St Olaves railway station explained

St Olaves
Status:Disused
Borough:St. Olaves, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk
Country:England
Grid Name:Grid reference
Platforms:2
Pregroup:East Suffolk Railway
Great Eastern Railway
Postgroup:London and North Eastern Railway
Eastern Region of British Railways
Years:1 June 1859
Events:Opened
Years2:2 November 1959
Events2:Closed

St Olaves was a station in St. Olaves. It was on the Great Eastern Railway between Great Yarmouth and London. It was first opened in June 1859. After just over a century it was closed in November 1959[1] when the connection it stood on was cut, and services transferred to another route to make roughly the same journey. Today St Olaves is most closely served by Haddiscoe railway station, which is over the two rivers which separate the two villages.

Station Today

A clear line on a map can still be seen travelling through Waveney Forest, through Wild Duck camp site and meeting with the old Belton Station. On ground, a lot of the track bank is still there, as well as a small bridge in the Forest. After that, the track would have come over a bridge (To which the piles are still in the ground).There is a house where the platforms and bridge are called 'CuttBride Cottage'

External links

52.5368°N 1.6253°W

Notes and References

  1. Book: Quick, M. E.. Railway passenger stations in England, Scotland and Wales – a chronology. 2002. Railway and Canal Historical Society. Richmond. 375. 931112387.