Bournemouth East railway station (1870–1885) explained

Bournemouth East
Status:Disused
Borough:Bournemouth, Dorset
Country:England
Platforms:1
Original:Ringwood, Christchurch and Bournemouth Railway
Pregroup:London and South Western Railway
Years:14 March 1870
Events:Opened
Years1:20 July 1885
Events1:Closed

Bournemouth East was the first railway station to be built in Bournemouth, Dorset, England. Completed in March 1870, it was sited at the south-east side of the Holdenhurst Road bridge, opposite the current station, at the end of an extension of an existing branch from Ringwood to Christchurch which had originally opened on 13 November 1862. The facilities offered by this station were very basic and not befitting a wealthy town which by 1871 had reached 5,900 inhabitants. The second station in the town, Bournemouth West, opened on 20 July 1874, and it was a far more substantial affair at the end of a new branch from Poole.

It was closed and replaced by the new Bournemouth East station, on the opposite (north-west) side of the Holdenhurst Road bridge, on 20 July 1885.[1]

The site today

The site is used for a warehouse store.

References

50.7269°N -1.8603°W

Notes and References

  1. http://www.semgonline.com/location/bomo2.html Bournemouth Central