Thurles railway station explained

Thurles
Native Name:Durlas
Native Name Lang:ga
Symbol:rail
Symbol Location:ie
Address:Railway Road, Thurles, County Tipperary, E41 H027
Country:Ireland
Coordinates:52.6764°N -7.8219°W
Structure:At-grade
Platform:3
Original:Great Southern and Western Railway
Pregroup:Great Southern and Western Railway
Postgroup:Great Southern Railways
Years:1848
Events:Station opens
Years1:1880
Events1:line to opened
Years2:1963
Events2:Clonmel passenger trains withdrawn
Years3:1967
Events3:line to Clonmel closed
Owned:Iarnród Éireann
Operator:Iarnród Éireann

Thurles railway station serves the town of Thurles in County Tipperary in Ireland. The station is on the Dublin–Cork Main line, and is situated 86.5miles from . It has two through platforms and one terminating platform.

An average of 17 trains each day between and serve Thurles station.[1]

History

The Great Southern and Western Railway opened the station on 13 March 1848.[2] The station was designed by Sancton Wood.[3]

On 5 August that year William Smith O'Brien was arrested on the station while waiting for a train after an unsuccessful insurrection in Ballingarry in South Tipperary. There is a plaque at the station commemorating the event.

In 1880 the Southern Railway of Ireland opened between Thurles and on the Waterford and Limerick Railway (W&LR), making Thurles a junction. Following failure to pay a debt the Board of Works took over the line with operations handed to the W&LR until that was absorbed by the GS&WR in 1901.

On 9 December 1921, Old IRA members were being released during the Irish War of Independence. As internees reached Thurles railway station, a bomb was thrown at the train. Vol. Declan Hurton was injured and later died of his wounds.[4] [5]

CIÉ withdrew passenger services from the Thurles – Clonmel line in 1963 and closed the line to freight in 1967.

Thurles station has three times won the Irish Rail Best Intercity Station prize.

Services

Bus Services

Local Link buses serve Thurles Railway Station.

391 Thurles to Limerick

850 Athlone to Thurles (Sundays only)

850 Portlaoise to Thurles

See also

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Dublin Heuston to Cork . Iarnród Éireann . 8 May 2018.
  2. Web site: Thurles station . Railscot – Irish Railways . 7 September 2007.
  3. Web site: Wood, Sancton: Works. 2021-09-21. Dictionary of Irish Architects.
  4. Book: The Dead of the Irish Revolution. Eunan. O'Halpin. Daithi O.. Corrain. 20 October 2020. Yale University Press. 9780300123821. Google Books.
  5. Web site: December 1921. irishhistory1919-1923chronology.ie.