Difference between revisions of "Coalport"
m (→See also: add links) |
(→History: 1922 staff) |
||
Line 15: | Line 15: | ||
The station opened on 1 February 1862 with a single platform. On 28 February 1894, GWR General Manager Henry Lambert proposed that the station should become a crossing place with the addition of a second platform and [[Coalport Brick & Tile Works Siding|additional sidings for Exley & Sons' traffic]] at a total cost of £4,062.<ref name=Marshall108>[[Bibliography#Books|Marshall (1989)]] p. 108.</ref> The [[List of signal boxes#List of historical Signal Boxes and Ground Frames|signal box]] was a GWR <noglossary>Type 5</noglossary> brick signal box with a 31 lever frame comprising 24 working levers and 7 spares. It was situated some way south of the station. The loop was the longest on the Severn Valley Branch with a length of 1,476ft,<ref name=Marshall108/> and for that reason a two-lever ground frame, locked from the signal box, worked the loop points and FPL at the north end of the station. Col. Yorke gave approval of the new works on behalf of the Board of Trade on 22 January 1896.<ref name=Marshall108/> | The station opened on 1 February 1862 with a single platform. On 28 February 1894, GWR General Manager Henry Lambert proposed that the station should become a crossing place with the addition of a second platform and [[Coalport Brick & Tile Works Siding|additional sidings for Exley & Sons' traffic]] at a total cost of £4,062.<ref name=Marshall108>[[Bibliography#Books|Marshall (1989)]] p. 108.</ref> The [[List of signal boxes#List of historical Signal Boxes and Ground Frames|signal box]] was a GWR <noglossary>Type 5</noglossary> brick signal box with a 31 lever frame comprising 24 working levers and 7 spares. It was situated some way south of the station. The loop was the longest on the Severn Valley Branch with a length of 1,476ft,<ref name=Marshall108/> and for that reason a two-lever ground frame, locked from the signal box, worked the loop points and FPL at the north end of the station. Col. Yorke gave approval of the new works on behalf of the Board of Trade on 22 January 1896.<ref name=Marshall108/> | ||
− | On 27 May 1903, approval was given for an additional bedroom for the Stationmaster’s house at a cost of £84 | + | On 27 May 1903, approval was given for an additional bedroom for the Stationmaster’s house at a cost of £84<ref name=Marshall108/>. |
+ | |||
+ | [[SVR staff in 1922#Severn Valley Railway (North of Bridgnorth)|GWR staff records for 1922]] show the station had a staff of 4. | ||
The ground frame at the north end of the passing loop was removed and replaced by motorised points around 1930.<ref name=Marshall108/> | The ground frame at the north end of the passing loop was removed and replaced by motorised points around 1930.<ref name=Marshall108/> |
Revision as of 16:56, 5 January 2021
Towards Hartlebury and Kidderminster | Towards Shrewsbury |
---|---|
Linley (2½ miles) | Ironbridge (2 miles) via Jackfield Halt (from 1934) |
Coalport Station was located 25 miles from Hartlebury and 15¾ miles from Shrewsbury.
History
The station opened on 1 February 1862 with a single platform. On 28 February 1894, GWRGreat Western Railway General Manager Henry Lambert proposed that the station should become a crossing place with the addition of a second platform and additional sidings for Exley & Sons' traffic at a total cost of £4,062.[1] The signal box was a GWRGreat Western Railway Type 5 brick signal box with a 31 lever frame comprising 24 working levers and 7 spares. It was situated some way south of the station. The loop was the longest on the Severn Valley Branch with a length of 1,476ft,[1] and for that reason a two-lever ground frame, locked from the signal box, worked the loop points and FPLFacing Point Lock, equipment that physically locks points so that they cannot move. at the north end of the station. Col. Yorke gave approval of the new works on behalf of the Board of Trade on 22 January 1896.[1]
On 27 May 1903, approval was given for an additional bedroom for the Stationmaster’s house at a cost of £84[1].
GWR staff records for 1922 show the station had a staff of 4.
The ground frame at the north end of the passing loop was removed and replaced by motorised points around 1930.[1]
The station closed to passengers from 9 September 1963. The signal box was closed on 2 December 1963 after through freight services ended. The station building is now a private house. In May 2017 it was offered for sale at a price of £950,000.[2]
Coalport passing loop operating instructions
The BR(W) Working Timetables for 1948 and 1959 include the following operating instruction specific to Coalport: When a Freight Train is standing in either of the sidings on the UpIn reference to the direction of travel means towards the major terminus (i.e. towards Kidderminster on the present day SVR) Side at Coalport, waiting for a train to pass, the Guard must divide his train to provide space for the Signalman to pass through for the purpose of exchanging train staffs with the passing train.
Traffic statistics
Passenger Traffic | Freight Traffic | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Tickets issued | Parcels despatched | Revenue (£) | Tons received & despatched | Revenue (£) | Total revenue (£) |
1903 | 7,906 | 1,325 | 493 | 11,021 | 3,820 | 4,313 |
1913 | 6,622 | 1,257 | 490 | 6,823 | 1,850 | 2,340 |
1923 | 8,984 | 1,885 | 754 | 9,253 | 3,857 | 4,611 |
1933 | 5,771 | 690 | 412 | 5,950 | 2,750 | 3,162 |
1938 | 5,741 | 1,257 | 366 | 4,937 | 1,771 | 2,137 |
Gallery
An ex-GWRGreat Western Railway prairie pulls a short northbound goods through Coalport in July 1962 (Sellick Collection)
A southbound train arrives at Coalport in August 1963 (Sellick Collection)
See also
- The Severn Valley Railway under GWR/BR ownership
- Pre-1963 map
- Shropshire Historic Environment Record
References
The Severn Valley Railway, John Marshall
Severn Valley Railway, A View from the Past, MA Vanns
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Marshall (1989) p. 108.
- ↑ Rightmove.co.uk retrieved 1 August 2017
- ↑ Nabarro (1971) p. 55.
|