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Disused railway stations on the Exeter to Plymouth Line

There are eleven disused railway stations on the Exeter to Plymouth line between Exeter St Davids and Plymouth Millbay in Devon, England. At eight of these there are visible remains.

Exminster station is now an architectural salvage depot.

Background edit

The South Devon Railway was opened in stages between 30 May 1846 and 2 April 1849. It was originally designed to operate on the atmospheric principle but this was not successful and was never completed beyond Newton Abbot.[1][2] It was amalgamated into the Great Western Railway on 1 February 1876 and now forms part of the Exeter to Plymouth Line.[3][4]

Ivybridge station (which closed in 1959) was replaced by another station on a different site in 1994.[5] The disused stations at Exminster, [6] Brent and Plympton have been suggested for reopening.[7][8]

Stations edit

Exeter to Plymouth
 
0¾
Exeter St Davids
 
1¾
Exeter St Thomas
 
 
City Basin Branch (goods)
 
 
 
2¾
Marsh Barton
 
5¾
Exminster
 
Starcross
 
10½
Dawlish Warren
 
11¾
Warren Halt
1905–1912
 
12¾
Dawlish
 
15¾
Teignmouth
 
 
 
20¾
Newton Abbot
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
to Totnes Quay (goods)
 
28¾
Totnes
 
 
 
35¾
Brent
 
37¾
Wrangaton
 
39¾
Bittaford Platform
 
40¼
Ivybridge
 
41¼
Ivybridge
1848–1965
 
43½
Cornwood
 
48¾
Plympton
 
 
 
 
Sutton Harbour Branch (goods)
 
50¾
Laira
1848–1849
 
50¼
Laira Halt
1904–1930
 
 
Sutton Harbour Branch (goods)
 
51¼
Lipson Vale Halt
 
51¾
Mutley
 
52¾
Plymouth North Road
 
 
 
53¾
Plymouth Millbay

Exminster edit

Located at 50°40′31″N 3°28′58″W / 50.6753°N 3.4828°W / 50.6753; -3.4828 (Exminster)

 
Exminster in 1970 looking north towards Exeter
 
Exminster in 1970 looking south towards Starcross

A station was built at Exminster by George Hennet. It was opened in August 1852 and operated by him on behalf of the South Devon Railway until January 1857 when the railway company took over. An Italianate building on the west side of the single track housed a booking office and waiting room on the ground floor, with accommodation above for the station master. Hennet also operated a goods siding and coal shed at the station.[9][10]

The line through Exminster was doubled in November 1859 and so a second platform for southbound (down) trains was built; passengers used the road bridge to cross to it. The siding was extended to provide a refuge for up trains in 1894, and a down refuge siding was constructed north of the bridge in 1906; these allowed slow goods trains to be overtaken.[9]

In 1924 the facilities were greatly enlarged. A new passenger loop was laid behind the southbound platform, so now down stopping passenger trains could be overtaken while in the station. This meant that the road bridge had to be extended across the loop line with a second span. A new signal box was provided at this time. In 1931 an up platform loop was squeezed into the space between the station building and the platform and the bridge extended again. A new booking office was provided on the approach to the bridge. In 1940 the down refuge siding was converted into a loop so that goods trains could run straight in without reversing, and three loop sidings were provided behind the platform. These were originally intended to help the flow of goods traffic during the Second World War, but later became a useful place to stable empty passenger trains on busy summer Saturdays.[9]

The station closed for passenger traffic on 30 March 1964 and for goods on 4 December 1967, although only coal traffic had been handled for the previous 27 months. The refuge sidings had already been removed by then, and the loop sidings behind the down platform converted to dead-ends. They continued to see occasional use until 1985. The signal box was closed on 14 November 1986 and was used by bird watchers[9] for a while before being dismantled for reuse at Broadway railway station on the Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway[11] The 1852 station building still survives.[10]

A ten-year strategy published by the local council n November 2017 included a proposal that Exminster could reopen[6] but in April 2020 a decision was made to prioritise a new station nearby at Marsh Barton instead. Lack of track capacity meant that it was 'almost impossible' to open both.[12]

Brent edit

 
Brent Station in 1958

Located at 50°25′41″N 3°50′04″W / 50.4280°N 3.8345°W / 50.4280; -3.8345 (Brent)

Brent railway station served the village of South Brent on the southern edge of Dartmoor. It was not ready when the railway was opened, but was brought into use six weeks later on 15 June 1848. On 19 December 1893 the station became a junction, with the opening of the Kingsbridge Branch Line. The branch line closed on 16 September 1963 and there was little reason for the station after that. Goods traffic was withdrawn on 6 April 1964 and to passengers on 5 October 1964. The signal box was retained until 17 December 1973 when control of the line was transferred to the power signal box at Plymouth.[13]

The former goods shed on the westbound (Plymouth) side is still intact.[13] The signal box was demolished in November 2014.[citation needed]

Wrangaton edit

Located at 50°24′16″N 3°51′16″W / 50.4044°N 3.8545°W / 50.4044; -3.8545 (Wrangaton)

The station at Wrangaton was opened with the line on 5 May 1848. At the time it was the only intermediate station between Totnes and the temporary terminus at Laira. From 1849 to 1893 the station was known as 'Kingsbridge Road', becoming 'Wrangaton' once more when the Kingsbridge branch line opened.[14]

The station was closed to passengers on 2 March 1959 but goods traffic continued to be handled until 9 September 1963. Part of the platform is still visible just west of Wrangaton Tunnel, as are the former Admiralty sidings on the north side of the line.[14]

The signal box is now preserved as an exhibit at Kidderminster Railway Museum, adjacent to the Severn Valley Railway in Worcestershire.[citation needed]

Bittaford Platform edit

Located at 50°23′52″N 3°52′36″W / 50.3977°N 3.8766°W / 50.3977; -3.8766 (Bittaford Platform)

An unstaffed station was opened by the Great Western Railway at Bittaford on 18 November 1907 and closed on 2 March 1959. It was situated immediately east of Bittaford Viaduct. There are no visible remains of the platform.[15]

There were no goods facilities but Redlake Siding was opened 34 mile to the west on 10 September 1911. This siding served a large china clay drier which processed clay brought by pipeline from Redlake on Dartmoor; the eight mile long, 3 ft (914 mm) gauge Redlake Tramway was used to carry materials between Redlake Siding and the clay pits.

Ivybridge edit

Located at 50°23′45″N 3°55′21″W / 50.3958°N 3.9224°W / 50.3958; -3.9224 (Ivybridge)

The station at Ivybridge was not complete when the railway was opened, but was brought into use six weeks later on 15 June 1848. The building was situated on the north side of the track, immediately to the west of Ivybridge Viaduct. The line originally had just a single track but was doubled to the west on 11 June 1893 and from the far side of the viaduct to the east on 13 August 1893. A new stone viaduct to replace Isambard Kingdom Brunel's timber structure was brought into use in 1894 and allow the joining up of the double-track sections. This was on a new alignment which forced the construction of a new westbound (down) platform further back from the old line. The up platform was widened and this left the building set back at an odd angle to the track.[16]

The goods shed at the station was replaced on 1 October 1911 by a new facility further west, which still survives in commercial use. In 1968 this was altered for shipping china clay brought from workings on Dartmoor by lorry. A signal box was situated on the south side of the line between the station and the goods yard from 1895 until 1973. The goods station closed on 2 November 1965 although passenger traffic had ceased from 2 March 1959. A replacement Ivybridge railway station was opened a mile away on the far side of the viaduct on 15 July 1994. The goods shed is still standing and used by a non-railway business.[16]

Cornwood edit

Located at 50°24′28″N 3°58′02″W / 50.4078°N 3.9672°W / 50.4078; -3.9672 (Cornwood)

A station was built at Cornwood by George Hennet. It was opened in 1852 and operated by him on behalf of the South Devon Railway until January 1857 when the railway company took over.[17] Until April 1864 it was known as 'Cornwood Road'.[18]

An Italianate building on the north side of the single track housed a booking office and waiting room on the ground floor, with accommodation above for the station master. The line was doubled from Hemerdon to Cornwood on 14 May 1893 and a signal box was opened at the east end of the station, replacing an earlier one at the west end. This doubling required the construction of a new platform for westbound (down) trains. The double line was extended eastward to Blatchford viaduct on 19 November 1893 and a loop line was provided to the east of the platform for up trains.[19]

The station closed on 2 March 1959 but the station building can still be seen from passing trains.[18] The up loop was retained until 26 February 1962 and the signal box until 26 February 1963.[19]

Plympton edit

 
Plympton

Located at 50°23′28″N 4°03′27″W / 50.3911°N 4.0576°W / 50.3911; -4.0576 (Plympton)

Railway facilities in Plympton had originally been provided by the horse-drawn Plymouth and Dartmoor Railway, but their branch to Plympton was closed and sold to the South Devon Railway to allow the construction of their new line. The new station was not ready to be opened with the railway, but was brought into use six weeks later on 15 June 1848.[20]

From 1 June 1904 it was the eastern terminus for enhanced Plymouth area suburban services, which saw steam railmotors used to fight competition from electric trams. The station closed to passengers on 2 March 1959 but goods traffic continued to be handled until 1 June 1964.[20]

A Plymouth Joint plan that was opened for consultation in 2018 included a suggested 'Plymouth Metro' with a station at Plympton.[8]

Laira edit

A temporary terminus was opened at Laira (at 50°22′59″N 4°06′10″W / 50.3831°N 4.1028°W / 50.3831; -4.1028 (Laira (terminus))) on the outskirts of Plymouth on 5 May 1848 while work continued on Mutley Tunnel and the final stretch of the line to Millbay. The Plymouth and Dartmoor Railway crossed the new South Devon Railway on the same level just east of the station. Wooden buildings were provided for both passengers and goods traffic. Access was from the turnpike road (now known as Embankment Road) and a horse-drawn bus conveyed passengers to and from the town. The station was closed when the line to Millbay was opened on 3 April 1849.[21][22]

A new facility, known as 'Laira Halt' (at 50°22′58″N 4°06′27″W / 50.3828°N 4.1074°W / 50.3828; -4.1074 (Laira Halt)) was opened by the Great Western Railway on 1 June 1904. It was on a new site west of that used by the temporary terminus but adjacent to the new Laira engine shed. It had two 261 ft (80 m) wooden platforms with iron shelters. This, along with several other small stations, formed a scheme to introduce a suburban train service in competition with electric trams. Laira Halt was not particularly successful and was closed from 7 July 1930.[21]

Lipson Vale Halt edit

Located at 50°22′57″N 4°07′34″W / 50.3826°N 4.1260°W / 50.3826; -4.1260 (Lipson Vale Halt)

Another of the small stations opened by the Great Western Railway on 1 June 1904 was Lipson Vale Halt. It was situated on the east side of Mutley Tunnel between Laira Halt and the older station at Mutley. The platforms were built from wood but shortened in 1933; a shelter was provided on the westbound platform. The station closed on 22 March 1942.[23]

Mutley edit

 
Mutley looking towards Exeter

Located at 50°22′51″N 4°08′14″W / 50.3807°N 4.1373°W / 50.3807; -4.1373 (Mutley)

The second permanent station in Plymouth was opened on 1 August 1871 to the west of the tunnel beneath Mutley Plain. It became a joint station used also by the London and South Western Railway trains when they arrived in the area by running over the railway from Tavistock, which they did from 18 May 1876.[24]

A new joint North Road railway station was built in 1877, just a few yards to the west of Mutley and this became the main station for the city. The London and South Western trains to Plymouth from 2 June 1890 ran on a new line via Devonport. From 1 July 1891 they again called at Mutley when their new terminus at Plymouth Friary was opened, but now they ran in the opposite direction to before. Trains from Friary to Exeter St Davids stopped on the westbound platform, those from Millbay to Exeter St Davids stopping on the eastbound.[24]

Mutley was closed from 3 July 1939 to allow for track alterations in association with the rebuilding of North Road station.[24]

Plymouth Millbay edit

 
Millbay in the early 20th century

Located at 50°22′05″N 4°09′00″W / 50.3681°N 4.1501°W / 50.3681; -4.1501 (Plymouth Millbay)

The trains of the South Devon Railway finally reached the town of Plymouth on 2 April 1849. Docks were opened adjacent to the station and a new headquarters office was built next door. The station was expanded ready for the opening of the Cornwall Railway on 4 May 1859 and the South Devon and Tavistock Railway on 22 June 1859. Initially known as just 'Plymouth', it became 'Plymouth Millbay' after other stations were opened in the town in 1876–7 at Mutley and North Road.[25][26]

The station was closed to passengers on 23 April 1941 after bombs destroyed the nearby goods depot; the passenger station being used thereafter only for goods traffic and access to the carriage sheds. All traffic ceased from 14 December 1969, except for goods trains running through to the docks which continued until 30 June 1971.[25]

The site is now occupied by the Plymouth Pavilions leisure complex. Two granite gate posts outside the Millbay Road entrance are all that is left of the station.[25]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Gregory, R H (1982). The South Devon Railway. Salisbury: Oakwood Press. pp. 12–44. ISBN 0-85361-286-2.
  2. ^ Kay, Peter (1993). Exeter – Newton Abbot: A Railway History. Sheffield: Platform 5 Publishing. pp. 1–36. ISBN 1-872524-42-7.
  3. ^ Gregory 1982, pp. 93–102.
  4. ^ MacDermot, E T (1931). History of the Great Western Railway, volume II 1863–1921. London: Great Western Railway. Chapter 6.
  5. ^ Oakley, Mike (2007). Devon railway stations. The Dovecote Press. pp. 115–116. ISBN 978-1-904-34955-6.
  6. ^ a b Clark, Daniel (15 November 2017). "Exminster railway station and upgraded Heathfield line still planned". DevonLive.
  7. ^ Transport, Campaign for Better. "Re-opening rail lines". Campaign for Better Transport.
  8. ^ a b Waddington, Sarah. "'Plymouth Metro' could include new station in Plympton". The Herald. Retrieved 1 February 2018.
  9. ^ a b c d Kay 1993, pp. 109–119.
  10. ^ a b Oakley 2007, pp. 92–93.
  11. ^ . Broadway Signal Box. Archived from the original on 12 January 2007. Retrieved 3 October 2023.
  12. ^ Clark, Daniel (13 April 2020). . Devonlive. Reach plc. Archived from the original on 14 April 2020. Retrieved 14 April 2020.
  13. ^ a b Oakley 2007, pp. 41–42.
  14. ^ a b Oakley 2007, pp. 215–216.
  15. ^ Oakley 2007, p. 34.
  16. ^ a b Oakley 2007, pp. 115–116.
  17. ^ Kay 1993, pp. 40–41.
  18. ^ a b Oakley 2007, p. 66.
  19. ^ a b Cooke, R A (1984). Track Layout Diagrams of the GWR and BR WR, Section 14: South Devon. Harwell: R A Cooke. p. 4.
  20. ^ a b Oakley 2007, p. 162.
  21. ^ a b Oakley 2007, pp. 122–123.
  22. ^ Sheppard, Geof (2023). "Laira: Plymouth's first terminus". Broadsheet (89): 22–25.
  23. ^ Oakley 2007, pp. 123–124.
  24. ^ a b c Oakley 2007, pp. 142–143.
  25. ^ a b c Oakley 2007, pp. 158–159.
  26. ^ Sheppard, Geof; Arman, Brian (2010). "Plymouth Millbay Station". Broadsheet (64): 17.

Sources edit

disused, railway, stations, exeter, plymouth, line, there, eleven, disused, railway, stations, exeter, plymouth, line, between, exeter, davids, plymouth, millbay, devon, england, eight, these, there, visible, remains, exminster, station, architectural, salvage. There are eleven disused railway stations on the Exeter to Plymouth line between Exeter St Davids and Plymouth Millbay in Devon England At eight of these there are visible remains Exminster station is now an architectural salvage depot Contents 1 Background 2 Stations 2 1 Exminster 2 2 Brent 2 3 Wrangaton 2 4 Bittaford Platform 2 5 Ivybridge 2 6 Cornwood 2 7 Plympton 2 8 Laira 2 9 Lipson Vale Halt 2 10 Mutley 2 11 Plymouth Millbay 3 See also 4 References 4 1 SourcesBackground editThe South Devon Railway was opened in stages between 30 May 1846 and 2 April 1849 It was originally designed to operate on the atmospheric principle but this was not successful and was never completed beyond Newton Abbot 1 2 It was amalgamated into the Great Western Railway on 1 February 1876 and now forms part of the Exeter to Plymouth Line 3 4 Ivybridge station which closed in 1959 was replaced by another station on a different site in 1994 5 The disused stations at Exminster 6 Brent and Plympton have been suggested for reopening 7 8 Stations editvteExeter to PlymouthLegendmi nbsp 0 Exeter St Davids nbsp 1 Exeter St Thomas nbsp nbsp City Basin Branch goods nbsp nbsp Teign Valley Line nbsp 2 Marsh Barton nbsp 5 Exminster nbsp 8 Starcross nbsp 10 Dawlish Warren nbsp 11 Warren Halt 1905 1912 nbsp 12 Dawlish nbsp 15 Teignmouth nbsp nbsp Moretonhampstead amp Sth Devon Rly nbsp 20 Newton Abbot nbsp nbsp Aller Junction nbsp nbsp to Paignton nbsp nbsp Buckfastleigh Totnes amp Sth Devon Rly nbsp nbsp to Totnes Quay goods nbsp 28 Totnes nbsp nbsp Kingsbridge branch line nbsp 35 Brent nbsp 37 Wrangaton nbsp 39 Bittaford Platform nbsp 40 Ivybridge nbsp 41 Ivybridge 1848 1965 nbsp 43 Cornwood nbsp 48 Plympton nbsp nbsp South Devon and Tavistock Railway nbsp nbsp Sutton Harbour Branch goods nbsp 50 Laira 1848 1849 nbsp 50 Laira Halt 1904 1930 nbsp nbsp Sutton Harbour Branch goods nbsp 51 Lipson Vale Halt nbsp 51 Mutley nbsp 52 Plymouth North Road nbsp nbsp Cornwall Railway nbsp 53 Plymouth MillbaymiExminster edit Located at 50 40 31 N 3 28 58 W 50 6753 N 3 4828 W 50 6753 3 4828 Exminster nbsp Exminster in 1970 looking north towards Exeter nbsp Exminster in 1970 looking south towards StarcrossA station was built at Exminster by George Hennet It was opened in August 1852 and operated by him on behalf of the South Devon Railway until January 1857 when the railway company took over An Italianate building on the west side of the single track housed a booking office and waiting room on the ground floor with accommodation above for the station master Hennet also operated a goods siding and coal shed at the station 9 10 The line through Exminster was doubled in November 1859 and so a second platform for southbound down trains was built passengers used the road bridge to cross to it The siding was extended to provide a refuge for up trains in 1894 and a down refuge siding was constructed north of the bridge in 1906 these allowed slow goods trains to be overtaken 9 In 1924 the facilities were greatly enlarged A new passenger loop was laid behind the southbound platform so now down stopping passenger trains could be overtaken while in the station This meant that the road bridge had to be extended across the loop line with a second span A new signal box was provided at this time In 1931 an up platform loop was squeezed into the space between the station building and the platform and the bridge extended again A new booking office was provided on the approach to the bridge In 1940 the down refuge siding was converted into a loop so that goods trains could run straight in without reversing and three loop sidings were provided behind the platform These were originally intended to help the flow of goods traffic during the Second World War but later became a useful place to stable empty passenger trains on busy summer Saturdays 9 The station closed for passenger traffic on 30 March 1964 and for goods on 4 December 1967 although only coal traffic had been handled for the previous 27 months The refuge sidings had already been removed by then and the loop sidings behind the down platform converted to dead ends They continued to see occasional use until 1985 The signal box was closed on 14 November 1986 and was used by bird watchers 9 for a while before being dismantled for reuse at Broadway railway station on the Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway 11 The 1852 station building still survives 10 A ten year strategy published by the local council n November 2017 included a proposal that Exminster could reopen 6 but in April 2020 a decision was made to prioritise a new station nearby at Marsh Barton instead Lack of track capacity meant that it was almost impossible to open both 12 Brent edit Main article Brent railway station nbsp Brent Station in 1958Located at 50 25 41 N 3 50 04 W 50 4280 N 3 8345 W 50 4280 3 8345 Brent Brent railway station served the village of South Brent on the southern edge of Dartmoor It was not ready when the railway was opened but was brought into use six weeks later on 15 June 1848 On 19 December 1893 the station became a junction with the opening of the Kingsbridge Branch Line The branch line closed on 16 September 1963 and there was little reason for the station after that Goods traffic was withdrawn on 6 April 1964 and to passengers on 5 October 1964 The signal box was retained until 17 December 1973 when control of the line was transferred to the power signal box at Plymouth 13 The former goods shed on the westbound Plymouth side is still intact 13 The signal box was demolished in November 2014 citation needed Wrangaton edit Located at 50 24 16 N 3 51 16 W 50 4044 N 3 8545 W 50 4044 3 8545 Wrangaton The station at Wrangaton was opened with the line on 5 May 1848 At the time it was the only intermediate station between Totnes and the temporary terminus at Laira From 1849 to 1893 the station was known as Kingsbridge Road becoming Wrangaton once more when the Kingsbridge branch line opened 14 The station was closed to passengers on 2 March 1959 but goods traffic continued to be handled until 9 September 1963 Part of the platform is still visible just west of Wrangaton Tunnel as are the former Admiralty sidings on the north side of the line 14 The signal box is now preserved as an exhibit at Kidderminster Railway Museum adjacent to the Severn Valley Railway in Worcestershire citation needed Bittaford Platform edit Located at 50 23 52 N 3 52 36 W 50 3977 N 3 8766 W 50 3977 3 8766 Bittaford Platform An unstaffed station was opened by the Great Western Railway at Bittaford on 18 November 1907 and closed on 2 March 1959 It was situated immediately east of Bittaford Viaduct There are no visible remains of the platform 15 There were no goods facilities but Redlake Siding was opened 3 4 mile to the west on 10 September 1911 This siding served a large china clay drier which processed clay brought by pipeline from Redlake on Dartmoor the eight mile long 3 ft 914 mm gauge Redlake Tramway was used to carry materials between Redlake Siding and the clay pits Ivybridge edit Located at 50 23 45 N 3 55 21 W 50 3958 N 3 9224 W 50 3958 3 9224 Ivybridge The station at Ivybridge was not complete when the railway was opened but was brought into use six weeks later on 15 June 1848 The building was situated on the north side of the track immediately to the west of Ivybridge Viaduct The line originally had just a single track but was doubled to the west on 11 June 1893 and from the far side of the viaduct to the east on 13 August 1893 A new stone viaduct to replace Isambard Kingdom Brunel s timber structure was brought into use in 1894 and allow the joining up of the double track sections This was on a new alignment which forced the construction of a new westbound down platform further back from the old line The up platform was widened and this left the building set back at an odd angle to the track 16 The goods shed at the station was replaced on 1 October 1911 by a new facility further west which still survives in commercial use In 1968 this was altered for shipping china clay brought from workings on Dartmoor by lorry A signal box was situated on the south side of the line between the station and the goods yard from 1895 until 1973 The goods station closed on 2 November 1965 although passenger traffic had ceased from 2 March 1959 A replacement Ivybridge railway station was opened a mile away on the far side of the viaduct on 15 July 1994 The goods shed is still standing and used by a non railway business 16 Cornwood edit Main article Cornwood railway station Located at 50 24 28 N 3 58 02 W 50 4078 N 3 9672 W 50 4078 3 9672 Cornwood A station was built at Cornwood by George Hennet It was opened in 1852 and operated by him on behalf of the South Devon Railway until January 1857 when the railway company took over 17 Until April 1864 it was known as Cornwood Road 18 An Italianate building on the north side of the single track housed a booking office and waiting room on the ground floor with accommodation above for the station master The line was doubled from Hemerdon to Cornwood on 14 May 1893 and a signal box was opened at the east end of the station replacing an earlier one at the west end This doubling required the construction of a new platform for westbound down trains The double line was extended eastward to Blatchford viaduct on 19 November 1893 and a loop line was provided to the east of the platform for up trains 19 The station closed on 2 March 1959 but the station building can still be seen from passing trains 18 The up loop was retained until 26 February 1962 and the signal box until 26 February 1963 19 Plympton edit nbsp PlymptonLocated at 50 23 28 N 4 03 27 W 50 3911 N 4 0576 W 50 3911 4 0576 Plympton Main article Plympton railway station Railway facilities in Plympton had originally been provided by the horse drawn Plymouth and Dartmoor Railway but their branch to Plympton was closed and sold to the South Devon Railway to allow the construction of their new line The new station was not ready to be opened with the railway but was brought into use six weeks later on 15 June 1848 20 From 1 June 1904 it was the eastern terminus for enhanced Plymouth area suburban services which saw steam railmotors used to fight competition from electric trams The station closed to passengers on 2 March 1959 but goods traffic continued to be handled until 1 June 1964 20 A Plymouth Joint plan that was opened for consultation in 2018 included a suggested Plymouth Metro with a station at Plympton 8 Laira edit A temporary terminus was opened at Laira at 50 22 59 N 4 06 10 W 50 3831 N 4 1028 W 50 3831 4 1028 Laira terminus on the outskirts of Plymouth on 5 May 1848 while work continued on Mutley Tunnel and the final stretch of the line to Millbay The Plymouth and Dartmoor Railway crossed the new South Devon Railway on the same level just east of the station Wooden buildings were provided for both passengers and goods traffic Access was from the turnpike road now known as Embankment Road and a horse drawn bus conveyed passengers to and from the town The station was closed when the line to Millbay was opened on 3 April 1849 21 22 A new facility known as Laira Halt at 50 22 58 N 4 06 27 W 50 3828 N 4 1074 W 50 3828 4 1074 Laira Halt was opened by the Great Western Railway on 1 June 1904 It was on a new site west of that used by the temporary terminus but adjacent to the new Laira engine shed It had two 261 ft 80 m wooden platforms with iron shelters This along with several other small stations formed a scheme to introduce a suburban train service in competition with electric trams Laira Halt was not particularly successful and was closed from 7 July 1930 21 Lipson Vale Halt edit Located at 50 22 57 N 4 07 34 W 50 3826 N 4 1260 W 50 3826 4 1260 Lipson Vale Halt Another of the small stations opened by the Great Western Railway on 1 June 1904 was Lipson Vale Halt It was situated on the east side of Mutley Tunnel between Laira Halt and the older station at Mutley The platforms were built from wood but shortened in 1933 a shelter was provided on the westbound platform The station closed on 22 March 1942 23 Mutley edit nbsp Mutley looking towards ExeterLocated at 50 22 51 N 4 08 14 W 50 3807 N 4 1373 W 50 3807 4 1373 Mutley The second permanent station in Plymouth was opened on 1 August 1871 to the west of the tunnel beneath Mutley Plain It became a joint station used also by the London and South Western Railway trains when they arrived in the area by running over the railway from Tavistock which they did from 18 May 1876 24 A new joint North Road railway station was built in 1877 just a few yards to the west of Mutley and this became the main station for the city The London and South Western trains to Plymouth from 2 June 1890 ran on a new line via Devonport From 1 July 1891 they again called at Mutley when their new terminus at Plymouth Friary was opened but now they ran in the opposite direction to before Trains from Friary to Exeter St Davids stopped on the westbound platform those from Millbay to Exeter St Davids stopping on the eastbound 24 Mutley was closed from 3 July 1939 to allow for track alterations in association with the rebuilding of North Road station 24 Plymouth Millbay edit nbsp Millbay in the early 20th centuryMain article Plymouth Millbay railway station Located at 50 22 05 N 4 09 00 W 50 3681 N 4 1501 W 50 3681 4 1501 Plymouth Millbay The trains of the South Devon Railway finally reached the town of Plymouth on 2 April 1849 Docks were opened adjacent to the station and a new headquarters office was built next door The station was expanded ready for the opening of the Cornwall Railway on 4 May 1859 and the South Devon and Tavistock Railway on 22 June 1859 Initially known as just Plymouth it became Plymouth Millbay after other stations were opened in the town in 1876 7 at Mutley and North Road 25 26 The station was closed to passengers on 23 April 1941 after bombs destroyed the nearby goods depot the passenger station being used thereafter only for goods traffic and access to the carriage sheds All traffic ceased from 14 December 1969 except for goods trains running through to the docks which continued until 30 June 1971 25 The site is now occupied by the Plymouth Pavilions leisure complex Two granite gate posts outside the Millbay Road entrance are all that is left of the station 25 See also editMap all coordinates using OpenStreetMapDownload coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates Disused railway stations Bristol to Exeter Line Disused railway stations Riviera Line Disused railway stations Cornish Main Line South Devon Railway engine housesReferences edit Gregory R H 1982 The South Devon Railway Salisbury Oakwood Press pp 12 44 ISBN 0 85361 286 2 Kay Peter 1993 Exeter Newton Abbot A Railway History Sheffield Platform 5 Publishing pp 1 36 ISBN 1 872524 42 7 Gregory 1982 pp 93 102 MacDermot E T 1931 History of the Great Western Railway volume II 1863 1921 London Great Western Railway Chapter 6 Oakley Mike 2007 Devon railway stations The Dovecote Press pp 115 116 ISBN 978 1 904 34955 6 a b Clark Daniel 15 November 2017 Exminster railway station and upgraded Heathfield line still planned DevonLive Transport Campaign for Better Re opening rail lines Campaign for Better Transport a b Waddington Sarah Plymouth Metro could include new station in Plympton The Herald Retrieved 1 February 2018 a b c d Kay 1993 pp 109 119 a b Oakley 2007 pp 92 93 Broadway Signal Box Broadway Signal Box Archived from the original on 12 January 2007 Retrieved 3 October 2023 Clark Daniel 13 April 2020 Exminster railway station plans almost impossible councillors told Devonlive Reach plc Archived from the original on 14 April 2020 Retrieved 14 April 2020 a b Oakley 2007 pp 41 42 a b Oakley 2007 pp 215 216 Oakley 2007 p 34 a b Oakley 2007 pp 115 116 Kay 1993 pp 40 41 a b Oakley 2007 p 66 a b Cooke R A 1984 Track Layout Diagrams of the GWR and BR WR Section 14 South Devon Harwell R A Cooke p 4 a b Oakley 2007 p 162 a b Oakley 2007 pp 122 123 Sheppard Geof 2023 Laira Plymouth s first terminus Broadsheet 89 22 25 Oakley 2007 pp 123 124 a b c Oakley 2007 pp 142 143 a b c Oakley 2007 pp 158 159 Sheppard Geof Arman Brian 2010 Plymouth Millbay Station Broadsheet 64 17 Sources edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Disused railway stations in Devon Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Disused railway stations on the Exeter to Plymouth Line amp oldid 1180839088, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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