Brompton railway station explained

Brompton
Status:Disused
Borough:Brompton, Hambleton
Country:England
Coordinates:54.3645°N -1.425°W
Grid Name:Grid reference
Platforms:2
Original:Leeds Northern Railway
Pregroup:North Eastern Railway
Postgroup:London and North Eastern Railway
Events:Station opened
Events1:Station closed

Brompton railway station was a railway station that served the town of Brompton, North Yorkshire, England. It was opened in 1854 and closed in 1965. The line it was on is still open and carries passenger traffic to and from and to and London King's Cross.

History

The Leeds Northern Railway line between Northallerton and was opened in 1852;[1] the station opened in 1854.[2] It was equipped with three sidings to the south of the level crossing a weighbridge, a coal drop, and a private siding. The principal freight from the station was hay and clover. The level crossing is still in operation,[3] though the station buildings were demolished in the early 2000s.[4]

Passenger trains in 1906 amounted to six stopping trains either way. Most ran between and ; the remainder were services between and Hartlepool.[5]

The station was closed on 6 September 1965. It was the last intermediate station still in operation between Northallerton and Eaglescliffe[6] (although railway station reopened in 1996).[7]

The railway is still in operation[8] for passenger trains to and from Sunderland (Grand Central), and to and from Middlesbrough (TransPennine Express). The line is also used for freight trains between the northeast and the south.[9]

1924 accident

On 17 March 1924, a train between Northallerton and West Hartlepool derailed after travelling through a crossover at . Men were working on the line and crossings to replace worn out tracks and fittings. Unwittingly, the gauge at the crossover was too wide and the last four coaches of the train derailed, with some mounting the platform on the opposite side of the line.[10] [11]

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Book: Body. Geoffrey. Railways of the Eastern Region.. 1989. Stephens. Wellingborough. 1-85260-072-1. 137.
  2. Book: Ellis. Norman. North Yorkshire railway stations. 1995. R. Stenlake. Ochiltree. 1-872074-63-4. 41.
  3. Book: Brailsford. Martyn. Railway Track Diagrams Book 2; Eastern. 2016. TRACKmaps. Frome. 978-0-9549866-8-1. 20. 4.
  4. News: Lloyd . Chris . On the track of lost cottages . The Northern Echo . 18 January 2014 . 27. 2043-3077.
  5. Web site: Bradshaw 1906. archive.org. Blacklock & Co. 15 May 2018. 578 579. 1 February 1906.
  6. Book: Burgess. Neil. The lost railways of Yorkshire's North Riding. 2011. Stenlake. Catrine. 9781840335552. 53.
  7. Piggott. Nick. New station opens at Yarm. The Railway Magazine. April 1996. 142. 1140. 18. IPC. London. 0033-8923.
  8. Web site: Disused Stations: Northallerton Low Level Station. www.disused-stations.org.uk. 15 May 2018.
  9. Web site: Route Specifications 2017 London North Eastern and East Midlands. networkrail.co.uk. 15 May 2018. 61. April 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20180308232104/https://cdn.networkrail.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/LNE-and-EM-Route-Specification.pdf. 8 March 2018. dead.
  10. Web site: Hall . G L . Brompton train crash 17 March 1924 . railwaysarchive.co.uk . Ministry of Transport . 14 August 2018 .
  11. Book: Riordan . Michael . The History of Northallerton, North Yorkshire, from Earliest Times to the Year 2000 . 2002 . Blackthorn Press . Pickering . 0-9540535-0-8 . 380.