Purley railway station explained

Purley
Manager:Southern
Fare Zone:6
Symbol:rail
Borough:London Borough of Croydon
Platforms:6
Railexits0405: 5.512
Railexits0506: 3.593
Railexits0607: 5.267
Railexits0708: 5.376
Railexits0809: 4.234
Railexits0910: 5.789
Railexits1011: 2.675
Railexits1112: 2.756
Railexits1213: 2.917
Railexits1314: 3.064
Railexits1415: 3.206
Railexits1516: 3.351
Railexits1617: 3.029
Railint1617:0.570
Railexits1718: 3.076
Railint1718: 0.560 -->
Railexits1819: 3.004
Railint1819: 0.848
Railexits1920: 2.962
Railint1920: 0.829
Railexits2021: 0.808
Railint2021: 0.140
Railexits2122: 1.864
Railint2122: 0.331
Railexits2223: 2.348
Railint2223: 0.549
Railcode:PUR
Dft Category:C2
Years1:12 July 1841
Events1:Opened as Godstone Road
Years2:1 October 1847
Events2:Closed
Years3:5 August 1856
Events3:Reopened as Caterham Junction
Years4:1 October 1888
Events4:Renamed Purley
Access:yes
Toilets:Yes
Access Note:[1]
Original:London & Brighton Railway
Pregroup:London, Brighton & South Coast Railway
Postgroup:Southern Railway
Coordinates:51.3377°N -0.1135°W

Purley railway station is in the London Borough of Croydon on the Brighton Main Line, 13miles measured from (15miles from),[2] in Travelcard Zone 6. It is a junction, with branches to Caterham and Tattenham Corner.

History

Purley station has been known by three different names.

Godstone Road

The station was opened by the London & Brighton Railway on 12 July 1841 as Godstone Road. Due to low passenger traffic, this was closed on 1 October 1847 by the London, Brighton & South Coast Railway (LB&SCR), which had opened the new Stoat's Nest station 1miles away at Coulsdon.

Caterham Junction

In 1855 a proposal by a local company to connect the sandstone quarries at Caterham to the main line railway became embroiled in a long-running dispute between the LB&SCR and the rival South Eastern Railway (SER), which resulted in the reopening of the station as Caterham Junction. The proposed line was in the territory of the SER, and was to be operated by that company. It would have to join the railway system on a section of the LB&SCR, where the SER had running powers but no stations. The new railway had to sue the LB&SCR to force it to allow the junction with its line and to reopen the station. On 5 August 1856 the station reopened with the opening of the single track Caterham branch.[3] [4] [5]

Purley

The station was renamed Purley on 1 October 1888, and rebuilt between and 1899 during the widening of the main line between East Croydon and the beginning of the new Quarry Line at Coulsdon North in 1899. The SER built a line from Purley to Kingswood, extended to Tattenham Corner between 1897 and 1901. By the latter date it had become the South Eastern & Chatham Railway. The main station building facade reads 1899 as the year of construction.

Accidents and incidents

On 22 September 1873, John Cunliffe Pickersgill-Cunliffe, a former member of Parliament, was struck by a train at the then Caterham Junction station. He died two weeks later at Guy's Hospital.[6]

On 22 December 1894, a collision between a light engine and a passenger train injured six people.[7]

The Purley station rail crash on 4 March 1989 occurred just to the north of the station, and left five dead and 94 injured. A memorial garden was created at the station to commemorate this.[8]

On the night of 5 July 2002 a fire occurred on the 23:15 service from Caterham to London Bridge. A rail attendant, Philip Cable, helped put out the fire, and suffered an asthma attack and collapsed. He died at Mayday Hospital in Croydon a few hours later. A charge of manslaughter was laid against Karl Lacey, who was aged 16 at the time of the fire, and had set fire to newspapers and cushions in the carriage. After being found guilty, he was sentenced to four years' youth custody.[9]

Platforms

Platform 1 and 2 are normally used only on early mornings and when engineering works dictate. At all other times, services on the Brighton Main Line run limited stop between East Croydon and Brighton: these trains, together with Gatwick Express and Thameslink services, pass through platforms 1 and 2. During 2008 a fence was erected to prevent access to Platform 2, for safety reasons. Gates at both end of this fence are opened by staff for the few trains that stop.

Platform 3 is used for main line services to London Bridge, London Victoria and Thameslink services to .

Platform 4 is used for main line services to Horsham and Reigate, Thameslink services to Three Bridges and Sunday services to Bognor Regis.

Platform 5 and 6 serve the branch lines to Tattenham Corner and Caterham. Both these platforms can be used by trains in either direction, though platform 5 is primarily northbound towards London and platform 6 is usually southbound.

Services

Services at Purley are operated by Southern and Thameslink.

The typical off-peak service in trains per hour is:[10]

Southern

Southern services at Purley are operated using EMUs.

Thameslink

Thameslink also operate an hourly night service between Bedford and although this service does not call at London Bridge.

Thameslink services at Purley are operated using EMUs.

Connections

Several London Buses routes serve the station.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Network Map. Southern. 2 January 2010.
  2. Book: Yonge, John . Jacobs . Gerald . Railway Track Diagrams 5: Southern & TfL . 3rd . November 2008 . 1994 . Trackmaps . Bradford on Avon . 978-0-9549866-4-3 . map 14C .
  3. Chronology Of London Railways by H.V.Borley
  4. Southern Region Record by R.H.Clark
  5. Forgotten Stations of Greater London by J.E.Connor and B.Halford
  6. Banking Obituaries. The Bankers' Magazine. 1873. 33. 1053–1054. 30 January 2013.
  7. Book: Kidner, R. W.. 1977 . 1963 . The South Eastern and Chatham Railway . The Oakwood Press. Tarrant Hinton . 49.
  8. Web site: Joanna. Till. Memorial to Purley train crash victims is now a fitting crash tribute. https://archive.today/20120913134139/http://www.thisiscroydontoday.co.uk/news/Memorial-fitting-crash-tribute/article-3152807-detail/article.html. dead. 13 September 2012. This is Croydon Today. 2 February 2011. 25 March 2011.
  9. News: Teenager jailed for manslaughter. 11 June 2004. BBC News. 15 September 2012.
  10. https://www.networkrail.co.uk/running-the-railway/timetabling/electronic-national-rail-timetable/ (Timetable Nos. 177, 181, and 183 May 2018)