Norton Fitzwarren railway station explained

Norton Fitzwarren
Type:Station on heritage railway
Borough:Norton Fitzwarren, Somerset
Country:England
Coordinates:51.0246°N -3.1571°W
Grid Name:Grid reference
Operator:West Somerset Railway
Platforms:2
Original:Bristol and Exeter Railway
Postgroup:Great Western Railway
Years:1873
Events:First station opened
Years1:1961
Events1:First station closed
Years2:2009
Events2:New station opened

Norton Fitzwarren railway station is an untimetabled station on the West Somerset Railway in Somerset, England. It was built in 2009 about NaNmiles north of the site of the old (Norton Fitzwarren) station that served the village of Norton Fitzwarren from 1873 until 1961. There were fatal railway accidents in the vicinity in 1890, 1940 and 1978.

History

First station

The Bristol and Exeter Railway (B&ER) was opened through Norton Fitzwarren on 1 May 1843 but the nearest station was 2miles east at . On 31 March 1862 the original West Somerset Railway was opened to, leaving the Exeter line at Norton Junction, but still no station was provided. The first section of the Devon and Somerset Railway to opened on 8 June 1871, making a connection into the West Somerset line just west of the junction with the Exeter line.[1]

The first two-platform station was finally opened at the junction on 1 June 1873, located immediately east of the junction (at 51.0233°N -3.1493°W). On the northern platform side closest to the village was a small station building, a hotel and the goods yard.[2] Both the branch lines were operated by the B&ER until 1 January 1876 when it was amalgamated with the Great Western Railway.[1]

In 1931 the GWR started a project to quadruple the track between Cogload Junction (where the mainline from and the north met the Castle Cary cut-off line from Yeovil, Reading and), for the 7miles south through Taunton to Norton Fitzwarren. The existing station buildings were demolished, to allow a new up-relief line to be built north of the existing northern platform, followed by the creation of a down relief road south of the southern platform. A new metal passenger bridge was erected, connecting the new station buildings to the north with both island platforms. The completion of the project also allowed the GWR to create the large regional goods facility at Fairwater Yard, located just east of the station. The whole project was brought into operation on 2 December 1931.[3] [2]

World War 2: US Army Depot G-50

See main article: Norton Manor Camp. At the start of World War II, the Royal Army Service Corps choose the relatively large scale station serving the small community as the ideal location for a new logistics depot. Finished at the end of 1941, it was immediately taken over by the United States Army as part of Operation Bolero in early 1942, one of their 18 supplies depots within the United Kingdom. Redesignated Quartermaster General Depot G-50, they equipped it with extensive railway sidings to the northeast of the railway station.[4]

Part of the reasoning behind the choice of the depot, was that it was one of five within the 18 designated as a US Army Medical Corps supplies depot. Medical supplies were allocated of under cover storage, and a further outside.[5] The US Army also locally developed the 67th General Hospital at Musgrove Park. Both facilities under the control of the US Army Medical Corps came into operation on 1 September 1942.[6] [7]

Closure

On 1 January 1948 the railways were nationalised and Norton Fitzwarren became a part of the Western Region of British Railways. Passenger traffic was withdrawn on 30 October 1961,[3] after which passengers for the two branches once again had to change trains at Taunton until these routes were closed on 3 October 1966 (the Devon and Somerset line) and 4 January 1971 (West Somerset line).[2] The goods yard continued to operate until 6 July 1964, when the logistics facilities of Norton Manor Camp closed.[3]

The goods facilities had always handled a large volume of locally grown cider apples, and on 1 March 1983 a private siding utilising much of the former up-relief road connection to the WSR was opened into the Taunton Cider Company's factory on the northwest side of the former station site.[3] [8] Although this factory has since closed,[2] it was this private siding that allowed the West Somerset Railway, in its new heritage railway guise, to be connected to the national railway network.[3] [9]

West Somerset Railway

In 2004 the West Somerset Railway Association (WSRA) (the volunteer organisation that supports the WSR) purchased 33acres of land west of its railway and north of the main line at Norton Fitzwarren.

This included a short length of the track bed of the dismantled Barnstaple branch line. This track bed and a new north-west chord have eventually formed a triangle where rolling stock is turned when required.[10] Part of the land is used for ballast reclamation, with waste material being delivered to the site by Network Rail in conjunction with their track renewals depot at nearby Fairwater Yard.[11]

There is also sufficient space to allow for the construction of a locomotive and rolling stock restoration depot in the future.[10]

The WSRA built a single concrete platform on the west side of the Minehead to Taunton line in 2009. This is not shown in the regular timetable but is for use during special events when a shuttle service can bring people from . It is long enough to handle four-coach trains.[12] It was first used on 1 and 2 August 2009 in association with a vintage vehicle rally on the WSR's land at Norton Fitzwarren.[13]

There is no public access to the site currently, however it is hoped this will change in the future as the adjacent 'Ford Farm' site has been identified as a Potential Mixed Use Development site in the Taunton Deane Core Strategy[14] with an associated transport policy statement that any such development should include improved access to the adjoining West Somerset Railway station.[15]

The WSR entered into a partnership with the modern Great Western Railway (GWR) in 2019 to operate Summer Saturday services between and on Saturdays when special events were taking place. On 3 August, services called additionally at Norton Fitzwarren for the annual Steam Fayre Vintage Rally, run by the WSRA, taking place at the station.[16] [17] These GWR services were the first time the new station was served by trains from the national rail network.

Accidents

Three significant accidents have happened on the main line in the vicinity of Norton Fitzwarren:

Notes and References

  1. Book: MacDermot, E T. History of the Great Western Railway . 1. 2 (1863-1921). Great Western Railway. 1931. London.
  2. Book: Oakley, Mike. Somerset Railway Stations. Redcliffe Press. 2006. Bristol. 1-904537-54-5.
  3. Book: Branchline to Minehead. Vic Mitchell & Keith Smith. Middleton Press. July 1990. 9780906520802.
  4. Web site: The New Somerset Heritage Centre and its Site History. 23 April 2005 . Somerset County Council. 2012-08-15.
  5. Web site: CHAPTER IX Europe: Preinvasion Buildup in the United Kingdom. US Army Medical Department. 2012-08-15.
  6. Web site: History in Brief. Musgrove Park Hospital . 2009-07-05.
  7. Book: Wakefield, Ken. Operation Bolero: The Americans in Bristol and the West Country 1942-45. 1994. Crecy Books. 0-947554-51-3. 101.
  8. Book: Maggs, Colin G. Taunton Steam. Millstream Books. 1991. Bath. 0-948975-26-1.
  9. Book: Jacobs, Gerald. Railway Track Diagrams Book 3: Western. Trackmaps. 2005. Bradford-on-Avon. 0-9549866-1-X.
  10. Web site: The Norton Fitzwarren Project. West Somerset Railway Association. 2009-08-06. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20090708000118/http://www.wsra.org.uk/norton.htm. 8 July 2009. dmy-all.
  11. Web site: Norton Fitzwarren Report 28 November 2006. West Somerset Railway Association. 2009-08-06. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20081023185852/http://www.wsra.org.uk/nf28nov2006.htm. 23 October 2008. dmy-all.
  12. Web site: A station for Norton Fitzwarren. West Somerset Railway Association. 2009-08-06. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20090708000104/http://www.wsra.org.uk/nf01jan2009.htm. 8 July 2009. dmy-all.
  13. Web site: The Steam Fayre and Vintage Rally . West Somerset Railway Association . 2009-07-31 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090729021615/http://www.wsra.org.uk/rally.htm . 29 July 2009 . dmy-all .
  14. Web site: Taunton Deane Core Strategic Diagram, Norton Fitzwarren . 2017-08-14.
  15. Web site: Taunton Deane Core Strategy Transport Statement . paragraph 3.86, final sentence . 14 August 2017 .
  16. Web site: New Somerset train services start on July 27 GWR Shuttles to West Somerset Railway details announced . West Somerset Railway . 8 July 2019 . 10 July 2019.
  17. Web site: Steam Fayre Vintage Rally . West Somerset Railway . 11 July 2019.
  18. Web site: Rich . Colonel F. H. . Report of the Board of Trade Enquiry . 1890-11-15 .
  19. Report to the Ministry of Transport . Great Western Railway . 1940-12-07 . 2009-08-07 .
  20. Book: Department of Transport . Major A.G.B. . King . 1980 . Railway Accident: Report on the Fire that occurred in a Sleeping-Car Train on 6th July 1978 at Taunton in the Western Region, British Railways . HMSO . 0-11-550513-X .