Aldermaston railway station explained

Aldermaston
Symbol Location:gb
Symbol:rail
Borough:Aldermaston Wharf, West Berkshire
Country:England
Grid Name:Grid reference
Manager:Great Western Railway
Platforms:2
Code:AMT
Classification:DfT category F1
Original:Great Western Railway
Pregroup:GWR
Postgroup:GWR
Years:21 December 1847
Events:opened
Footnotes:Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road

Aldermaston railway station serves the village of Aldermaston in Berkshire, England. The station is at nearby Aldermaston Wharf and about 2miles north of Aldermaston village. It is measured from .

It was opened on 21 December 1847.[1]

Description

Aldermaston station is between the A4 road and the settlement of Aldermaston Wharf. It has a flanking platform on each side of the double track line. Each platform has its own independent road access and car park, together with a small shelter. The two platforms are also linked by a footbridge. The Newbury-bound platform is flanked on its offside by a siding, formerly used as a headshunt for access to a nearby freight facility. Since the rebuilding of the A340 bridge over the railway line in 2012, the siding has been defunct.

History

The station was built by the Berks and Hants Railway, part of the Great Western Railway and stayed with that company after the Grouping of 1923. The line then became part of the Western Region of British Railways upon the subsequent nationalisation of the railways.

When Sectorisation was introduced, the station was served by Network SouthEast although trains of the Intercity Sector passed on the Reading to Taunton Line which uses the Berks and Hants to Westbury for some long-distance services. This continued until the Privatisation of British Railways.

A 10.5miles branch line connecting Aldermaston to the Didcot, Newbury and Southampton Railway (DN&SR) at was proposed.[2] [3] The line was authorised by an Act of Parliament but never built.[4] This is because the railway finances were loaned by the London and South Western Railway, who stipulated that the DN&SR must relinquish their sole rights to run Southampton-bound services on the line and to also abandon its plans for a link at Aldermaston with the Great Western Railway.[5] [6] The proposed route roughly followed the Enborne valley, passing south of Brimpton, before following the Gaily Brook and West Clere Scarp near Kingsclere on to Old Burghclere.

Services

The station is served by local services operated by Great Western Railway between and or . Trains run hourly in both directions on Mondays to Saturdays, and on Sundays service is about every 2 hours. Typical journey times are about 15 minutes to Reading and 16 minutes to Newbury. Passengers for must normally change trains at Reading, though there are a small number of weekday peak through trains and a regular service on Sundays.

External links

51.4022°N -1.1367°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Basingstoke Railway History in Maps . https://web.archive.org/web/20081206131552/http://web.ukonline.co.uk/cj.tolley/cjt-brhm.htm . 6 December 2008. Christopher Tolley . 19 February 2015.
  2. Book: Carter, Ernest Frank. An Historical Geography of the Railways of the British Isles. 1959. Cassell. 414.
  3. Book: Popplewell, Lawrence. Bournemouth railway history: an exposure of Victorian engineering fraud. 1973. Dorset Publishing Co. 210.
  4. Book: Karau, Paul. An illustrated history of the Didcot, Newbury, and Southampton railway. 1984. Wild Swan. Upper Bucklebury, Berks.. 0906867045. viii. Parsons, Mike. Robertson, Kevin.
  5. Book: Pannell, John Percival Masterman. Old Southampton Shores. 1969. David & Charles. 139.
  6. Web site: RAILWAY MANIA. Kingsclere: Its History and Its People. 4 January 2014.