Blackhall Rocks railway station explained

Blackhall Rocks
Status:Disused
Borough:Blackhall Rocks, County Durham
Country:England
Coordinates:54.7429°N -1.2761°W
Grid Name:Grid reference
Platforms:2
Original:North Eastern Railway
Pregroup:North Eastern Railway
Events:Opened
Years1:4 January 1960
Events1:Closed to passengers
Events2:Closed completely

Blackhall Rocks was one of two railway stations to have served the Blackhalls in County Durham, North East England, and was a stop on the Durham Coast Line. The station was poorly sited for the village that grew around Blackhall Colliery in the years following its opening and, after the opening of the more conveniently sited Blackhall Colliery station in 1936,[1] it came to primarily serve the more southerly village of Blackhall Rocks.

History

On 1 April 1905, the North Eastern Railway opened a new coastal line to link together the former Londonderry, Seaham and Sunderland Railway at and former Hartlepool Dock and Railway at .[2] This line was built, primarily, to avoid the steep gradients of the older inland route at and Banks[3] but also provided access to the newly developing collieries of the Durham Coast.[4]

In July 1907, the NER added a station to serve the Blackhalls at what would become Blackhall Rocks.[5] The first station was likely sited here as the sinking of Blackhall Colliery would not begin until 1909 and thus, at the time, it was anticipated that the station would primarily be used by tourists visiting the caves at Blackhall Rocks. This meant that the village that developed to serve the colliery was left some distance from their nearest railway station. Between the summer and 1 October 1919, the station was only served on Wednesdays and Saturdays.

The NER became part of the London and North Eastern Railway as part of the 1923 grouping and, on 24 July 1936, that company opened an additional station, approximately 1miles to the north, to serve the colliery village. Although this meant that the station ceased to primarily serve that village, a community had begun to grow close to Blackhall Rocks station during the 1920s, making it not entirely redundant. LNER lines in the North East came under the control of the North Eastern Region of British Railways following its nationalisation in 1948. By this time, passenger and goods traffic across the country was in decline and this was the case for Blackhall station, which closed to passengers on 4 January 1960 and then to all traffic on 7 December 1960.[6]

Passenger services continue to pass through the site of the station, but the only station between Seaham and Hartlepool to have been reopened (as of 2021) is at Horden.[7]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Cliffs, Caves and Coal: A Short History of the Blackhalls Area up to 1920. Deneholme Publishing. 2001. 0954149203. Hartlepool. 9, 19, 53, 55.
  2. Book: Body, Geoffrey. PSL Field Guides - Railways of the Eastern Region Volume 2. Patrick Stephens Limited. 1989. 1852600721. 66, 85, 150.
  3. Book: Hill, Norman. Teesside Railways A View From The Past. Ian Allan Publishing Ltd. 2001. 0711028036. 48, 58, 65.
  4. Web site: blackhall_history_1_7. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20170801113847/http://www.durhamintime.org.uk/durham_miner/blackhall_history_1_7.pdf. 1 August 2017. 14 July 2017.
  5. Book: Quick, M. E.. Railway passenger stations in England, Scotland and Wales - a chronology. Railway and Canal Historical Society. 2001. Richmond. 81. 931112387.
  6. Web site: Site of Blackhall Rocks Station © Ben Brooksbank cc-by-sa/2.0 :: Geograph Britain and Ireland. Geograph. 10 February 2021.
  7. Web site: temporary-timetable-for-mondays-to-saturdays-4167-qmvpwa.pdf. 16 February 2021.