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Enzie railway station

Enzie
Enzie station site geograph-3458893-by-Ben-Brooksbank.jpg
The site of Enzie station
Location
Place Enzie
Area Moray
Coordinates 57°38′08″N 2°59′20″W / 57.6355°N 2.9889°W / 57.6355; -2.9889Coordinates: 57°38′08″N 2°59′20″W / 57.6355°N 2.9889°W / 57.6355; -2.9889
Grid reference NJ 410 610
Operations
Original company Highland Railway
Pre-grouping Highland Railway
Platforms 1
History
1 August 1884 Station opens as 'Enzie'
9 August 1915 Station closes to passengers
Disused railway stations in the United Kingdom
Closed railway stations in Britain
A B C D–F G H–J K–L M–O P–R S T–V W–Z
170433 at Edinburgh Waverley.JPG

Enzie railway station was a station which served the hamlet of Enzie, in the Scottish county of Moray. It was served by trains on the Buckie and Portessie Branch north of Keith. The latter station is now the nearest to Enzie.

The station was opened by the Highland Railway in 1884 and had a short life with services being suspended during World War I on 9 August 1915 and the rails south of Buckie removed, although it was hoped to restart services. The line remained closed in 1923, when the Highland Railway was absorbed by the London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS). After this the track was relaid, but services were not restarted and the track removed again in 1937. The nearby Aultmore became the terminus of a goods spur from Keith and continued in use until 1966.

Work had begun on the Keith to Portessie line of the Highland Railway on 7 November 1882. Wartime economies led to closure of the line on 9 August 1915 and in 1917 the track between Aultmore (towards Keith) and Portessie was requisitioned by the Admiralty. The Great North of Scotland Railway (GNoSR) re-opened the north and south sections of line by 1919, but the Aultmore to Portessie section passing through Enzie, Drybridge and Rathven was never re-opened and the track was again removed in 1937.

The station had a single platform, a signal box and a goods shed with a stationmaster's house nearby. A set of sidings ran towards Aultmore with a weigh machine located to one side. A second signal box was located nearby on the line towards Drybridge Platform.Murdoch Paterson was the architect responsible for the station buildings.

The station site is now occupied by a house.



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