Southwell railway station explained

Southwell
Status:Disused
Borough:Southwell, Newark and Sherwood, Nottinghamshire
Country:England
Grid Name:Grid reference
Platforms:2
Pregroup:Midland Railway
Postgroup:London, Midland and Scottish Railway
Years1:1 July 1847
Events1:Opened
Years2:1871
Events2:Rebuilt in stone
Years3:15 June 1959
Events3:Closed to passengers
Years4:7 December 1964
Events4:Closed for freight

Southwell railway station served the town of Southwell in Nottinghamshire, England, from 1847 to 1959. It was a stop on the Rolleston Junction-Mansfield line.

History

The station at Southwell opened on 1 July 1847 as a branch line from the Nottingham and Lincoln Railway at Rolleston Junction.[1] In its early years, the passenger service was horse-worked.[2] In 1862 gas lighting was introduced.[3]

In 1871 the line was extended to Mansfield by the contractors Eckersley and Baylis (using cast iron bridges built by Andrew Handyside and Company of Derby).[4] [5] The Midland Railway took the opportunity to rebuild the station building and stationmaster's house in stone and the platform shelters, and dismantle the original wooden station building, which was re-erected at Beeston railway station.[2]

The Mansfield to Southwell section, which passed through a mining area subject to subsidence, was closed to passengers by the London, Midland and Scottish Railway in 1929,[6] the same year in which a north to south-west curve at Rolleston was opened to give direct access to the Fiskerton direction from the branch. The Southwell to Rolleston Junction section remained open to passengers until 1959, normally worked by a push–pull train. Freight services ended in 1964.

Stationmasters

Present day

The station building is now in use both as a private residence and a bed & breakfast called Southwell Station House. The old level crossing gate is still visible by the station building.

A pub called The Final Whistle lies nearby; it contains railway memorabilia and relics.

The westbound trackbed back towards Mansfield forms a shared-use path called the Southwell Trail. The trackbed immediately to the east is now occupied by housing developments; beyond this, the route of the old railway to Rolleston has become Racecourse Road.

Rolleston Junction station remains open, now renamed Rolleston, as a stop on the Nottingham-Lincoln line; it is close to Southwell Racecourse, about three miles (4.8 km) south-east of the town itself. Fiskerton station is also an equal distance from Southwell, one stop further along the line to the south-west of Rolleston.

References

53.0819°N -0.9461°W

Notes and References

  1. News: . Nottingham and Lincoln Railway . Leicestershire Mercury. 3 July 1847 . 29 August 2016 . British Newspaper Archive . subscription.
  2. Book: Leleux, Robin . A Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain. Vol. 9: The East Midlands . Newton Abbot . David & Charles . 1976 . 0-7153-7165-7 . 120.
  3. Nottinghamshire Guardian, 4 April 1862.
  4. Sheffield Daily Telegraph, 24 February 1871.
  5. Derby Mercury, 8 March 1871.
  6. News: . Stations Closed . Derby Daily Telegraph . England . 3 August 1929 . 31 January 2021 . British Newspaper Archive . subscription.
  7. News: . Presentation . Gloucestershire Chronicle . England . 11 May 1878 . 28 January 2021 . British Newspaper Archive . subscription.
  8. News: . Coalville . Leicester Daily Post . England . 17 December 1917 . 26 January 2021 . British Newspaper Archive . subscription.
  9. News: . Southwell Stationmaster . Nottingham Journal . England . 9 January 1928 . 28 January 2021 . British Newspaper Archive . subscription.
  10. News: . Presentation to a Stationmaster . Penrith Observer . England . 4 February 1936 . 28 January 2021 . British Newspaper Archive . subscription.
  11. News: . New Stationmaster . Lincolnshire Echo . England . 2 September 1939 . 28 January 2021 . British Newspaper Archive . subscription.