Cotham railway station explained

Cotham
Status:Disused
Borough:Cotham, Nottinghamshire
Country:England
Grid Name:Grid reference
Platforms:2
Pregroup:Great Northern Railway
Postgroup:LNER
Years:15 December 1879
Events:Opened
Years1:11 September 1939
Events1:Closed

Cotham railway station was a railway station serving the village of Cotham, Nottinghamshire. It was the only intermediate station on the Great Northern Railway Newark to Bottesford line, which was effectively a northern continuation of the Great Northern and London and North Western Joint Railway.[1] It opened in 1879. It was served by through services to the joint line, but only one of these remained in 1910[2] and this had been withdrawn by 1922.[3] Although Cotham station itself closed in 1939 occasional passenger services between Nottingham to Newark continued to use the line until 1955. The singled branch line was then freight only until it closed on 16 April 1987. The track was lifted in 1988. The line from Bottesford West Junction to Newark had remained in use until 1987 mainly for oil trains from Immingham on the River Humber to an oil refinery at Rectory Junction, Colwick. After closure of the line these trains ran via Nottingham or Grantham.

References

53.0066°N -0.8117°W

Notes and References

  1. British Railways Pre-Grouping Altlas and Gazetteer
  2. Bradshaw's Railway Guide, April 1910.
  3. Bradshaw's Railway Guide, July 1922.