*** Welcome to piglix ***

Hook Norton railway station

Hook Norton
Location
Place Hook Norton
Area Cherwell
Grid reference SP363335
Operations
Original company Banbury and Cheltenham Direct Railway
Pre-grouping Great Western Railway
Post-grouping Great Western Railway
Western Region of British Railways
Platforms 2
History
6 Apr 1887 Station opens
4 June 1951 Station closes
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

Hook Norton railway station served the village of Hook Norton in northern Oxfordshire, England.

The station was built for the Banbury and Cheltenham Direct Railway, which was operated by the Great Western Railway before complete takeover in 1897. Following the passing of the Act of Parliament in 1873 authorising the construction of the B&CDR, it was announced in 1874 that a station would be provided at Hook Norton. The location originally proposed was north of the Milcombe Road and a start had been made on construction at this site but this was abandoned in 1883 in favour of a site to the south, slightly nearer the village. On 2 June 1884 it was reported that "Hook Norton Station is built nearly up to the level of the doors". The entire station and goods yard were built on a large embankment containing 120,000 cubic yards of earth, which led onto the first of Hook Norton's two viaducts. In order to provide solid foundations, the platforms were supported on iron girders and the station building had a 20-foot deep cellar. Hook Norton was a passing place with two platforms. The main station building containing booking office, waiting rooms and toilets was on the up platform while the down platform had a small waiting shelter. The first train ran on 6 April 1887.

There were a number of ironstone quarries around Hook Norton. In the 1890s the Hook Norton Ironstone Partnership were dispatching ore by rail, with sidings on the south side of the down platform. From the sidings a steep standard gauge line ran in a curve, passing under the viaduct to a tipping dock where ore was tipped from a 1'8" gauge tramway line. This line was operated by an 0-6-0 Manning Wardle locomotive named Hook Norton The sidings were subsequently turned into loops with the addition of a connection at the west end. The partnership was wound up in 1903 and the sidings became the property of the GWR. In 1907 they were extended towards Banbury, forming a loop which could hold sixty mineral wagons. A new signal box was opened on the up platform at this time. The GWR also acquired the locomotive Hook Norton which was subsequently used on the Weymouth Harbour Tramway for many years. In 1899 the Brymbo Ironworks of Wrexham established a new quarry at Hook Norton, which it connected to the railway at Council Hill Sidings, ​34 mile east of the station, with a narrow gauge railway. The Brymbo Ironworks closed in 1946 and was dismantled in 1948. In 1929 the GWR began operating a bus service between Chipping Norton and Banbury via Hook Norton. In the early 1930s this service was transferred to Midland Red and became a serious competitor to the railway's passenger service, having the advantage of a direct journey to Banbury compared to the circuitous route taken by the railway. In the period 1935-9 only 40-64 rail tickets per week were sold. In 1930 the station had a staff of four: a stationmaster, two porters and two signalmen.


...
Wikipedia

...