Beighton railway station

Beighton

Site of Beighton railway station in 1963
Location
Place Beighton
Area City of Sheffield
Coordinates 53°21′04″N 1°20′08″W / 53.351140°N 1.335500°W / 53.351140; -1.335500Coordinates: 53°21′04″N 1°20′08″W / 53.351140°N 1.335500°W / 53.351140; -1.335500
Grid reference SK443840
Operations
Pre-grouping Sheffield and Lincolnshire Junction Railway
Great Central Railway
Post-grouping London and North Eastern Railway
London Midland Region of British Railways
Platforms 2
History
June 1840 First station opened
2 January 1843 First station closed
12 February 1849 Second station opened
February 1852 Second station closed temporarily
March 1854 Second station reopened
1 November 1893 Second station closed
1 November 1893 Third station opened
1950 Extensively rebuilt
1 November 1954 Closed[1]
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
UK Railways portal

Beighton railway station is a former railway station near the village of Beighton on the border between Derbyshire and South Yorkshire, England.

Three stations

Beighton station existed on three sites at different times:

At the time this station was within Derbyshire but following changes in boundaries the site is now within the City of Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England.

Context

All three stations were in the flood plain of the River Rother, which repeatedly led to problems.[4][5] In 1950 these plus the generally poor state of the station building led British Railways to raise platform levels and undertake other remedial works.[6]

Beighton station closed for the third and final time on 1 November 1954. It has since been demolished.

Beighton station and related lines
Northbound freight on the ex-GC main line in 1951
Up coal train at Beighton Junction in 1963

In 1897 the Lancashire, Derbyshire and East Coast Railway opened in a branch from Langwith Junction. The original hope had been to join the MS&LR line into Sheffield Victoria but it was rebuffed, so a goods yard and connection to the ex-North Midland line at Beighton was built instead, though this did not touch Beighton station. The LD&ECR obtained running rights along the Midland line to Treeton Junction and entered Sheffield via the Sheffield District Railway when it opened in 1900.[7][8]

References

Notes

Sources

External links

Preceding station Disused railways Following station
Woodhouse
Station open, line closed
  Great Central Railway
Derbyshire Lines
  Killamarsh Central
Line and station closed
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