western Region of British Railways |
Key dates | |
1 February 1905 | Opened |
7 March 1960 | Closed to passengers |
2 November 1964 | Goods facilities withdrawn |
2 August 1987 | Reopened |
Winchcombe railway station is a heritage railway station which serves the town of Winchcombe in Gloucestershire, England. The stations itself is actually located in the nearby village of Greet. It is located on the Honeybourne Line which linked Cheltenham and Stratford-upon-Avon and which was opened by the Great Western Railway in 1906. The station closed to passengers in 1960, although the line itself remained open for freight and diversionary use until 1976, when a freight train derailed near Winchcombe and damaged the track.
By the late 1970s, the line had been dismantled. The stretch between Toddington and Cheltenham Racecourse, including Winchcombe, has since been reconstructed and reopened by the heritage Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway. A new station has been erected in Greet, Winchcombe, on the site of the original building, the building being the former station at Monmouth Troy. Nearby is the 693-yard (634 m) Greet Tunnel, the second longest on any preserved line in Britain.
On 9 July 1859, the Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway opened a line from Stratford-upon-Avon to Honeybourne. [1] [2] The OW&W became the West Midland Railway in 1860 and was acquired by Great Western Railway in 1883 with a view to combining it with the Birmingham to Stratford Line to create a high-speed route from the Midlands to the South West. [3] [4] The GWR obtained authorisation in 1899 for the construction of a double-track line between Honeybourne and Cheltenham and this was completed in stages by 1908. [5]
Winchcombe was opened on 1 February 1905. [6] It is situated close to the small village of Greet but 3⁄4-mile (1.2 km) to the north of Winchcombe. [7] Two 400 ft (122 m) facing platforms were provided; the original station building built of red brick on a plinth of blue brick was situated on the Down platform. [8] [7] A verandah canopy, similar to that at Broadway, extended from the front of the building to a covered footbridge linking the two platforms. [9] [7] On the Up platform was a passenger waiting shelter and gentlemen's lavatory. [7] The goods yard lay on the south-eastern side of the station and comprised cattle pens, a goods shed, weighbridge and 6-ton crane. [10] A brick-built 31-lever signal box controlled access to the yard, [11] [12] while a 50-wagon Up refuge siding led to the rear of the Up platform. [13] As with Toddington, the station was lit by acetylene lamps with the gas hut situated behind the weighhouse. [14]
From February 1905 to June 1906, Winchcombe was the southern terminus of the line and buses to Cheltenham were provided pending the extension south. [15] From June 1906, eight local services each way ran between Honeybourne and Cheltenham (St James). [16] The completion of the North Warwickshire Line in July 1908 saw the first through services from Wolverhampton to Penzance. [17] By 1938, nine Down and ten Up services ran daily, with three on Sundays. [18] Traffic receipts for 1913 showed that 21,824 passengers had been carried, representing £1,436 in fares collected (equivalent to £178,481 in 2023 [nb 1] ), whilst 11,828 tons of goods traffic had been handled (mainly coal/coke and livestock), giving a total income of £5,837 (equivalent to £725,481 in 2023 [nb 1] ). [19] [8] By 1933, both of these figures had fallen: receipts to £4,436 (equivalent to £397,791 in 2023 [nb 1] ) and goods tonnage to 8,320. [19] The Second World War however saw tonnage peak at 17,045, [20] with the bulk of it consisting in agricultural machinery, fertilisers and foodstuffs. [19]
Winchcombe closed to passenger traffic on 7 March 1960, [6] the distance between the town and its station contributing to its demise. [21] The goods yard remained open for a further four years until 2 November 1964. [22] By March 1965, the station site had been levelled, leaving only the weighhouse, goods shed and residential accommodation. [23] The signal box remained in operation until 24 February 1965, [13] shortly after which it was demolished. [19] The line remained open to goods and diversionary traffic until 25 August 1976 when the 06.35 Toton to Severn Tunnel Junction derailed at a point east of the bridge carrying the B4632 road linking Winchcombe and Toddington over the line. [19] The incident prompted British Rail to announce the line's closure. [24]
The Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway reopened the line between Toddington and Winchcombe on 2 August 1987. [28] [29] A signal box was obtained from Hall Green and rebuilt on the foundations of the original structure, [30] with the 37-lever frame coming from Honeybourne West Loop Box. [31] The former Great Western Railway station building at Monmouth Troy was dismantled stone-by-stone and re-erected at Winchcombe in 1986. [32] The platform slabs came from Birmingham Snow Hill and Cheltenham St James. [31] The only original buildings left are the old goods shed, now the main workshop for the carriage and wagon group on the railway, and the weighbridge. Bidirectional signalling has been installed as has a passing loop through the station, which has been operational since 12 July 1997. [33] Since 2012, the station, and indeed parts of the line itself, have been used for scenes in the television series Father Brown .
Preceding station | Heritage railways | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Hayles Abbey Halt | Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway | Gotherington | ||
Historical railways | ||||
Hayles Abbey Halt Line open, station open | Great Western Railway Honeybourne Line | Gretton Halt Line open, station closed |
Winchcombe is a market town and civil parish in the Borough of Tewkesbury in the county of Gloucestershire, England, it is 6 miles (10 km) north-east of Cheltenham. The population was recorded as 4,538 in the 2011 census and estimated at 5,347 in 2019. The town is located in the Cotswolds and has many features and buildings dating back to medieval times. In 2021 it was the primary strike site of the eponymous Winchcombe meteorite.
The Gloucestershire Warwickshire Steam Railway is a volunteer-run heritage railway which runs along the Gloucestershire/Worcestershire border of the Cotswolds in England.
Stratford-upon-Avon railway station is the southern terminus of the North Warwickshire Line and Leamington–Stratford line, serving the market town of Stratford-upon-Avon in Warwickshire, England. The station is served by West Midlands Trains (WMT) and Chiltern Railways.
Toddington railway station serves the village of Toddington in Gloucestershire, England. Since 1984 it has been the main base of operations for the heritage Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway.
Honeybourne railway station serves the village of Honeybourne in Worcestershire, England. Opened in 1853, it is on the Cotswold Line and was formerly a busy junction with five platform faces, also serving trains on the Great Western Railway's Honeybourne Line between Cheltenham Spa and Stratford-upon-Avon, which formed part of a strategic route between the West Midlands and the West of England.
Winslow railway station refers to either one of two railway stations which historically served or is planned to serve, the town of Winslow in north Buckinghamshire, England. The original station (1850–1968) was on the former Varsity Line between Cambridge and Oxford. As of August 2023, construction of a new station nears completion and is scheduled to be served by East West Rail, as part of the plan to reinstate the Oxford–Cambridge service.
Olney was a railway station on the former Bedford to Northampton Line and Stratford-upon-Avon and Midland Junction Railway which served the town of Olney in Buckinghamshire, England. It was situated on a busy section of line between Towcester and Ravenstone Wood junction which saw heavy use by freight services running between Wales and north-east England. The station closed for passengers in 1962 and completely in 1964, the various connecting routes to the line having closed one by one from the 1950s onwards.
Fairford railway station served the town of Fairford in Gloucestershire. It was the western terminus of the Oxford, Witney and Fairford Railway between Oxford and Fairford. It had one platform, and a stone-built station building.
Broom Junction was a railway station serving the village of Broom in Warwickshire, England. It was an interchange for both the Stratford-upon-Avon and Midland Junction Railway and the Barnt Green to Ashchurch line.
Stratford-upon-Avon Racecourse Platform was a railway station on the Stratford upon Avon to Cheltenham section of the Honeybourne Line. Located one mile south of the town centre, its purpose was to serve Stratford Racecourse. It closed in 1968 as a result of falling passenger numbers.
Milcote railway station was a station on the Great Western Railway line between Stratford-upon-Avon and Honeybourne, which in 1908 became part of the Great Western Railway's new main line between Birmingham and Cheltenham.
Chambers Crossing Halt railway station was a timber-framed railway halt on the Stratford-upon-Avon to Cheltenham section of the Honeybourne Line. The station was located two miles south-west of Stratford upon Avon. The site of the station is now part of the Stratford greenway and may in future form part of the Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway's northern extension from Toddington.
Cheltenham Spa Malvern Road railway station was a station in the town of Cheltenham.
Cheltenham Spa St. James railway station was a station in the town of Cheltenham.
Laverton Halt railway station was a halt on the Honeybourne Line from Honeybourne to Cheltenham which served the hamlet of Laverton in Gloucestershire between 1905 and 1960.
Hayles Abbey Halt railway station is a halt opened by the Great Western Railway on the Honeybourne Line from Honeybourne to Cheltenham which served the hamlet of Hailes in Gloucestershire, as well as the nearby Hailes Abbey, between 1928 and 1960. The line through the site of the station was reinstated in 1985 and opened in 1987 by the Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway, although for many years no new halt was provided. The halt was eventually reopened on 5 June 2017 after being rebuilt by volunteers. Unlike the original, however, it only has a single platform. It lies between Toddington and Winchcombe stations.
Gretton Halt railway station was a halt opened by the Great Western Railway on the Honeybourne Line from Honeybourne to Cheltenham which served the small village of Gretton in Gloucestershire between 1906 and 1960. The line through the site of the station was reinstated in 1997 by the Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway, although no new halt was provided.
Weston-sub-Edge railway station is a disused station on the Honeybourne Line from Stratford-upon-Avon to Cheltenham which served the village of Weston-sub-Edge in Gloucestershire between 1904 and 1960.
Willersey Halt railway station served the village of Willersey, Gloucestershire, England between 1904 and 1960.
The Stratford on Avon Railway was a branch railway line opened in 1860, to connect the town of Stratford-upon-Avon to the Great Western Railway main line at Hatton, in England. It was worked by the GWR. In 1861 it was connected through Stratford to a branch line from Honeybourne, and this later enabled the development of a through mineral traffic. The company was absorbed by the GWR in 1883.