Showing posts with label 1985. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1985. Show all posts

Sunday, 21 July 2019

Mold 2.4.1985














(All copyright Steve Sainsbury/Rail Thing)



Mold station closed to passengers on 30 April 1962 and to freight on 5 May 1964. The line itself stayed open for freight for longer, operating to a chemical factory north of the station and beyond to a government installation at Rhydymwyn.

The last freight trains to run through Mold operated in March 1983. These photos were taken in 1985 when the tracks were still in situ, and were lifted in the summer of the same year, The station site was redeveloped as a supermatrket in the 1990s.





Saturday, 30 December 2017

Micklefield 1985

MICKLEFIELD













All 18.6.1985 copyright Steve Sainsbury/Rail Thing



An hour or so at Micklefield in Yorkshire back in 1985 produced a variety of trains, most of which would now be extinct! The station was still fairly original and was orientated east-west so afternoon photos would catch the sun right - except I never saw the sun out there!

Friday, 19 May 2017

Lullingstone station - a fascinating 'never was'.


A southward view reveals the ends of the platforms and, in the distance, Eynsford substation, the latter of which is virtually identical to that still in evidence at Chelsfield. The absence of platform edging is evident here.
Text and picture © David Glasspool


 feature which can also still be seen is the former entrance to the footbridge. It is located on the ''down'' side of the line, above the platforms - the station is in a cutting by this point. In the background is the field which was earmarked for the international airport. The station had been partly financed by the Kemp Town Brewery Company, which also owned the land planned for development. The distances of Heathrow and the proposed Lullingstone airport from Central London are not too dissimilar: 14 miles and 17 miles out respectively.
Text and photo © David Glasspool


This northward view reveals that both prefabricated concrete platform surfaces remain intact, although some of the edging has since disappeared. A signal post now occupies part of what would have been the ''up'' platform. Eynsford Tunnel is in the distance, and the field which was to accommodate the area's version of Heathrow Airport is beyond the vegetation on the left. 
Text and photo © David Glasspool

The above three photos were all taken on 14 December 2006 and are published with permission of the owner David Glasspool. More on this station and other Kent railways on the recommended Kent Rail website.

In a few rare cases stations were built but never opened. Lullingstone in Kent is one of these. It was sited on the Maidstone East line just over a mile from the existing station at Eynsford. Although largely demolished in 1955 there are still some remains visible, south of Eynsford Tunnel.
The station was built to serve new housing and a proposed new airport. Lullingstone would be one of four airports to serve London, and a 5000 acre estate was purchased for new housebuilding. 
The clue to why this didn't happen is the date - 1936. War was just three years away, and plans and development were all put on ice.

However the station was constructed, ready for the passengers that never came. The proposed opening date was 2 April 1939. The main line platforms and station buildings were built as were the steps for a footbridge. The station would have been substantial, with four platforms, two for mainline use and another two on the proposed airport branch. The station never opened but was shown in passenger timetables from 1939 to 1941 as, confusingly, being served by trains but with a note saying the opening date would be announced in due course. After that the station still appeared for a while, but no trains were shown as stopping there.

After demolition the station canopy was reused at Canterbury West. Today there are still a  few signs of its existence, including parts of the platforms, and the approach road.

I did try to find this station back in April 1985, having read about it somewhere. I walked the road beyond Eynsford station towards Lullingstone hoping to find some clue as to where it was, but with the light fading and twenty years before Google I gave up, but not before getting this lovely shot of the viaduct with a slam door train running over it. This quiet corner of Kent would have been transformed if Lullingstone Airport had been built!


(23.4.1985 copyright Steve Sainsbury/Rail Thing)

Wednesday, 5 April 2017

Instow Transformation

INSTOW


Instow 14.5.1985


Instow 26.6.2012



The Barnstaple to Torrington line is one of those lines that really shouldn't ever have closed, linking a number of towns into the Network in a prime holiday area. The line will no doubt reopen at some point in the future but, like the S&D, it's currently just the site of a number of separate restoration schemes. Torrington station and the start of a line northwards is under the control of the Tarka Valley Railway which aims to gradually restore the line towards Bideford. Bideford station itself has been restored and the signalbox completely rebuilt from nothing (just like at Midsomer Norton and Shillingstone) with track laid and a loco on site. The same group are also responsible for the fantastic restoration of the signalbox further towards Barnstaple at Instow, the two photos above showing this.

If you're in the area please try to take a look at what's happening on this wonderfully scenic and useful route.

LINKS

Wednesday, 8 March 2017

Eltham Well Hall 1985

ELTHAM WELL HALL







The replacement Eltham station in the distance.






(All 13.2.1985 copyright Steve Sainsbury/Rail Thing)


Eltham Well Hall station opened on 1 May 1895. 

Eltham Well Hall was one of two Eltham stations (the other being Eltham Park) which were both closed on 17 March 1985 when the new Eltham station opened, slightly to the east of Eltham Well Hall.

Eltham Well Hall opened on 1 May 1895. There are no traces of the station left.

I visited the station just five weeks before closure on a bitterly cold day with snow on the ground. Work on the new station had progressed well, the new station being immediately to the east of Well Hall. Unfortunately no trains passed through whilst I was there!

Thursday, 15 September 2016

Lincolnshire backwater in 1985

GAINSBOROUGH LEA ROAD






(All pics 19.6.1985 copyright Steve Sainsbury/Rail Thing)



Back in 1985 I was driving a lorry around the country, a very cheap way to visit lots of places and take lots of photos!

A part of the country I really don't know very well is Lincolnshire. Southern and Western Region, and Switzerland I know like the back of my hand, most if not all of the railways, same with the stations.

So I turned up at this strange little place, I knew it was one of two stations in Gainsborough, and I vaguely knew (this was pre-Internet of course!) that it didn't see many passenger trains. But I was lucky enough to snap a class 56 on a freight in the twenty minutes or so I was there.

The line and station are still there of course - hopefully they get a few more passenger trains these days!

Wednesday, 24 August 2016

Hatfield Peverel 1985

HATFIELD PEVEREL













(All pics 11.6.1985 copyright Steve Sainsbury/Rail Thing)


It's Flaming June in 1985 and I've found myself at Hatfield Peverel station somewhere in the east of England.

Whilst it wasn't pleasant taking photos in these conditions as usual the rain brings out a very different feel to a place, giving the shots a bleakness that sunny shots would miss.

It was a busy station with quite a variety of stock coming through. This was the tail end of the BR blue era but a few carriages with Inter-City livery are starting to appear in the loco hauled rakes.

I also tried to capture a few atmosphere/existentialist shots, which I think managed to catch the everyday feel of the place. All in all a good hour or so well spent!