Cranmore railway station explained

Cranmore
Type:Station on heritage railway
Borough:Cranmore, Somerset
Country:England
Coordinates:51.185°N -2.478°W
Grid Name:Grid reference
Operator:East Somerset Railway
Platforms:1
Original:East Somerset Railway
Pregroup:Great Western Railway

Cranmore is the main railway station (and also the headquarters) of the preserved East Somerset Railway, in Somerset, England.

Services

Various services are provided throughout the year, mainly in the spring, summer and autumn months to Mendip Vale. Occasionally, specials are run to Westbury. The station also occasionally receives railtours from further afield such as London.[1]

The station was opened in 1858 to serve the village of Cranmore.[2]

Facilities

The station originally consisted of just the station building located at the west end of the remaining platform (now a museum). The on-platform station house and main station building were both built during preservation and provide much better services to passengers. The station has a signal box located at the west end of the former down platform. This is currently non-operational. Behind it is a miniature railway which runs to Cranmore West.

As the main station and home of the East Somerset Railway, Cranmore station also provides facilities for visitors:

Disabled access to the platforms is available.

Platform 2 rebuild

During the station's heyday, Cranmore originally had two platforms, but with the closure in 1960s, the site became derelict. Platform 2 was demolished and was not rebuilt as part of the ESR's restoration at the time. However, with preserved traffic increasing (and as platform 1 sometimes became overcrowded during special events), the ESR has rebuilt the long-demolished platform 2, along with its waiting room as an educational and interpretation centre, enabling volunteers and staff of the ESR to learn new skills and to display the history associated with the preserved line. In 2018, the ESR received £46,500 through National Lottery support.[3] Following the completion of the first phase, in 2019 the ESR received a further grant of £58,700 from the National Lottery Fund to finish the platform 2 and complete other works at the station. This was largely completed at the start of 2020, with the whole platform being constructed and surfaced. Further detail items are in hand which are to be added to the platform.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: East Somerset Railway Timetable . 17 June 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070617041651/http://www.eastsomersetrailway.com/timetable/timetable.php . 17 June 2007 . dead .
  2. Web site: East Somerset Railway. Steam Railway Lines. 27 October 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304094827/http://www.steamrailwaylines.co.uk/east_somerset_railway.htm. 4 March 2016. dead.
  3. Web site: East Somerset Railway wins National Lottery support. Unseensteam. 24 April 2018.