Broughton Skeog railway station explained

Broughton Skeog
Status:Disused
Borough:Garlieston, Wigtownshire
Country:Scotland
Original:Wigtownshire Railway
Pregroup:Caledonian, Glasgow & South Western, Midland and London North Western Railways
Years:December 1877[1]
Events:Opened
Years1:6 August 1885
Events1:Closed to passengers
Years2:1964
Events2:Line closed completely

Broughton Skeog (NX4554444071) was a railway station that was located near level crossing gates over a minor road on the Wigtownshire Railway branch line, from Newton Stewart, of the Portpatrick and Wigtownshire Joint Railway. It served a rural area in Wigtownshire and was named after the nearby farm. Although the station closed as far back as 1885 the line was not closed to passenger services until 1950, and to goods in 1964.

History

The Portpatrick and Wigtownshire Joint Railway was formed from the amalgamation of two railway companies: The Portpatrick Railway and the Wigtownshire Railway, which got into financial difficulties; they merged and were taken over.[2]

The station stood close to a controlled level crossing and was reached by a short lane which Ordnance Survey maps show had a crossing keeper's hut. After the station was closed an unusual siding remained for some years with centrally positioned points. Signals controlling the crossing may have been housed within the small building shown on the map.[3] By 1907 the signals and siding had been removed.[4]

Other stations

References

Notes
Sources

54.7677°N -4.4023°W

External links

Notes and References

  1. Butt, Page 46
  2. Casserley
  3. http://maps.nls.uk/os/25inch-2nd-and-later/view/?jp2=82909275#jp2=82909275&zoom=6&lat=5194.5&lon=7364&layers=BT 25 Inch 1894 OS Map
  4. http://maps.nls.uk/os/25inch-2nd-and-later/view/?jp2=82909278#jp2=82909278&zoom=6&lat=5343.00824&lon=7356&layers=BT 25 Inch 1907 OS Map