Showing posts with label East Sussex. Show all posts
Showing posts with label East Sussex. Show all posts

Wednesday, 10 May 2017

Eastbourne Tramway








(Selection of photos and postcards sourced via the Internet)


A line I sadly missed despite living in Sussex from 1957 to 1990 was the Eastbourne Tramway. This was a two foot gauge miniature tramway that operated between the Crumbles and Princes Park in Eastbourne. It was built and operated by Claude Lane, opening in 1956 and running until 1969 when the whole operation was moved to Seaton in Devon with the trams being regauged to 2 feet 9 inches.

Wednesday, 28 December 2016

Crowborough 1977

CROWBOROUGH
AND
JARVIS BROOK











(All 4.7.1977 copyright Steve Sainsbury/Rail Thing)



Back in 1977 Crowborough station was an impressive place, complete with a fine array of Southern Region signage. Services were provided by first generation DEMUs and the whole place was in a bit of a time warp even then!

The station had of course been on a secondary main line until 8 years before these pics, when the Uckfield to Lewes section was inexplicably closed, converting this useful diversionary route into a long branch line, and cutting off the tradd from the south coast. Nearly 50 years later we are STILL trying to get this short 8 mile section reopened!

Saturday, 26 September 2015

Rye in 1986





(Pics 19.8.1986 copyright Steve Sainsbury/Rail Thing)


Back in 1986 I managed to spend 2 or 3 weeks each year travelling on rover tickets. One used to go west to Weymouth, Yeovil, Warminster and up to Reading, the other east towards Kent and East Sussex.

A favourite line was the Hastings-Ashford which unusually had diesel traction, and had narrowly missed closure in the 70s - in fact the closure notices had been put up at some of the stations!

It would have been a deeply regretted closure though I suspect it would have been reversed as much of the route would have had to remain in place for the Dungeness nuclear flask trains. But of course it didn't happen and the line has gradually flourished since, given a new importance by the Channel Tunnel.

Back in 1986 it was still quite a sleepy backwater, and had plenty of charm. I took these pics on 10 August 1986.


Rye railway station serves Rye in East SussexEngland. It is on the Marshlink Line 11 14 miles (18.1 km) east of Hastings providing a passing place between two single track sections. Train services are provided by Southern. The staggered platforms are linked by footbridge. Owing to a prolonged threat by British Rail to close the line, the station remained unmodernised and gaslit well into the 1970s.

History

The station opened on 13 February 1851, six weeks before the 1851 census. The census lists the station master as 23-year-old James Broderick from London. In each of the four successive censuses, William Hunt from Devon is names as station master, indicating at least a 40-year spell in charge. In 1901 it shows Richard Hunnisett as station master and in 1911 it is George Geer.

Services

The typical off-peak service is one train per hour to Hastings and Brighton and one train per hour to Ashford International.
At peak times an Ashford to Rye shuttle also operates meaning that between 0600 and 0900 six trains operate towards Ashford International and the wider network of services available there. In the reverse direction in the evening some six trains operate between 1730 and 2000.
Preceding stationNational Rail National RailFollowing station
Winchelsea Southern
Marshlink Line
 Appledore (Kent)

Gallery

Annual rail passenger usage*
2004/050.244 million
2005/06Increase 0.261 million
2006/07Increase 0.308 million
2007/08Increase 0.328 million
2008/09Increase 0.339 million
2009/10Increase 0.341 million
2010/11Increase 0.386 million
2011/12Decrease 0.376 million
2012/13Increase 0.393 million
2013/14Increase 0.427 million