Downton railway station explained

Downton
Status:Disused
Borough:Downton, Wiltshire
Country:England
Coordinates:50.993°N -1.7391°W
Grid Name:Grid reference
Platforms:2
Pregroup:Salisbury & Dorset Junction Railway
London and South Western Railway
Postgroup:Southern Railway
Southern Region of British Railways
Years:20 December 1866
Events:Opened
Years2:4 May 1964
Events2:Closed

Downton was a railway station serving Downton, a village in Wiltshire. The village contained a large tanning mill on the River Avon, which has now closed, and has been redeveloped as residential property. The station was one of many casualties of the mass closure of British railway lines in the 1960s and 1970s; the last service was on 2 May 1964. It was served by the Salisbury and Dorset Junction Railway, a line running north–south, along the River Avon just to the West of the New Forest, connecting Salisbury to the North and Poole to the South, meeting the Southampton and Dorchester Railway at West Moors.

Today, the site of the station is a residential estate.

External links

Further reading