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Salisbury railway station

Salisbury railway station serves the cathedral city of Salisbury in Wiltshire, England. It is 83 miles 43 chains (134.4 km) from London Waterloo on the West of England line to Exeter St Davids. This is crossed by the Wessex Main Line from Bristol Temple Meads to Southampton Central. The station is operated and served by South Western Railway (SWR), and is also served by Great Western Railway (GWR).

Salisbury
General information
LocationSalisbury, Wiltshire
England
Coordinates51°04′14″N 1°48′20″W / 51.0705°N 1.8055°W / 51.0705; -1.8055
Grid referenceSU136301
Managed bySouth Western Railway
Platforms4
Other information
Station codeSAL
ClassificationDfT category C1
History
Original companySalisbury and Yeovil Railway
Pre-groupingLondon and South Western Railway
Post-groupingSouthern Railway
Key dates
1859Opened
Passengers
2018/19 1.980 million
 Interchange 0.208 million
2019/20 1.904 million
 Interchange  0.197 million
2020/21 0.455 million
 Interchange  41,127
2021/22 1.289 million
 Interchange  0.137 million
2022/23 1.622 million
 Interchange  0.218 million
Notes
Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road

History edit

 
Railways in Salisbury

Three railway station sites have been used in Salisbury, owned by the London and South Western Railway (LSWR) from 1847 and the Great Western Railway (GWR) from 1856, as well as two further stations at Wilton, 2.5 miles (4 km) west.

London and South Western Railway edit

 
The original LSWR station
 
The new building of 1902

The LSWR opened their Milford station on the east side of the city on 1 March 1847, with the opening of their branch line from Eastleigh to passenger traffic.[1] This was the city's only railway until 30 June 1856, when the GWR opened the Salisbury branch from Westbury.[1] On 1 May 1857, the LSWR opened the extended main line from London and Andover,[2] at first to the Milford station.

On 2 May 1859, the LSWR opened a station on the south side of the 1856 GWR station, west of Fisherton Street, to coincide with the opening of the first section of the Salisbury and Yeovil Railway.[1] At the same time, the terminus of the Andover line moved to the new station, having been brought across the city, partly through a tunnel. The building is largely of two stories and has a central main entrance; the architect was Sir William Tite, who was responsible for a number of LSWR stations.[3]

As the GWR and LSWR used different gauges, through goods traffic had to be unloaded and transhipped in a transfer shed; a covered footbridge was opened in 1860 linking the two stations, to allow passengers to change trains. The LSWR station had a single long platform served by trains in both directions and a second bay platform was provided at the London end.[4]

In the 1870s the LSWR opened a second platform, east of Fisherton Street, for services towards London; it had an entrance from the street and was linked to the old platform by a subway, and there was another bay platform for trains to the east.

The LSWR station was again enlarged between 1899 and 1902, and the 1870s platform east of Fisherton Street could then be closed.[5] Two new platforms serving three tracks were opened between the GWR platforms and the original LSWR one, reached by a subway from the LSWR's new station offices, which were built in red brick on the west side of their original building of 1859.[3]

In 2008, the group of buildings (1859 and 1902) was designated as Grade II listed.[3]

Great Western Railway edit

 
The former GWR station

The GWR opened their 7 ft (2,134 mm) broad gauge Salisbury branch line from Westbury on 30 June 1856. [1]The terminus was on the west side of Salisbury on the west side of Fisherton Street. Isambard Kingdom Brunel provided a station with a wooden train shed to cover the tracks and a single-storey building of red brick with stone dressings to house booking offices and waiting rooms.[5]

The GWR converted their line to 4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge in 1874, and four years later a connecting line was laid to the neighbouring 1859 LSWR station, which allowed wagons to be shunted between the two stations.[4] In 1896 a through service between Cardiff on the GWR and Portsmouth on the LSWR began operating over a junction line at Salisbury. The two companies' lines ran alongside each other from Salisbury as far as Wilton (where they finally diverged although there was no connection between the lines there) until October 1973, when a new junction between the lines was put in at Wilton and the former GWR route closed.

On 12 September 1932 the GWR's passenger trains were transferred to the LSWR station, and the two railways were in common ownership by British Railways from 1 January 1948. The train shed was demolished but Brunel's passenger buildings were designated as Grade II listed in 1972[6] and are in use as offices by non-railway businesses.[5]

Goods facilities edit

The former Salisbury Milford station was used as a goods station until it was closed in 1967 and demolished in 1968.[7] Goods traffic was also handled in goods sheds at the west end of the Fisherton station – north of the GWR station and south of the LSWR station – and also on the 460 yards (420 m) Market House branch from the east end of the LSWR station which opened in 1859.[1] A new LSWR marshalling yard was opened on the site of the old platform east of Fisherton Street after it had closed in 1902, but the main LSWR goods depot was kept at the old Milford station until 1967. The former GWR station remained in use as a goods depot until 1991.

Motive power depots edit

An engine shed, water tower and turntable were erected on the Milford site from January 1847, as the line was then open for freight traffic.[7] A replacement engine shed was built by the LSWR at Fisherton Street in 1859. The GWR also built a small engine shed adjacent to their station in April 1858. This was demolished in 1899 to allow expansion of the LSWR station, and a replacement built on the north side of the line. This was closed by British Railways in 1950.

A large new and well equipped engine shed was opened by the LSWR on 12 January 1901. This remained in use until the end of steam in southern England on 9 July 1967. The shed lay derelict for some years before being demolished.[7]

The sidings around the former GWR station were redeveloped in 1992 as Salisbury Traincare Depot, where South Western Railway maintain their fleet of DMUs.

Accidents and incidents edit

In the early morning of 1 July 1906, an overnight boat train derailed in Salisbury station, killing 24 passengers and 4 railwaymen.[8][9]

On 31 October 2021, a SWR train collided with a GWR train at Salisbury Tunnel Junction, approximately 1 mile (1.6 km) north-east of the station.[10]

Description edit

 
The platforms

The approach road from the city is accessed from a junction on the south side of the railway bridge across Fisherton Street, which leads into a one-way car park with 287 spaces.[11] The large building on the right of the approach road is the old LSWR buildings of 1859, which now houses the Salisbury signal panel. Immediately next door is the red brick building of 1902, now the main entrance where the ticket office and buffet are located.[5]

The main platform adjacent to the entrance is platform 4 which is mainly used for trains towards Exeter and Cardiff, as is platform 3 opposite. This is one side of an island platform, the opposite side of which is platform 2 which is used by trains to London Waterloo and Portsmouth Harbour. Platform 5 is a bay platform at the west end which is no longer used by passenger trains. Terminal platform 6 is an eastwards extension of platform 4 and is predominantly used by London Waterloo trains terminating here, and local services to Southampton Central.

Beyond platform 2 is another disused platform, formerly platform 1. Behind this are the sidings of the Traincare Depot; at the east end of this is an old water tank and the brick offices which once served the GWR station.

Services edit

 
South Western Railway and Great Western Railway trains pass at Salisbury

South Western Railway operate half-hourly services to London Waterloo and hourly to Exeter St Davids. There is also an hourly circular service to Romsey via Southampton Central and Eastleigh (therefore calling at Romsey twice), and limited services to Yeovil Pen Mill. In 2016 a new service began running once on summer Saturdays between London Waterloo and Weymouth, however since 2020 the Saturday Weymouth services ceased due to the COVID-19 pandemic[12] and there are no plans to reinstate them.[citation needed]

Until late 2009, Services to Exeter would extend on a limited basis to Penzance, Plymouth & Paignton. These services were removed in favour of hourly Waterloo to Exeter services.[13] Until December 2021 a limited number of South Western Railway services operated to Bristol Temple Meads, with a train dividing here from a service to Exeter.

Great Western Railway operate hourly regional services between Portsmouth Harbour and Cardiff Central via Bristol Temple Meads.[14]

In 2022, South Western Railway added a "Welcome Host" at the station, a staff member who provides information and sells tickets.[15]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Sands, T.B. (August 1961). "The Railways of Salisbury - 1". The Railway Magazine. pp. 523–530.
  2. ^ Bradley, D.L. (1965). Locomotives of the London and South Western Railway. Solihull: The Railway Correspondence and Travel Society. p. 3.
  3. ^ a b c Historic England. "Buildings fronting South Western road and attached canopy (1392847)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 23 March 2017.
  4. ^ a b Sands, T.B. (September 1961). "The Railways of Salisbury - 2". The Railway Magazine. pp. 641–647.
  5. ^ a b c d Oakley, Mike (2004). Wiltshire Railway Stations. Wimbourne: The Dovecote Press. ISBN 1-904349-33-1.
  6. ^ Historic England. "Former GWR station (1242134)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 23 March 2017.
  7. ^ a b c Griffiths, Roger (1999). The directory of British engine sheds: 1. Oxford: Oxford Publishing Co. p. 43. ISBN 0-86093-542-6.
  8. ^ Rolt, L.T.C. (1956). Red for Danger. Bodley Head / David and Charles / Pan Books.
  9. ^ Pattenden, Norman (2001). Salisbury 1906 – An answer to the enigma?. Swindon: South Western Circle. ISBN 0-9503741-6-4.
  10. ^ "Salisbury train crash: Driver suffers 'life-changing injuries'". BBC News. 1 November 2021.
  11. ^ "National Rail information page". from the original on 16 January 2012. Retrieved 24 January 2012.
  12. ^ "South West Trains May 2016 Timetable" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 27 April 2016. Retrieved 20 April 2016.
  13. ^ "SWT Exeter – Paignton / Plymouth will stop in December 2009". Rail. No. 595. Peterborough. 2 July 2008. p. 20.
  14. ^ Table 123 National Rail timetable, May 2016
  15. ^ Tryhorn, Faye (7 February 2022). "Salisbury train station to get 'Welcome Host'". Greatest Hits Radio (Salisbury). Retrieved 8 February 2022.

External links edit

  • Panoramic photograph of Salisbury station
  • Three Rivers Community Rail Partnership

salisbury, railway, station, this, article, about, station, united, kingdom, other, uses, salisbury, station, disambiguation, serves, cathedral, city, salisbury, wiltshire, england, miles, chains, from, london, waterloo, west, england, line, exeter, davids, th. This article is about the station in the United Kingdom For other uses see Salisbury station disambiguation Salisbury railway station serves the cathedral city of Salisbury in Wiltshire England It is 83 miles 43 chains 134 4 km from London Waterloo on the West of England line to Exeter St Davids This is crossed by the Wessex Main Line from Bristol Temple Meads to Southampton Central The station is operated and served by South Western Railway SWR and is also served by Great Western Railway GWR SalisburyGeneral informationLocationSalisbury WiltshireEnglandCoordinates51 04 14 N 1 48 20 W 51 0705 N 1 8055 W 51 0705 1 8055Grid referenceSU136301Managed bySouth Western RailwayPlatforms4Other informationStation codeSALClassificationDfT category C1HistoryOriginal companySalisbury and Yeovil RailwayPre groupingLondon and South Western RailwayPost groupingSouthern RailwayKey dates1859OpenedPassengers2018 191 980 million Interchange 0 208 million2019 201 904 million Interchange 0 197 million2020 210 455 million Interchange 41 1272021 221 289 million Interchange 0 137 million2022 231 622 million Interchange 0 218 millionNotesPassenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road Contents 1 History 1 1 London and South Western Railway 1 2 Great Western Railway 1 3 Goods facilities 1 4 Motive power depots 1 5 Accidents and incidents 2 Description 3 Services 4 References 5 External linksHistory edit nbsp Railways in SalisburyThree railway station sites have been used in Salisbury owned by the London and South Western Railway LSWR from 1847 and the Great Western Railway GWR from 1856 as well as two further stations at Wilton 2 5 miles 4 km west London and South Western Railway edit nbsp The original LSWR station nbsp The new building of 1902 The LSWR opened their Milford station on the east side of the city on 1 March 1847 with the opening of their branch line from Eastleigh to passenger traffic 1 This was the city s only railway until 30 June 1856 when the GWR opened the Salisbury branch from Westbury 1 On 1 May 1857 the LSWR opened the extended main line from London and Andover 2 at first to the Milford station On 2 May 1859 the LSWR opened a station on the south side of the 1856 GWR station west of Fisherton Street to coincide with the opening of the first section of the Salisbury and Yeovil Railway 1 At the same time the terminus of the Andover line moved to the new station having been brought across the city partly through a tunnel The building is largely of two stories and has a central main entrance the architect was Sir William Tite who was responsible for a number of LSWR stations 3 As the GWR and LSWR used different gauges through goods traffic had to be unloaded and transhipped in a transfer shed a covered footbridge was opened in 1860 linking the two stations to allow passengers to change trains The LSWR station had a single long platform served by trains in both directions and a second bay platform was provided at the London end 4 In the 1870s the LSWR opened a second platform east of Fisherton Street for services towards London it had an entrance from the street and was linked to the old platform by a subway and there was another bay platform for trains to the east The LSWR station was again enlarged between 1899 and 1902 and the 1870s platform east of Fisherton Street could then be closed 5 Two new platforms serving three tracks were opened between the GWR platforms and the original LSWR one reached by a subway from the LSWR s new station offices which were built in red brick on the west side of their original building of 1859 3 In 2008 the group of buildings 1859 and 1902 was designated as Grade II listed 3 Great Western Railway edit nbsp The former GWR station The GWR opened their 7 ft 2 134 mm broad gauge Salisbury branch line from Westbury on 30 June 1856 1 The terminus was on the west side of Salisbury on the west side of Fisherton Street Isambard Kingdom Brunel provided a station with a wooden train shed to cover the tracks and a single storey building of red brick with stone dressings to house booking offices and waiting rooms 5 The GWR converted their line to 4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gauge in 1874 and four years later a connecting line was laid to the neighbouring 1859 LSWR station which allowed wagons to be shunted between the two stations 4 In 1896 a through service between Cardiff on the GWR and Portsmouth on the LSWR began operating over a junction line at Salisbury The two companies lines ran alongside each other from Salisbury as far as Wilton where they finally diverged although there was no connection between the lines there until October 1973 when a new junction between the lines was put in at Wilton and the former GWR route closed On 12 September 1932 the GWR s passenger trains were transferred to the LSWR station and the two railways were in common ownership by British Railways from 1 January 1948 The train shed was demolished but Brunel s passenger buildings were designated as Grade II listed in 1972 6 and are in use as offices by non railway businesses 5 Goods facilities edit The former Salisbury Milford station was used as a goods station until it was closed in 1967 and demolished in 1968 7 Goods traffic was also handled in goods sheds at the west end of the Fisherton station north of the GWR station and south of the LSWR station and also on the 460 yards 420 m Market House branch from the east end of the LSWR station which opened in 1859 1 A new LSWR marshalling yard was opened on the site of the old platform east of Fisherton Street after it had closed in 1902 but the main LSWR goods depot was kept at the old Milford station until 1967 The former GWR station remained in use as a goods depot until 1991 Motive power depots edit An engine shed water tower and turntable were erected on the Milford site from January 1847 as the line was then open for freight traffic 7 A replacement engine shed was built by the LSWR at Fisherton Street in 1859 The GWR also built a small engine shed adjacent to their station in April 1858 This was demolished in 1899 to allow expansion of the LSWR station and a replacement built on the north side of the line This was closed by British Railways in 1950 A large new and well equipped engine shed was opened by the LSWR on 12 January 1901 This remained in use until the end of steam in southern England on 9 July 1967 The shed lay derelict for some years before being demolished 7 The sidings around the former GWR station were redeveloped in 1992 as Salisbury Traincare Depot where South Western Railway maintain their fleet of DMUs Accidents and incidents edit In the early morning of 1 July 1906 an overnight boat train derailed in Salisbury station killing 24 passengers and 4 railwaymen 8 9 On 31 October 2021 a SWR train collided with a GWR train at Salisbury Tunnel Junction approximately 1 mile 1 6 km north east of the station 10 Description edit nbsp The platforms The approach road from the city is accessed from a junction on the south side of the railway bridge across Fisherton Street which leads into a one way car park with 287 spaces 11 The large building on the right of the approach road is the old LSWR buildings of 1859 which now houses the Salisbury signal panel Immediately next door is the red brick building of 1902 now the main entrance where the ticket office and buffet are located 5 The main platform adjacent to the entrance is platform 4 which is mainly used for trains towards Exeter and Cardiff as is platform 3 opposite This is one side of an island platform the opposite side of which is platform 2 which is used by trains to London Waterloo and Portsmouth Harbour Platform 5 is a bay platform at the west end which is no longer used by passenger trains Terminal platform 6 is an eastwards extension of platform 4 and is predominantly used by London Waterloo trains terminating here and local services to Southampton Central Beyond platform 2 is another disused platform formerly platform 1 Behind this are the sidings of the Traincare Depot at the east end of this is an old water tank and the brick offices which once served the GWR station Services edit nbsp South Western Railway and Great Western Railway trains pass at Salisbury South Western Railway operate half hourly services to London Waterloo and hourly to Exeter St Davids There is also an hourly circular service to Romsey via Southampton Central and Eastleigh therefore calling at Romsey twice and limited services to Yeovil Pen Mill In 2016 a new service began running once on summer Saturdays between London Waterloo and Weymouth however since 2020 the Saturday Weymouth services ceased due to the COVID 19 pandemic 12 and there are no plans to reinstate them citation needed Until late 2009 Services to Exeter would extend on a limited basis to Penzance Plymouth amp Paignton These services were removed in favour of hourly Waterloo to Exeter services 13 Until December 2021 a limited number of South Western Railway services operated to Bristol Temple Meads with a train dividing here from a service to Exeter Great Western Railway operate hourly regional services between Portsmouth Harbour and Cardiff Central via Bristol Temple Meads 14 In 2022 South Western Railway added a Welcome Host at the station a staff member who provides information and sells tickets 15 Preceding station nbsp National Rail Following station Warminster Great Western RailwayWessex Main Line Romsey Tisbury South Western RailwayWest of England Main Line Grateley or Andover Warminster South Western RailwayWessex Main Line Tisbury South Western RailwayLondon Waterloo to Frome Terminus South Western RailwayLondon Salisbury stopping services Grateley Terminus South Western RailwayWessex Main Line Dean Disused railways Terminus Southern RegionSalisbury and Dorset Junction Railway DowntonReferences edit a b c d e Sands T B August 1961 The Railways of Salisbury 1 The Railway Magazine pp 523 530 Bradley D L 1965 Locomotives of the London and South Western Railway Solihull The Railway Correspondence and Travel Society p 3 a b c Historic England Buildings fronting South Western road and attached canopy 1392847 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 23 March 2017 a b Sands T B September 1961 The Railways of Salisbury 2 The Railway Magazine pp 641 647 a b c d Oakley Mike 2004 Wiltshire Railway Stations Wimbourne The Dovecote Press ISBN 1 904349 33 1 Historic England Former GWR station 1242134 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 23 March 2017 a b c Griffiths Roger 1999 The directory of British engine sheds 1 Oxford Oxford Publishing Co p 43 ISBN 0 86093 542 6 Rolt L T C 1956 Red for Danger Bodley Head David and Charles Pan Books Pattenden Norman 2001 Salisbury 1906 An answer to the enigma Swindon South Western Circle ISBN 0 9503741 6 4 Salisbury train crash Driver suffers life changing injuries BBC News 1 November 2021 National Rail information page Archived from the original on 16 January 2012 Retrieved 24 January 2012 South West Trains May 2016 Timetable PDF Archived PDF from the original on 27 April 2016 Retrieved 20 April 2016 SWT Exeter Paignton Plymouth will stop in December 2009 Rail No 595 Peterborough 2 July 2008 p 20 Table 123 National Rail timetable May 2016 Tryhorn Faye 7 February 2022 Salisbury train station to get Welcome Host Greatest Hits Radio Salisbury Retrieved 8 February 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Salisbury railway station Panoramic photograph of Salisbury station Three Rivers Community Rail Partnership Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Salisbury railway station amp oldid 1219724613, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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