King's Lynn railway station explained

King's Lynn
Symbol Location:gb
Symbol:rail
Borough:King's Lynn, King's Lynn and West Norfolk
Country:England
Coordinates:52.7539°N 0.4033°W
Grid Name:Grid reference
Owned:Network Rail
Manager:Great Northern
Platforms:3 (2 in use)[1]
Code:KLN
Classification:DfT category D
Years:27 October 1846
Events:Opened as Lynn
Years2:1846-1848
Events2:Dereham line opens
Years3:1862
Events3:Hunstanton line opens
Years4:1865
Events4:South Lynn station opens
Years5:1871
Events5:Current station built
Years6:1 January 1911
Events6:Renamed King's Lynn[2]
Years7:1959
Events7:South Lynn station and M&GN closes
Years8:1968
Events8:Dereham branch closes, services to Wisbech end
Years9:1969
Events9:Hunstanton branch closes
Years10:1992
Events10:Line electrified, station refurbished
Footnotes:Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road
Embedded:
Embed:yes
Designation1:Grade II
Designation1 Feature:Kings Lynn Railway Station
Designation1 Date:24 August 2001
Designation1 Number:1389399

King's Lynn railway station is the northern terminus of the Fen line in the east of England, serving the town of King's Lynn, Norfolk. It is 41chain47chain from and 96chain75chain measured from London Liverpool Street.

The station and all trains calling here are operated by Great Northern (with service to and from .)

It has been the only station in the town since the closure of South Lynn railway station in 1959.

Early growth

The act for the Lynn and Ely Railway received royal assent on 30 June 1845. Work started on the line in 1846 and so the railway arrived at Lynn on 27 October 1846. The original line ran South to Downham with the first station after Lynn being St Germain's. It took another two years to reach Ely. Great Eastern Railway.[3] [4] Lynn, when opened was a Joint station (Lynn & Ely and Lynn & Dereham). However, on 22 July 1847 the Lynn & Ely and Lynn & Dereham were amalgamated to form the East Anglian Railway. A spur connecting the harbour was opened in 1849, and at one point was a complicated network of lines, boasting two swing bridges, serving premises on and around the town's South Quay.[5] Another short branch, about three-quarters of a mile (1200 m) long, connecting the docks was opened in 1862 by the King's Lynn Docks & Railway Company.[6] [7] The railway was initially not welcomed by the port authorities in King's Lynn; they predicted that sea-bound trade would decline, and were later proved correct when through-trains to London ended up carrying the majority of freight to the capital.[8]

Lynn opened as a junction station. The Lynn and East Dereham Railway Act 1845 of 21 July 1845,[9] authorised a line which weaved a 26miles route to Dereham. The line opened to Narborough, on 27 October 1846, the same day the Lynn & Ely opened to Downham. The line was extended to Swaffham, on 10 August 1847, opening in stages between 1846 and 1848. The line ran out of Lynn in a South-Easterly direction with Middleton being the first station after Lynn.[10] this later became part of the Great Eastern Railway.

Expansion followed with the opening of several branches. A line running north to the seaside resort of Hunstanton was opened in 1862,[8] [11] a journey celebrated by former Poet Laureate John Betjeman in a short BBC film about the line.[12]

The Hunstanton line included Wolferton station, which served the Royal Family's Sandringham House, and so became the route of hundreds of Royal Trains.[13] Since royal services to London had to first pass through King's Lynn before heading south to King's Cross,[14] crowds on King's Lynn station cheering the Royal Train became one of the town's cherished and memorable traditions.[15]

King's Lynn also received services from the Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway system, whose main station serving the town was in nearby South Lynn; a short shuttle service ran from King's Lynn to South Lynn as often as twenty times a day.[16] The station opened in 1886, serving Sutton Bridge and Spalding to the west.[17] Prior to the opening of South Lynn station, there had been a simple single platform station serving West Lynn, on the west bank of the River Ouse. An early constituent of the M&GN, the Lynn & Fakenham Railway, had used King's Lynn station, but ran into it from the north, via Gaywood Junction. This line was abandoned on the opening of the station at South Lynn. The "Lynn Avoiding" line was the last link in the chain which brought the eastern lines, which had reached Norwich in 1882, and Cromer in 1887, in direct contact with the lines west of Lynn.

King's Lynn's original station building was replaced by the current building by the builder Robert Skipper of Dereham in 1871–72, and was significantly extended in 1910; the original of 1846 was a somewhat rudimentary timber building on the site of the goods yards of the time.[18] The Railway Cafe was opened in 1910 and celebrated the centenary of its opening in 2010.[19]

Closures

At their peak, the railways in and around King's Lynn employed hundreds of people,[20] but Britain's extensive railway cutbacks in the late 1950s and the following decades badly affected King's Lynn's railway services. The 1959 closure of the former M&GN's lines resulted in the closure of South Lynn railway station on 28 February that year, depriving King's Lynn of services to Norwich and Spalding.[17] [21] The dubious safety of a bridge over the Ouse, a very short way north-west of South Lynn station, was allegedly a significant factor in the closure of the whole route, and was demolished later that year. A section of this line about half a mile (800 m) long[22] was left open for freight into the 1990s, transporting materials like oil and limestone to the sugar beet factory (since closed).[23]

Other services suffered a similar fate in the following years. Passenger services to Hunstanton were discontinued in 1969,[24] services to Wisbech (via Magdalen Road) ended in 1968,[25] and the line to Dereham was closed in the same year, save for a three-mile[26] section for sand freight from King's Lynn to Middleton.[27] [28] The closure of these services left only one passenger route in operation—services to Ely and Cambridge on the Fen Line.

Freight services to King's Lynn were less swiftly, but even more extensively, affected by cutbacks. Campbell's made heavy use of rail transport after opening its factory in Lynn in 1959, its curtain-sided wagons being one of the more distinctive sights on the Fen Line; but with the withdrawal of Speedlink services in the early 1990s, this traffic was lost to road transport.[29] The branch to the harbour was progressively shortened before its final closure at around the same time,[5] and the line to the docks closed as well (except for a short stub allowing the aforementioned freight trains from Middleton to change direction), the last train passing over the line in June 1994. The station's once-extensive goods yard suffered the same fate, the site being taken over by the station's car park and two large shops.

To the present

Before electrification in 1992, InterCity (and, later, Network SouthEast) diesel locomotives such as the Class 37[30] operated most services. Many of these services featured full-service restaurant cars. Off-peak links were often provided by Metro-Cammell diesel multiple units, such as the Class 101.[31]

For many years after electrification, and the consequent removal of diesel locomotives from passenger services, Class 317 electrical multiple units operated all services out of King's Lynn. While they were not as comfortable as the previous fleet of locomotive-hauled coaches, they quickly developed a reputation for reliability.[32] Today's services are mostly operated by Class 387s. A new siding alongside the Middleton Towers branch line, which extends for, was commissioned in August 2020, to enable 8-car electric multiple units to be stabled when not in use.[33] [34] The only freight activity around King's Lynn today is the sand trains which run from the Middleton Towers branch to either Goole, Barnsley or Doncaster. These are usually operated by GB Railfreight,[35] using Class 66 locomotives. Occasionally, enthusiast railtours operate on this branch as well.[36]

The station is served by Great Northern as part of its service from King's Cross. Outside peak hours, services run non-stop between London and Cambridge as part of a half-hourly Cambridge service; one train per hour then continues beyond Cambridge, stopping at all stations on the Fen Line to King's Lynn. In the past, through-trains from London always started from Liverpool Street, but services were shifted to King's Cross in the 1990s. Before the May 2023 timetable change, Greater Anglia also operated a limited number a services to London Liverpool Street, which have since been withdrawn.

Ticket barriers were installed in 2012.

Restoration work began in April 2013 as a station rewire which quickly grew into a heritage inspired project. The view taken was to restore the station to a 1949 state with British Rail branding and reminisces of the GER and LNER railways. The paint scheme was based upon a GER steam unit which had blue red and gold. GER cast iron benches were made locally by East Coast Castings in Wotton and BR style totems were hand-made alongside LNER station clocks. Platforms were resurfaced and LED lighting installed throughout public areas along with new CCTV. A Norfolk county flagpole was installed to replace the old one and canopies and roof restored and or replaced. The overall cost was under £1.1million. The project was jointly funded by First Capital Connect and Network Rail. The project's completion was marked with Michael Portillo unveiling a plaque in the booking hall area on 22 July 2014.[37] [38]

It was originally intended that King's Lynn would be included in the Thameslink Programme, so that most trains for London from King's Lynn would be diverted on to the Thameslink route and on to St Pancras, Farringdon rather than terminating at King's Cross.[39] However, this did not occur and King's Lynn trains continue to provide the fast service from Cambridge to Kings Cross.[40]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: National Rail Enquiries - Station facilities for Kings Lynn.
  2. 25 January 1911 . Minutes of Meeting of the Superintendents' Conference . Minute No. 6381 . London . Railway Clearing House. (Unpublished).
  3. Book: Oppitz, Leslie . Lost Railways of East Anglia . 2002 . 1-85306-595-1 . Countryside Books . 15.
  4. Book: Adderson, Richard . Ely to Kings Lynn, including the Stoke Ferry Branch . Kenworthy, Graham . 2002 . Middleton Press . 1-901706-53-2.
  5. Adderson & Kenworthy, map XXVI, and preface to ch. 4.
  6. Adderson & Kenworthy, preface to ch. 4.
  7. Web site: William Burkitt's Life and Career . The Colonel Stephens Railway Museum . 2 September 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070425044923/http://www.hfstephens-museum.org.uk/pages/topics/gazelle/burkitt.htm . 25 April 2007 . dead .
  8. Oppitz 2002, p. 15.
  9. Book: Tuck, Henry . The Railway Shareholder's Manual; or, Practical Guide to all the Railways in the World . 1847 . Effingham Wilson . 130.
  10. Oppitz 2002, p. 17.
  11. Web site: Royal Insight Mailbox . January 2005 . Insight Magazine . 2 September 2007 . [Wolferton Station's] origins go back to the opening of the Kings Lynn to Hunstanton branch railway line in 1862[.].
  12. John Betjeman Goes By Train . 1962 . Betjeman, John (Narrator); Freegard, Malcolm (Producer) . British Transport Films/BBC TV East Anglia.
  13. According to Insight (2005), 645 in just 27 years.
  14. Not, as was the norm for passenger services at the time, Liverpool Street; the reigning monarch is not permitted to enter the City of London, in whose boundaries Liverpool Street station lies, without the permission of the Lord Mayor.
  15. News: The New York Times . 29 June 1986 . Wilson . Anne . NEW TONE FOR AN OLD PORT .
  16. Adderson & Kenworthy, slide 106.
  17. Oppitz 2002, pp. 26–28.
  18. Adderson & Kenworthy, notes to map XXVIII and slide 114.
  19. News: Bishop. Chris. A Norfolk station cafe used by Stephen Fry celebrates 100 years. 17 March 2016. Eastern Daily Press. 10 November 2010.
  20. The ASLEF Journal . King's Lynn celebrates its century . March 2007 . 15.
  21. News: DETONATORS CRACKLE KNELL OF M&GN . Lynn News & Advertiser . 1959-03-03 . 1 . [A] crackle of detonators greeted [the final train's] crossing of the Clenchwarton bridge—the bridge whose safety and expensive replacement has been a strong point in the British Transport Commission's unflinching determination to close the "Joint". .
  22. Ordnance Survey . North West Norfolk (Sheet 132) . 1974 . 1:50000 . 6117 to 6218 .
  23. Adderson & Kenworthy, slide 107.
  24. Oppitz 2002, pp. 14–15.
  25. Oppitz 2002, p. 19.
  26. To be precise, 2.9miles. See Web site: Griffiths, Tim (Office of Rail Regulation) . Consultation on Caps for Freight Track Access Charges December 2006 . 54 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070928003923/http://www.rail-reg.gov.uk/upload/pdf/310-EWS-290107.pdf . 28 September 2007 .
  27. Oppitz 2002, p. 18.
  28. Web site: Norfolk Heritage Explorer Record 13600 (Lynn and Dereham Railway) . Norfolk County Council . Norfolk Explorer . 4 September 2007.
  29. Adderson & Kenworthy, slide 91.
  30. Adderson & Kenworthy, slide 90.
  31. Adderson & Kenworthy, slides 32, 80, 109.
  32. Adderson & Kenworthy, slide 119.
  33. Book: Kelman . Leanne . Railway track diagrams, books 2 - eastern . 2020 . Trackmaps . Frome . 978-1-9996271-3-3 . 5. 12.
  34. Milner . Chris . NR takes full advantage of August Bank Holiday with raft of engineering work . The Journal of the Royal Air Force Historical Society . October 2020 . 166 . 1,435 . 83 . Mortons Media . Horncastle . 0033-8923.
  35. Web site: GBRf's Sand Trains from Kings Lynn. 16 February 2014 . brakingcurve.wordpress.com . 17 June 2017.
  36. Web site: Notable Workings - Saturday 21st October 2006 . https://web.archive.org/web/20061128182353/http://www.therailwaycentre.com/Noteable%20Workings%20data/21_10_06.htm . usurped . 28 November 2006 . 21 October 2006 . TheRailwayCentre.com . 6 September 2007.
  37. News: A station fit for a queen: How King's Lynn is taking a step back in time . Emma . Baker . ITV News Anglia . 22 November 2013 . 28 July 2014 .
  38. News: Michael Portillo officially opens King's Lynn station refurbishment . 23 July 2014 . ITV News Anglia . 28 July 2014 .
  39. Web site: Thameslink Programme (Thameslink 2000) . alwaystouchout.com . 2 September 2007 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070831014244/http://www.alwaystouchout.com/project/23 . 31 August 2007 .
  40. Web site: Norfolk's Fen line - the next transport battle? . 4 February 2011 . 21 February 2011.