Chee Dale Halt railway station explained

Chee Dale Halt
Status:Disused
Borough:Buxton, High Peak
Country:England
Platforms:1
Original:British Rail
Years:5 July 1987
Events:Opened
Years1:13 September 1987
Events1:Closed[1]

Chee Dale Halt railway station was a timber-built railway halt located on the Peak Forest Junction to Buxton Junction spur of a triangle of the former Midland Railway lines at Blackwell Mill. The halt was opened on 5 July 1987 by British Rail and used for a summer Sundays-only passenger service promoted by Peak Rail that ran between Edale railway station and Chee Dale, and closed on 13 September 1987.

Use

The halt was used primarily by ramblers on the nearby Monsal Trail. There was no road access to the halt.

Closure

The passenger train ran for one summer season, until the Health and Safety executive raised concerns that the signalling along the line was not adequate for passenger trains. British Rail decided that it would not be economically viable to upgrade the signalling for a summer Sundays-only service, and the halt closed on 13 September 1987 after the last train left. The halt remained for a few years after closure, but was removed in the early 1990s to become Peak Rail's Matlock Riverside station. The line is still open for freight services.

References

53.2505°N -1.8335°W

Notes and References

  1. Book: Quick, M E. Railway passenger stations in England, Scotland and Wales – a chronology. 2002. Railway and Canal Historical Society. Richmond. 121. 931112387.