Whitby railway station explained

Whitby
Symbol Location:gb
Symbol:rail
Borough:Whitby, North Yorkshire
Country:England
Coordinates:54.4848°N -0.6152°W
Map Type:United Kingdom North Yorkshire
Grid Name:Grid reference
Owned:Network Rail
Manager:Northern Trains
Platforms:2
Tracks:2
Code:WTB
Classification:DfT category F1
Original:Whitby and Pickering Railway
Pregroup:North Eastern Railway
Postgroup:
Events1:Opened as Whitby
Years2:4 June 1847
Events2:Resited
Years3:1886
Events3:Renamed Whitby Town
Years4:1924
Events4:Renamed Whitby
Years5:30 September 1951
Events5:Renamed Whitby Town
Years6:5 September 1966
Events6:Renamed Whitby
Footnotes:Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road
Embedded:
Embed:yes
Designation1:Grade II
Designation1 Feature:Original York and North Midland Railway station building
Designation1 Date:4 December 1972
Designation1 Number:1261393

Whitby is a railway station serving the town of Whitby in North Yorkshire, England. It is the southern terminus of the Esk Valley Line from Middlesbrough. The station is owned by Network Rail; its mainline services are operated by Northern Trains and its heritage services by the North Yorkshire Moors Railway.

History

Whitby's original railway station stood near to the end of the current platform, in the form of the offices, workshop and carriage shed of the Whitby and Pickering Railway; a single track horse worked line opened throughout in 1836. Its engineer was George Stephenson.

In 1845, the W&P was taken over by the York and North Midland Railway and converted into a double tracked, steam worked line. The Y&NM built the present Whitby station to the design of its architect George Townsend Andrews, who also designed the locomotive shed and the goods shed. Andrews' station included a fine 'Euston Truss' overall roof which was removed by British Railways in 1953 and replaced by the present awnings.

In 1854, the Y&NM helped form the North Eastern Railway, who later added two more platforms to help deal with traffic from the other branch lines that served Whitby; the Esk Valley Line finally opened throughout to a junction at in 1865 while the coast line from opened in 1883 and from Scarborough in 1885. Block signalling replaced the time interval system in 1876 and brought Whitby an unusual three storey signal box to make it high enough to see over the adjacent goods shed.

In 1900, the NER authorised the installation of Tile Maps at 25 of their stations. Whitby is one of nine stations left to have their map still in situ and intact. The other eight are at Beverley, Hartlepool, Middlesbrough, Morpeth, Saltburn, Scarborough, Tynemouth and .[1]

The NER became part of the London and North Eastern Railway at the grouping of the railways in 1923 and the LNER became part of British Railways with the nationalisation of the railways in 1948. The only changes brought to Whitby were in locomotives, rolling stock and signalling; the basic structure remained unchanged.

The station was scheduled to be closed in the 1963 Beeching Report, which recommended the removal of all three lines serving the station. The route to York via Pickering and Malton was closed as scheduled, while the coast lines had gone by 1965. However the Esk Valley Line to Middlesbrough was kept open because of poor road access for replacement buses.[2]

With the closure of all but the Esk Valley Line, Whitby lost almost all of its staff. Over the following years the pickup goods train was withdrawn, the remaining double track as far as was singled and the signal box closed and demolished, as was the goods shed. A run-round loop for excursion trains was retained and was used by the regular NYMR services from 2007 until 2014.

Platforms 3 and 4 were entirely removed and the site sold off, to be occupied by a supermarket. Platform 2 was cut back to what remains of the trainshed and its track removed, leaving only platform 1 rail served. Apart from the roofless and truncated station, Whitby's only other surviving railway buildings are the two track engine shed, originally built by the York and North Midland Railway and extended by the NER and the neglected remains of one of the pair of Whitby and Pickering Railway 1835 weighbridge houses.

In 2013, plans were approved for major development work around the station. This included the rebuilding and restoration of platform 2, to a somewhat longer length than the original.[3] [4] When the rebuilding of platform 2 was complete in 2014, the NYMR increased their service to four trains per day (five in peak periods) to and from Whitby.[3] [5] [6] In December 2019, Northern increased their services from four trains per day to six.[7]

Services

Northern Trains

As of the May 2021 timetable change, the station is served by six trains per day (four on Sunday) towards Middlesbrough via Nunthorpe. Most trains continue to Newcastle via Hartlepool. All services are operated by Northern Trains.[8]

Rolling stock used: Class 156 and Class 158 Sprinter Units.

North Yorkshire Moors Railway

The North Yorkshire Moors Railway operates heritage services between Pickering and Whitby via Grosmont. Services run daily from Easter until the end of October each year, with some additional services at other times of year.

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: North Eastern Tile Company > A Bit of History. northeasterntilecompany.co.uk. 25 October 2015.
  2. News: This is why most of Yorkshire's closed railways won't re-open under the 'reverse Beeching fund'. Yorkshire Post. 27 January 2020. 8 March 2022.
  3. News: Funding Agreed For Second Platform at Whitby. North Yorkshire Moors Railway . press release. 12 March 2014.
  4. News: Work finally begins on second platform. Whitby Gazette. 4 March 2014. 7 August 2014.
  5. News: Moors Railway set for £2.8 m improvements. Reed. James . Yorkshire Post. 12 March 2014.
  6. News: North Yorkshire Moors Railway's new platform opens. 16 August 2014. 17 August 2014. BBC. BBC News.
  7. Web site: Mcelwee . Jade . Whitby welcomes more trains - this will make a day trip to London and back possible for the first time . The Scarborough News . 2 January 2020 . 15 July 2019.
  8. Web site: 16 May 2021. Train times: Middlesbrough to Whitby (Esk Valley Railway). 8 May 2021. Northern Trains. 8 May 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210508083353/https://d11vpqhghel6qd.cloudfront.net/images/timetables/bucket2/middlesbrough-to-whitby-the-esk-valley-railway-4378-qs6agl.pdf. dead.