Wilmington railway station (England) explained

Wilmington
Status:Closed
Borough:Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire
Country:England
Coordinates:53.7596°N -0.33°W
Grid Name:Grid reference
Platforms:Two (1864), One island (1912)
Original:Hull and Hornsea Railway
Pregroup:North Eastern Railway
Postgroup:London and North Eastern Railway
Years1:1864
Events1:Opened
Years2:1912
Events2:resited
Years3:1964
Events3:Closed

Wilmington railway station was a station that served the suburb of Wilmington, Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire, England. It was on the Hull and Hornsea Railway and acted as a temporary terminus of the line.

It was replaced in 1912 by a station of the same name west of Wilmington junction on the Victoria Dock Branch Line. The station closed 1964.

History

1864–1912

53.7586°N -0.3277°W

The station was constructed at the Hull end of the Hull and Hornsea Railway, directly east of its junction (Wilmington junction) with the Victoria Dock Branch Line. The Hull and Hornsea opened 28 March 1864, with services terminating at Wilmington. Through running from Hornsea to Paragon station was planned from 1 June 1864, but delayed until 1 July due to the safety requirements of the board of trade.

The station closed after 9 June 1912.

1912–1964

53.7593°N -0.3317°W In 1912 a new station was constructed west of the original on the Victoria Dock Branch Line; the level crossing at Cleveland Street was replaced with a bridge, at the same time a new double track swing bridge was constructed over the River Hull, slightly to the north of the original single track line.[1] The station was built to an island platform design, accessed via a subway at the booking office on Foster Street.[2] [3]

The new station came into use in June 1912, replacing both the 1854 Wilmington station, and Sculcoates station to the west.

The station closed to passengers on 19 October 1964. As of 2010 the 1912 booking office and an entrance to a subway under the former trackbed are still extant, (as of 2014 in use as cafe).

References

Sources

. A Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain, Volume 4: The North East. Ken Hoole. 1986.

Notes and References

  1. Wilmington's second swing bridge. Engineering. 31 January 1908. ., reprinted in www.forgottenrelics.co.uk with additional content
  2. Ordnance Survey 1:2500 1928
  3. Web site: Britain From Above . English Heritage/Aerofilms. Wilmington railway station. search results.