St Erth railway station explained

St Erth
Native Name:Lannudhno
Native Name Lang:kw
Symbol Location:gb
Symbol:rail
Borough:St Erth, Cornwall
Country:England
Coordinates:50.1714°N -5.4437°W
Grid Name:Grid reference
Manager:Great Western Railway
Platforms:3
Code:SER
Classification:DfT category E
Original:West Cornwall Railway
Pregroup:Great Western Railway
Postgroup:Great Western Railway
Years:11 March 1852
Events:Opened as St Ives Road
Years1:1 June 1877
Events1:St Ives branch opened
Years2:1 June 1877
Events2:Renamed as St Erth
Footnotes:Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road
Embedded:
Embed:yes
Designation1:Grade II
Designation1 Feature:St Erth Station
Designation1 Date:14 January 1988

St Erth railway station (Cornish: Lannudhno) is a Grade II listed station situated at Rose-an-Grouse in Cornwall, United Kingdom. It serves the nearby village of St Erth, which is about 0.75miles away, and is the junction for the St Ives Bay Line to St Ives. The station is 320miles from the zero point at measured via and .[1]

History

The station was opened by the West Cornwall Railway on 11 March 1852. At this time it was known as St Ives Road and was the railhead for that town, which lies about 4miles to the north.[2] This was an important harbour with a busy fishing trade and tin and copper mines; the new railway brought it artists and then tourists.[3] The station was a simple single platform situated on the north side of the line.[4]

On 1 June 1877 a branch line was opened from here to St Ives, which was when the station was renamed 'St Erth'.[5] The station building was reconstructed in granite[6] and a second track was laid on the north side of the platform for branch line trains, but the main line still had only the one track. This was partly rectified in about 1894 when a loop line with its own platform was opened, but the line was only doubled eastwards to on 10 September 1899, and westwards to on 16 June 1929.[4] Beyond the St Ives branch platform was the station goods yard and sidings which served a china clay dry for a few years. It then served milk trains from the Primrose Dairy creamery, later operated by United Dairies,[7] although these were taken out of use in 1982.[8] A camping coach was positioned here by the Western Region from 1953 to 1964, there were two coaches here for the last three years.[9]

Stationmasters

Facilities

The station buildings are constructed of granite in an 'L' shape west and north of the St Ives bay platform. The booking office is staffed for part of the day and is located in the west-facing section which faces the station car park. The northern range incorporates staff accommodation as well as refreshment facilities which appeared in a list of the ten best station cafes published in The Guardian in 2009.[15] Platforms 2 and 3 have a long canopy above them to protect passengers waiting for their train. At the west end of this is a covered footbridge which links with the main westbound platform for trains to Penzance, and a large wooden shelter is provided here. A small granite building further up the platform is for staff use. As with several other stations in Cornwall, small palm trees grow on the main platforms, both of which can accommodate seven-coach trains.

In 2017, a new concourse and ticket office was opened in St Erth, replacing the old ticket office which was smaller. The new building now includes toilet facilities and a waiting lounge, including a medium-sized ticket office with two windows. This process also included upgraded step-free access to the concourse and to platforms 2 & 3. A new entrance to platforms 2 & 3 near to the station café was also built, next to an also new private building for staff only. An improved transport interchange is under construction in 2018.[16]

A replacement footbridge with lifts is expected to be installed to enable step-free access to the whole station. The present footbridge will be dismantled and donated to the East Somerset Railway where they plan to install it at Cranmore railway station. The work is due to be completed in spring 2024.[17] A local historian said that the station would be "losing a valuable asset", replaced by a poorly-designed "eyesore".[18]

Platform layout

Because the main line is on a falling gradient towards Hayle, at the buffer stop end of platform 3 a few steps are needed to connect platforms 2 and 3 but at the east end they are nearly level. Standing at this end of the station the line to St Ives curves away to the left over Western Growers Crossing towards the covered way beneath the A30 road. The Cornish Main Line towards Hayle drops gently to the right with the signal box situated between the two. The Down Sidings on the right of the main line are level and so are higher than the main line at the far end. In 2022, platform 3 was extended by 6m (20feet) to allow it to accommodate a train with five carriages.[20]

Signalling

The signal box is situated at the east end of the station between the main line and the St Ives branch. It was opened on 10 September 1899 when the main line was doubled to Hayle and replaced an earlier box that dated from around the time of the opening of the St Ives branch. Semaphore signals still control movements around the station. The signal box also controls trains on the St Ives branch.[8]

Passenger volume

St Erth sees more passengers change train than any other station in Cornwall.[21]

 2002-032004-052005-062006-072007-082008-092009-102010-112011-12
Entries35,66445,57044,28033,47233,84446,71937,62460,385101,181
Exits35,74244,97144,06133,53234,38646,71937,62460,385101,181
Interchangesunknown85,65287,676102,930115,100119,106130,517138,551179,632
Total71,406176,193176,017169,934183,330212,544205,765259,321391,994
The statistics cover twelve month periods that start in April.

Services

St Erth is served by all Great Western Railway trains services on the Cornish Main Line between and . Some trains run through to or from London Paddington station, including the Night Riviera overnight sleeping car service and the Golden Hind which offers an early morning service to London and an evening return. Other fast trains are the mid-morning Cornish Riviera and the afternoon Royal Duchy. Frequent services on the St Ives Bay Line are operated by Great Western Railway. A small number of these trains are extended from or to Penzance.

There are a limited number of CrossCountry trains (3 per day each way) providing a service to Scotland in the morning and returning in the evening.

On an average weekday St Erth sees up to 69 trains, 26 trains to St Ives, 22 towards Penzance and 21 towards Plymouth. This makes it the busiest station in Cornwall in terms of services.

External links


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 11B .
  2. Book: MacDermot, E T. History of the Great Western Railway . 1. 2 (1863-1921). Great Western Railway. 1931. London.
  3. Book: Bray, Lena . Bray, Donald . St Ives Heritage . Second . 1981 . 1992 . Landfall Publications . Devoran . 1-873443-06-4 .
  4. Book: Cooke, R A. Track Layout Diagrams of the GWR and BR WR: Section 10, West Cornwall. R A Cooke. 1977. Harwell.
  5. Book: Beacham . Peter . Pevsner . Nikolaus . 2014 . The Buildings of England. Cornwall . Yale University Press . 538 . 9780300126686 .
  6. Book: Bennett, Alan. The Great Western Railway in West Cornwall. Runpast Publishing. 1988. 2 . Cheltenham. 1990. 1-870754-12-3.
  7. Jenkins . Stanley C . the St Ives Branch . Great Western Railway Journal . Cornish Special Issue . 2–34 . Wild Swan Publications Ltd. 1992.
  8. Book: Pryer, GA. Signal Box Diagrams of the Great Western & Southern Railways, Volume 16: GWR Lines in West Cornwall. 2000. GA Pryer. Weymouth. 0-9532460-5-1.
  9. Book: McRae, Andrew . British Railways Camping Coach Holidays: A Tour of Britain in the 1950s and 1960s . Scenes from the Past: 30 (Part Two) . Foxline . 1998 . 1-870119-53-3. 95.
  10. News: . Retirement of St Erth StationMaster . Cornishman . England . 24 January 1923 . 8 July 2021 . British Newspaper Archive . subscription .
  11. News: . New Stationmaster at St Erth . Western Morning News . England . 3 January 1923 . 8 July 2021 . British Newspaper Archive . subscription .
  12. News: . Retirement of the St Erth Station-Master . Western Morning News . England . 4 May 1934 . 8 July 2021 . British Newspaper Archive . subscription .
  13. News: . St Ives . Cornishman . England . 15 February 1940 . 8 July 2021 . British Newspaper Archive . subscription .
  14. News: . Presentation to Retired Stationmaster of St Erth . West Briton and Cornwall Advertiser . England . 9 February 1961 . 8 July 2021 . British Newspaper Archive . subscription .
  15. Web site: Wills . Dixe . Ten of the best railway cafes . Guardian . 2009-05-12 . 2009-06-30.
  16. Cornwall Council - St Erth https://www.cornwall.gov.uk/transport-and-streets/roads-highways-and-pavements/major-highway-schemes/st-erth-multi-modal-hub/
  17. Web site: Smith . Roger . 2023-09-05 . Cornwall station to have step-free access for first time . 2023-09-08 . RailAdvent . en-GB.
  18. News: Historian slams 'eyesore' St Erth Station footbridge replacement . . 5822 . 29 March 2024 . 4.
  19. Book: Jacobs, Gerald. Railway Track Diagrams Book 3: Western. Trackmaps. 2005. Bradford-on-Avon. 0-9549866-1-X.
  20. Web site: White . Chloe . 2022-03-18 . An extra 2,000 seats per day for the St. Ives branch line . 2022-03-21 . RailAdvent . en-GB.
  21. Web site: Station Usage. Rail Statistics. Office of Rail Regulation. 2010-03-25.