West Byfleet railway station explained

West Byfleet
Symbol Location:gb
Symbol:rail
Borough:West Byfleet, Borough of Woking
Country:England
Coordinates:51.3395°N -0.5054°W
Grid Name:Grid reference
Manager:South Western Railway
Platforms:3
Tracks:4
Code:WBY
Classification:DfT category C2
Opened:1 December 1887
Footnotes:Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road

West Byfleet railway station is a railway station serving the village of West Byfleet, which forms part of the borough of Woking in the English county of Surrey.

The station is on the South West Main Line, 21chain54chain from .[1]

History

It opened in December 1887 as Byfleet, 49 years after the line was first constructed through the area.[2] The station was renamed from Byfleet to West Byfleet on commencement of the Summer timetable, 1950. This reflected the name of the community that had developed around it, being a mile west of the original Byfleet village.[3] West Byfleet signal box closed in March 1970.[4]

Accidents and incidents

On 27 December 1946 the station was the scene of the derailment of a Bournemouth to London express service hauled by SR Lord Nelson class 4-6-0, 851 Sir Francis Drake. Although the entire 12 coach train and its engine were derailed at, the coaches remained upright and in line, helped by buckeye couplings being fitted to the leading six coaches. Only three people suffered minor injuries.[5]

Services

The station is served by all Alton and Woking (stopping) services from London Waterloo.

It adjoins West Byfleet and Woodham which are suburban settlements in the boroughs of Woking and Runnymede, to the south and north of the line, respectively. As to other towns it is the closest station to parts of the town/suburb of Byfleet and parts of the semi-rural suburb of Pyrford.[6]

The station has three platforms, one of which (platform 2) is rarely used in line with nearby other South West Main Line stations. The station competes in the broadest sense, not of train company, with faster services at the next nearest station on the line, Woking station. Both are served by bus routes outside of the Transport for London fare-capped scheme.

at off-peak times the station has 4 trains per hour in each direction, alternating between Woking and Alton as to the end or start destination to the south-west and both having London (Waterloo) as their north-east terminus. The Alton services calling at fewer intermediate stations (being semi-fast).

Cultural references

The station frontage appeared in the 1977 movie Adventures of a Private Eye starring Christopher Neil.

Notes and References

  1. Railways in the United Kingdom historically are measured in miles and chains. There are 80 chains to one mile.
  2. Book: Mitchell . Vic . Smith . Keith . 1986 . Waterloo to Woking . Middleton Press . Midhurst . 978-0-90-652038-3 . Fig. 112 .
  3. Staines & Ashford News, 9 June 1950 (British Newspaper Archive)
  4. Book: Mitchell . Vic . Smith . Keith . 1986 . Waterloo to Woking . Middleton Press . Midhurst . 978-0-90-652038-3 . Fig. 114 .
  5. Web site: 1946 . Accident Report (from Railways Archive). . Board of Trade.
  6. Web site: Surrey interactive map. Surrey County Council. 2015-04-15. 22 July 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170722104207/http://surreymaps.surreycc.gov.uk/public/viewer.asp. dead.