Kingthorpe railway station explained

Kingthorpe
Status:Disused
Borough:Kingthorpe, East Lindsey
Country:England
Coordinates:53.2583°N -0.3034°W
Grid Name:Grid reference
Platforms:1
Original:Louth and Lincoln Railway
Pregroup:Great Northern Railway
Postgroup:London and North Eastern Railway
Years:9 November 1874
Events:Opened (goods)
Years1:1 December 1876
Events1:Station opened to passengers
Years2:5 November 1951
Events2:closed (passenger)
Years3:15 September 1956
Events3:Goods Yard closed
Years4:1 February 1960
Events4:Line closed to all traffic

Kingthorpe railway station was a railway station that served the village of Kingthorpe, Lincolnshire, England between 1874 and 1956, on the to line.[1]

History

The Louth and Lincoln Railway planned and built a branch line from Bardney to Louth in stages, the first stage between Bardney and opened to goods traffic on 9 November 1874. South Willingham acted as a terminus until South Willingham Tunnel was completed. The line then opened to on 27 September 1875, still goods traffic only.[2]

The line was completed through to for goods traffic on 6 August 1876 and opened to passengers on 1 December 1876. It was absorbed by the Great Northern Railway in 1882.[3]

The station was located 133 miles 05 chains from London Kings Cross via, and Bardney.[4] The branch was mostly single track and the station had only one platform. A signal box was located at Kingthorpe, to control the block, and the small goods yard. The yard had only one siding serving a cattle dock. There was no loop at Kingthorpe to allow trains to pass one another but connections to the siding allowed the train's engine to run round a few wagons. At the road entrance to the goods yard was a weighbridge and office.[5] [6] The B1202 Wragby to Bardney road crossed the railway on an overbridge at the south end of the platform.

The station building included living accommodation for the Station Master and his family as well as a booking office and waiting room. Architecturally, the building was in the same style as others on the line; built of brick with a number of brick string courses of a contrasting colour. The number and appearance of the string courses differed on each station; at Kingthorpe, the general bricks were a darker colour with lighter string course bricks.[6] The station building was on the bank of Stainfield beck, and as a result the beck bisected the platform. It was carried across the beck on a bridge; the beck was too large to culvert. The track crossed the beck on a waybeam bridge, which can be seen in the photograph.

The signal box was of timber construction and was at the north end of the platform.

Passenger service

When the line opened five passenger trains a day were provided, but this was quickly reduced to 4, with 5 on Fridays. At the start of the Second World War the service was suspended for three months.[7] When it was reinstated in December 1939 the timetable was reduced to three trains in each direction and the 1950 timetable[6] shows that this arrangement continued after the war until closure. Although originally intended to run to Lincoln, trains on the line only ran between Louth and Bardney; passengers had to change at Bardney to get to .[6] Trains were timetabled to get to Bardney in 7 minutes, with a connection to Lincoln taking a further 25 minutes. In the other direction, trains took 7 minutes to get to and 40 minutes to arrive in Louth (these are sample times and varied during the day and in the direction travelled).

Passenger services ended on 5 November 1951, goods traffic on 15 September 1956.[8] However, the track through the station remained open for a further three years until 1 February 1960 to serve Wragby goods yard. The signal box was reduced to a ground frame in the locking room (the room under the signal box) sometime after closure to passengers and before 1953.[6]

After Closure

The track was lifted in 1961. The station building was demolished and no trace remains. The bridge carrying the B1202 was demolished and the road realigned sometime between 2010 and 2019.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Book: British Railways Atlas 1947: The last days of the Big Four . April 2011 . 1948 . . Hersham . 978-0-7110-3643-7 . 1104/A2 . p. 17, section A2 .
  2. Web site: The Lincolnshire and East Yorkshire Transport Review - Bardney - a Retrospect . 3 June 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090408075524/http://www.leytransport.i12.com/bardney.htm . 8 April 2009 .
  3. Book: Awdry, Christopher . Christopher Awdry . Encyclopaedia of British Railway Companies . 1990 . Guild Publishing . London . CN 8983 . 145 .
  4. http://www.railwaycodes.org.uk/elrs/_mileages/l/lob.shtm "Louth to Bardney Line Mileages"
  5. https://www.old-maps.co.uk/#/Map/513276/374815/12/100251 "Kingthorpe 1887 OS map"
  6. http://www.disused-stations.org.uk/k/kingthorpe/index.shtml "Kingthorpe"
  7. Vic Mitchell and Keith Smith, Eastern Main Lines: Boston to Lincoln, also from Louth and Horncastle, Middleton Press, Midhurst, 2015,
  8. A J Ludlam, Branch Lines of East Lincolnshire: volume 1: Louth to Bardney, published by Lincolnshire Wolds Railway Society, 2015,