Chambers Crossing Halt railway station explained

Chambers Crossing Halt
Status:Disused
Borough:nr. Luddington, Stratford-on-Avon
Country:England
Platforms:2
Original:Great Western Railway
Years:17 October 1904
Events:Opened
Years1:14 July 1916
Events1:Closed

Chambers Crossing Halt railway station was a timber-framed railway halt on the Stratford-upon-Avon to Cheltenham section of the Honeybourne Line. The station was located two miles south-west of Stratford upon Avon. The site of the station is now part of the Stratford greenway and may in future form part of the Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway's northern extension from .

History

The section of the Honeybourne Line from to was opened by the Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway on 9 July 1859,[1] but it was over forty years before Chambers Crossing Halt was opened on 17 October 1904 by the Great Western Railway. A single platform was built to the south of the level crossing over a lane which ran from Weston-on-Avon to Clifford Chambers. A crossing keeper's cottage had been built here in around 1899 and by the time the halt opened, the crossing was gated and protected by signals. The gates were operated by a ground frame on the west side of the line to the north of the crossing. When the line was doubled in 1908, the frame was relocated to the opposite site of the crossing, adjacent to the keeper's cottage. A second platform was added on the Up side around this time at a cost of £75 . The platforms, each of which was 100feet for the steam railmotor service, had no passenger facilities, only lamps and the running in boards.

The timetable for April 1910 shows that Chambers Crossing Halt was served by seven railmotors in each direction between Honeybourne and Cheltenham, with some running to and from . An additional service ran from Honeybourne to and back. Due to low patronage and the outbreak of the First World War,[2] the station, along with two other halts opened on the same date (and) closed on 17 July 1916 as a wartime economy measure. It is thought unlikely that there are any photographs of the station in existence due to its short lifetime and its unremarkable appearance.[2]

Freight services continued to pass through the station until November 1976 when the line itself was closed.[1] The tracks between the current Stratford station and Honeybourne were taken up in 1979.

Present day

The trackbed between and lay disused for ten years until 1989 when, in a joint venture between Sustrans and Warwickshire County Council, it was made into the 5miles Stratford Greenway for cycling and walking.[3] The crossing cottage survives as a private residence.

The long-term aspiration of the Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway, a heritage railway formed in 1976 to keep the Honeybourne Line open, is to reopen the line as far as Stratford from its base at .

Sources

. Kingscott . Geoffrey . Geoffrey Kingscott . Lost Railways of Warwickshire . 2009 . Countryside Books . Newbury, Berkshire . 978-1-84674-174-6 .

52.1685°N -1.7461°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Stratford Greenway . 2010-11-01 . . https://web.archive.org/web/20100410134646/http://www.sustrans.org.uk/sustrans-near-you/midlands/easy-rides-in-the-midlands/stratford-greenway . 10 April 2010 . dead .
  2. Web site: Chambers Crossing Halt . 2010-11-02 . Warwickshire Railways.com.
  3. Web site: The Stratford Greenway . 2010-11-02 . . https://web.archive.org/web/20100824180011/http://www.warwickshire.gov.uk/Web/corporate/pages.nsf/Links/4B9692DED309DD2C80256B7D004E6301# . 24 August 2010 . dead . dmy-all .