St Columb Road railway station explained

St Columb Road
Native Name:Fordh Sen Kolom
Native Name Lang:kw
Symbol Location:gb
Symbol:rail
Borough:St Columb Road, Cornwall
Country:England
Coordinates:50.3982°N -4.9407°W
Grid Name:Grid reference
Manager:Great Western Railway
Platforms:1
Code:SCR
Classification:DfT category F2
Original:Cornwall Minerals Ry
Pregroup:Great Western Railway
Postgroup:Great Western Railway
Years:20 June 1876
Events:'Halloon' opened
Years1:1 November 1878
Events1:Renamed 'St Columb Road'
Footnotes:Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road

St Columb Road railway station (Cornish: Fordh Sen Kolom) serves the village of St Columb Road in Cornwall, England. The station is situated on the Atlantic Coast Line, measured from the zero point at (via and).[1] All services are operated by Great Western Railway, which also manages the station.

History

The first railway here was a horse-worked line from Newquay Harbour to Hendra Crazey. It was built by Joseph Treffry and completed in 1849.

The Cornwall Minerals Railway opened its line from Fowey to St Dennis Junction on 1 June 1874, where it connected with Treffry's Newquay Railway. The trains continued to carry only goods traffic but a passenger service was introduced on 20 June 1876. The station was originally known as Halloon but was renamed "St Columb Road" on 1 November 1878.[2]

The passing loop was extended in 1933 to accommodate the long holiday trains that were then handled on the branch, but it was taken out of use on 3 January 1965 when the goods yard was closed.

Services

St Columb Road is a request stop on the line, so passengers wishing to alight must inform the conductor and passengers wishing to join the train must signal to the driver. The typical service is one train every two hours in each direction between Par and Newquay, with some services extending to Plymouth and one train in the summer extending to Penzance. On summer Saturdays, there is just one train per day in each direction due to the intercity services running through to Newquay in lieu of the local services. Trains are usually operated by Class 150 Sprinters.

Community rail

The trains between Par and Newquay are designated as a community rail service and is supported by marketing provided by the Devon and Cornwall Rail Partnership. The line is promoted under the "Atlantic Coast Line" name.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Book: Padgett, David . Munsey . Myles . Railway Track Diagrams 3: Western & Wales . 6th . June 2018 . 1989 . Trackmaps . Frome . 978-1-9996271-0-2 . map 10C .
  2. Book: Fairclough, Anthony . The story of Cornwall's railways . Tor Mark Press . Truro . 1970 . 31 .