fbpx
Wikipedia

Scarborough railway station

Scarborough railway station, formerly Scarborough Central, is a Grade II listed[1] station serving the seaside town of Scarborough, North Yorkshire. It lies 42 miles (68 km) east of York and is one of the eastern termini on the North TransPennine route, operated by TransPennine Express. The station is also at the northern end of the Yorkshire Coast line and is reputed to have the longest station seat in the world at 456-foot (139 m) long.[2]

Scarborough
The entrance to the station
General information
LocationScarborough, Scarborough
England
Coordinates54°16′47″N 0°24′20″W / 54.279800°N 0.405500°W / 54.279800; -0.405500Coordinates: 54°16′47″N 0°24′20″W / 54.279800°N 0.405500°W / 54.279800; -0.405500
Grid referenceTA039883
Managed byTransPennine Express
Platforms5
Other information
Station codeSCA
ClassificationDfT category C1
History
Opened1845
Passengers
2017/18 0.990 million
2018/19 0.958 million
2019/20 0.973 million
2020/21 0.270 million
2021/22 0.841 million
Listed Building – Grade II
FeatureScarborough Railway Station
Designated8 June 1973
Reference no.1243452[1]
Notes
Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road

From 1907 until 2010 the station approaches were controlled from a 120-lever signal box named Falsgrave (at the outer end of platform 1 and close to the former excursion station at Scarborough Londesborough Road). In its final years Falsgrave box controlled a mixture of colour-light and semaphore signals, including a gantry carrying 11 semaphores. The signal box was decommissioned in September 2010 and the gantry was dismantled and removed in October 2010. Its new home was Grosmont railway station, on the North Yorkshire Moors Railway. The new signalling is a relay-based interlocking with two- and three-aspect LED signals controlled from an extension to the existing panel at nearby Seamer.[3][4] Simplification of the track layout and major renewals took place at the same time.

History

Scarborough station opened on Monday 7 July 1845, following the completion of the line from York. The first train, consisting of 35 coaches, was hauled by two locomotives named Hudson and Lion and arrived in Scarborough at 1:35 p.m., having stopped at Castle Howard, Malton and Ganton, taking just over three hours. All the shops closed, and an estimated ten to fifteen thousand spectators saw it arrive.

The original station building was designed by G.T. Andrews. It had a wrought-iron and glazed roof, 348 feet long by 88 feet wide, in two spans and 30 feet from the rails. On the opening day the station was complete except for the overall roof, and the goods shed in the station yard had not been built.

The main station building included: a large central booking office, superintendent room, 1st class, 2nd class and Ladies' waiting rooms, toilets, porters' room, storeroom and refreshment room. Above the refreshment room was originally the station master's house, later the station hotel with ten bedrooms.

At first there were two platforms connected at the north end, with four tracks in between them, each track having a pair of turntables, one at each end of the platforms. Gradually as traffic increased modifications were made to the station layout.

To accommodate excursion traffic two new platforms were added in 1883, now known as platforms 1 and 2. Separate waiting rooms and more facilities were provided. The station clock, built by Potts of Leeds and costing £110 (equivalent to £11,787 in 2021) [5], was added in about 1884.

During the 1890s and until 1903 goods traffic was moved from the station yard to Gallows Close so that more platforms could be provided. The original goods shed, which was next to the station building, became platforms 6 to 9. Trains for the Forge Valley line often used these four platforms.

Platform 1A was formed out of platform 1 for easier access to the Whitby line and opened for the beginning of the summer timetable in 1934.

Until 1965 the station also served a line from Whitby and until 1950 from Pickering. The station was previously named Scarborough Central to distinguish it from the now closed Scarborough Londesborough Road on the York to Scarborough Line. In the late 1960s most of the roof that covered platforms 1 and 2 was demolished, leaving these platforms outdoors, though the platforms still remain in use today

By the early 1980s regular use of platforms 6-9 had declined and following a simplification of the track layout in 1985 they were taken out of use and demolished. The land they had occupied is now used for car and coach parking, though the overall roofs and brick walls remain.

The current Blackpool to York service used to continue to Scarborough alongside other TransPennine Express services. This was operated by Arriva Trains Northern until Northern Rail took over the franchise in 2004. This service was usually worked by West Yorkshire Metro liveried Class 158s and occasionally a Class 155. There was also a local service from York to Scarborough, usually worked by a Class 144 or a Class 156.

Station Masters

  • T. Mennell 1847 - 1866
  • John Bearup 1870 - 1882
  • William Taylor 1882 - 1890[6]
  • George Brown 1890 - 1912[7]
  • Albert Horsley 1912 - 1921[8]
  • Frederick Dowson 1922 - 1943[9]
  • Harold Baines 1944 - 1946[10] (formerly station master at Basford and Bulwell, afterwards station master at Hull Paragon)
  • J.G. Handley 1946 - 1947 (formerly station master at Bridlington, afterwards station master at Sunderland)
  • Ernest Brooks 1948 - ???? (formerly station master at Manors and Jesmond)
  • W.A.A. Scott 1954[11] - 1957
  • A. Maleham 1957 - 1959
  • J.F. Layton 1959 - ????
  • G.E. Hunter ca. 1963

Facilities

 
The long seat on Platform 1 previously covered by a roof.

Scarborough station has a Travel Centre, ticket office, touch-screen ticket machines and a Pumpkin Cafe. The main building has a small waiting room.

Platforms 3–5 are partly covered, as is platform 1, which reputedly features the longest railway bench in the world at 456-foot (139 m) in length.[12][13][14]

Outside the station are a taxi rank and several bus shelters/stops where local and longer-distance bus services depart and arrive. These include Arriva North East route X93 to Whitby and Middlesbrough via the A171; Yorkshire Coastliner services to West Yorkshire via the A64; and East Yorkshire route 128 (to Pickering/Helmsley via the A170) and routes south along the A165 to Filey/Bridlington.

Benches are provided throughout the station, which is staffed at all times. The station also has two payphones, a vending machine and luggage trolleys, as well as toilets and cycle racks. Step-free access is available to all platforms.[15]

Services

 
 
North-eastbound view from platform 1
 
Former signal gantry in July 1986
 
NER's Map Scarborough

TransPennine Express

The typical off-peak service from the station is:[16]

Rolling stock used: Class 185 Desiro diesel multiple units, Class 68 locomotives with Mark 5a coaching stock and occasionally Class 802 bi-mode trains.

Northern Trains

Rolling stock used: Class 170 Turbostar and Class 158 Express Sprinter.


From 2000 until 2019, Midland Mainline and successors East Midlands Trains and East Midlands Railway operated one return service from and to London St Pancras via Doncaster on Summer Saturdays initially with Class 170s and later Class 222s.[17][18]

Previously in summer West Coast Railways operated a steam locomotive hauled Scarborough Spa Express services from York. The regular planned service however has not operated for some years and only the occasional charter train is operated. [19]

Scarborough is also a popular destination for charter services as it has an operational turntable.

Future of the station

Three different proposals were put forward at the November 2009 Town Team meeting by SNAP Architects (Hull) with Local Transport Projects (Beverley) on the development of the Scarborough station area. All the proposals focused on different aspects (such as community/green/transport) of development. All three proposed improving the station frontage and opening up an entrance to the south of the station.

Service improvements

The new TPE and Northern franchises, which started in April 2016, were committed to improved service frequencies and rolling stock on both lines[20] - the York route was have two departures per hour instead of the previous one as of December 2019, both operators offering an hourly service as far as York, whilst the Hull line now has an hourly timetable seven days per week.[21][22] The latter was introduced at the May 2019 timetable change, but plans for the York line to go to 2tph have since been put on hold due to lack of available rolling stock.[23]

Trains to Liverpool have also been diverted west of Stalybridge to travel via Manchester Victoria and Newton-le-Willows (reverting to the route they used prior to May 1989). The improved service saw a new £7 million train servicing depot built in Scarborough to maintain the rolling stock.[24]

Accident

On 10 August 1943 Scarborough station was the scene of an accident between two trains at platform 5. The late-running 09:05 express from Hull was wrongly routed by the signalman and hit the 11:18 stopping train, which was waiting to depart. Four passengers in the first coach of the stopping train – all soldiers – were killed, eight received serious injuries and a further 22 suffered minor injuries. Nobody was injured on the express train.[25]

Local connections

This station offers access to the Cleveland Way
Distance to path 1 mile
Next station anticlockwise Whitby 21 miles
Next station clockwise Filey 7 miles

References

  1. ^ a b Historic England. "Scarborough Railway Station (1243452)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 6 January 2017.
  2. ^ "Longest bench gets smart new look". The Scarborough News. 23 March 2003. from the original on 24 April 2019. Retrieved 24 April 2019.
  3. ^ (Press release). Network Rail. 18 December 2009. Archived from the original on 29 September 2011. Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  4. ^ Williams, Alan (December 2010). "Farewell, Falsgrave". Modern Railways. London. pp. 16–17.
  5. ^ UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 11 June 2022.
  6. ^ "Councillor William Taylor". Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer. England. 19 August 1910. Retrieved 10 September 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  7. ^ "Mr. George Brown". Wigan Observer and District Advertiser. England. 28 March 1912. Retrieved 10 September 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  8. ^ "Mr. Albert Horsley". Hull Daily Mail. England. 13 December 1921. Retrieved 10 September 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  9. ^ "Scarborough Station Master". Hull Daily Mail. England. 1 January 1944. Retrieved 10 September 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  10. ^ "Hull's New Station Master". Hull Daily Mail. England. 14 May 1946. Retrieved 10 September 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  11. ^ "Scarborough Station Master". Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer. England. 28 July 1954. Retrieved 10 September 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  12. ^ "New lease of life for station". BBC News. 6 December 2010. from the original on 24 April 2019. Retrieved 24 April 2019.
  13. ^ Wainwright, Martin (1 August 2012). "Yorkshire has its Day - and the world's longest railway platform seat". The Guardian. from the original on 24 April 2019. Retrieved 24 April 2019.
  14. ^ Bickerdyke, Paul, ed. (November 2018). "When Saturday came: Scarborough". Rail Express. Horncastle: Mortons Media (270): 23. ISSN 1362-234X.
  15. ^ Scarborough station facilities 29 November 2016 at the Wayback Machine National Rail Enquiries; Retrieved 8 December 2016
  16. ^ Table 39, 43 National Rail timetable, December 2022
  17. ^ Now it's Midland Mainline to Scarborough The Railway Magazine issue 1189 May 2000 page 39
  18. ^ A New Era for the East Midlands as Abellio starts its fifth franchise Today's Railways UK issue 214 October 2019 page 24
  19. ^ "The Scarborough Express Spa Journey". West Coast Railways. from the original on 3 September 2014. Retrieved 9 September 2014.
  20. ^ "North Yorkshire Welcomes Rail Franchise Improvements". Yorkshire Coast Radio. 9 December 2015. from the original on 27 April 2018. Retrieved 26 April 2018.
  21. ^ "Northern franchise improvements". 24 July 2019 at the Wayback Machine Department for Transport. n.d.
  22. ^ "TransPennine Franchise Improvements". from the original on 29 March 2016. Retrieved 31 March 2016.
  23. ^ "New train service for Malton and Norton delayed" 29 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine Dunning, D Minster FM news article 15 October 2019; Retrieved 19 November 2019
  24. ^ "Rail Firm Invests £7m in Scarborough". Yorkshire Coast Radio. 4 December 2017. from the original on 26 April 2018. Retrieved 26 April 2018.
  25. ^ "LNER report on the 1943 accident" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 5 June 2011. Retrieved 17 October 2008.

External links

scarborough, railway, station, this, article, about, railway, station, england, station, south, wales, south, wales, other, uses, scarborough, station, disambiguation, formerly, scarborough, central, grade, listed, station, serving, seaside, town, scarborough,. This article is about the railway station in England For the station in New South Wales see Scarborough railway station New South Wales For other uses see Scarborough station disambiguation Scarborough railway station formerly Scarborough Central is a Grade II listed 1 station serving the seaside town of Scarborough North Yorkshire It lies 42 miles 68 km east of York and is one of the eastern termini on the North TransPennine route operated by TransPennine Express The station is also at the northern end of the Yorkshire Coast line and is reputed to have the longest station seat in the world at 456 foot 139 m long 2 ScarboroughThe entrance to the stationGeneral informationLocationScarborough ScarboroughEnglandCoordinates54 16 47 N 0 24 20 W 54 279800 N 0 405500 W 54 279800 0 405500 Coordinates 54 16 47 N 0 24 20 W 54 279800 N 0 405500 W 54 279800 0 405500Grid referenceTA039883Managed byTransPennine ExpressPlatforms5Other informationStation codeSCAClassificationDfT category C1HistoryOpened1845Passengers2017 180 990 million2018 190 958 million2019 200 973 million2020 210 270 million2021 220 841 millionListed Building Grade IIFeatureScarborough Railway StationDesignated8 June 1973Reference no 1243452 1 NotesPassenger statistics from the Office of Rail and RoadFrom 1907 until 2010 the station approaches were controlled from a 120 lever signal box named Falsgrave at the outer end of platform 1 and close to the former excursion station at Scarborough Londesborough Road In its final years Falsgrave box controlled a mixture of colour light and semaphore signals including a gantry carrying 11 semaphores The signal box was decommissioned in September 2010 and the gantry was dismantled and removed in October 2010 Its new home was Grosmont railway station on the North Yorkshire Moors Railway The new signalling is a relay based interlocking with two and three aspect LED signals controlled from an extension to the existing panel at nearby Seamer 3 4 Simplification of the track layout and major renewals took place at the same time Contents 1 History 1 1 Station Masters 2 Facilities 3 Services 3 1 TransPennine Express 3 2 Northern Trains 4 Future of the station 5 Service improvements 6 Accident 7 Local connections 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditScarborough station opened on Monday 7 July 1845 following the completion of the line from York The first train consisting of 35 coaches was hauled by two locomotives named Hudson and Lion and arrived in Scarborough at 1 35 p m having stopped at Castle Howard Malton and Ganton taking just over three hours All the shops closed and an estimated ten to fifteen thousand spectators saw it arrive The original station building was designed by G T Andrews It had a wrought iron and glazed roof 348 feet long by 88 feet wide in two spans and 30 feet from the rails On the opening day the station was complete except for the overall roof and the goods shed in the station yard had not been built The main station building included a large central booking office superintendent room 1st class 2nd class and Ladies waiting rooms toilets porters room storeroom and refreshment room Above the refreshment room was originally the station master s house later the station hotel with ten bedrooms At first there were two platforms connected at the north end with four tracks in between them each track having a pair of turntables one at each end of the platforms Gradually as traffic increased modifications were made to the station layout To accommodate excursion traffic two new platforms were added in 1883 now known as platforms 1 and 2 Separate waiting rooms and more facilities were provided The station clock built by Potts of Leeds and costing 110 equivalent to 11 787 in 2021 5 was added in about 1884 During the 1890s and until 1903 goods traffic was moved from the station yard to Gallows Close so that more platforms could be provided The original goods shed which was next to the station building became platforms 6 to 9 Trains for the Forge Valley line often used these four platforms Platform 1A was formed out of platform 1 for easier access to the Whitby line and opened for the beginning of the summer timetable in 1934 Until 1965 the station also served a line from Whitby and until 1950 from Pickering The station was previously named Scarborough Central to distinguish it from the now closed Scarborough Londesborough Road on the York to Scarborough Line In the late 1960s most of the roof that covered platforms 1 and 2 was demolished leaving these platforms outdoors though the platforms still remain in use todayBy the early 1980s regular use of platforms 6 9 had declined and following a simplification of the track layout in 1985 they were taken out of use and demolished The land they had occupied is now used for car and coach parking though the overall roofs and brick walls remain The current Blackpool to York service used to continue to Scarborough alongside other TransPennine Express services This was operated by Arriva Trains Northern until Northern Rail took over the franchise in 2004 This service was usually worked by West Yorkshire Metro liveried Class 158s and occasionally a Class 155 There was also a local service from York to Scarborough usually worked by a Class 144 or a Class 156 Station Masters Edit T Mennell 1847 1866 John Bearup 1870 1882 William Taylor 1882 1890 6 George Brown 1890 1912 7 Albert Horsley 1912 1921 8 Frederick Dowson 1922 1943 9 Harold Baines 1944 1946 10 formerly station master at Basford and Bulwell afterwards station master at Hull Paragon J G Handley 1946 1947 formerly station master at Bridlington afterwards station master at Sunderland Ernest Brooks 1948 formerly station master at Manors and Jesmond W A A Scott 1954 11 1957 A Maleham 1957 1959 J F Layton 1959 G E Hunter ca 1963 This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items September 2017 Facilities Edit The long seat on Platform 1 previously covered by a roof Scarborough station has a Travel Centre ticket office touch screen ticket machines and a Pumpkin Cafe The main building has a small waiting room Platforms 3 5 are partly covered as is platform 1 which reputedly features the longest railway bench in the world at 456 foot 139 m in length 12 13 14 Outside the station are a taxi rank and several bus shelters stops where local and longer distance bus services depart and arrive These include Arriva North East route X93 to Whitby and Middlesbrough via the A171 Yorkshire Coastliner services to West Yorkshire via the A64 and East Yorkshire route 128 to Pickering Helmsley via the A170 and routes south along the A165 to Filey Bridlington Benches are provided throughout the station which is staffed at all times The station also has two payphones a vending machine and luggage trolleys as well as toilets and cycle racks Step free access is available to all platforms 15 Services Edit Two First TransPennine Express Class 185s and a Midland Mainline Class 222 stand at platforms 3 5 North eastbound view from platform 1 Former signal gantry in July 1986 NER s Map Scarborough TransPennine Express Edit The typical off peak service from the station is 16 Mon Sat 1tph train per hour to York with alternate services continuing to Leeds and Manchester Piccadilly operated by TransPennine Express Sun 1tp2h train per every 2 hours to York operated by TransPennine Express Rolling stock used Class 185 Desiro diesel multiple units Class 68 locomotives with Mark 5a coaching stock and occasionally Class 802 bi mode trains Northern Trains Edit 1tph to Hull with most services continuing on to Sheffield operated by Northern Rolling stock used Class 170 Turbostar and Class 158 Express Sprinter From 2000 until 2019 Midland Mainline and successors East Midlands Trains and East Midlands Railway operated one return service from and to London St Pancras via Doncaster on Summer Saturdays initially with Class 170s and later Class 222s 17 18 Previously in summer West Coast Railways operated a steam locomotive hauled Scarborough Spa Express services from York The regular planned service however has not operated for some years and only the occasional charter train is operated 19 Scarborough is also a popular destination for charter services as it has an operational turntable Preceding station National Rail Following stationSeamerNorthern Trains Hull Scarborough lineTerminusTransPennine Express North TransPennine Historical railways Scarborough Londesborough RoadY amp NMRYork to Scarborough LineTerminusYorkEast Midlands Railway York to Scarborough LineDisused railwaysTerminusScarborough amp Whitby RailwayScalbyFuture of the station EditThree different proposals were put forward at the November 2009 Town Team meeting by SNAP Architects Hull with Local Transport Projects Beverley on the development of the Scarborough station area All the proposals focused on different aspects such as community green transport of development All three proposed improving the station frontage and opening up an entrance to the south of the station Service improvements EditThe new TPE and Northern franchises which started in April 2016 were committed to improved service frequencies and rolling stock on both lines 20 the York route was have two departures per hour instead of the previous one as of December 2019 both operators offering an hourly service as far as York whilst the Hull line now has an hourly timetable seven days per week 21 22 The latter was introduced at the May 2019 timetable change but plans for the York line to go to 2tph have since been put on hold due to lack of available rolling stock 23 Trains to Liverpool have also been diverted west of Stalybridge to travel via Manchester Victoria and Newton le Willows reverting to the route they used prior to May 1989 The improved service saw a new 7 million train servicing depot built in Scarborough to maintain the rolling stock 24 Accident EditOn 10 August 1943 Scarborough station was the scene of an accident between two trains at platform 5 The late running 09 05 express from Hull was wrongly routed by the signalman and hit the 11 18 stopping train which was waiting to depart Four passengers in the first coach of the stopping train all soldiers were killed eight received serious injuries and a further 22 suffered minor injuries Nobody was injured on the express train 25 Local connections EditThis station offers access to the Cleveland WayDistance to path 1 mileNext station anticlockwise Whitby 21 milesNext station clockwise Filey 7 milesReferences Edit a b Historic England Scarborough Railway Station 1243452 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 6 January 2017 Longest bench gets smart new look The Scarborough News 23 March 2003 Archived from the original on 24 April 2019 Retrieved 24 April 2019 Signalling In The Future at Scarborough Press release Network Rail 18 December 2009 Archived from the original on 29 September 2011 Retrieved 21 December 2009 Williams Alan December 2010 Farewell Falsgrave Modern Railways London pp 16 17 UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark Gregory 2017 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved 11 June 2022 Councillor William Taylor Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer England 19 August 1910 Retrieved 10 September 2017 via British Newspaper Archive Mr George Brown Wigan Observer and District Advertiser England 28 March 1912 Retrieved 10 September 2017 via British Newspaper Archive Mr Albert Horsley Hull Daily Mail England 13 December 1921 Retrieved 10 September 2017 via British Newspaper Archive a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Scarborough Station Master Hull Daily Mail England 1 January 1944 Retrieved 10 September 2017 via British Newspaper Archive Hull s New Station Master Hull Daily Mail England 14 May 1946 Retrieved 10 September 2017 via British Newspaper Archive Scarborough Station Master Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer England 28 July 1954 Retrieved 10 September 2017 via British Newspaper Archive New lease of life for station BBC News 6 December 2010 Archived from the original on 24 April 2019 Retrieved 24 April 2019 Wainwright Martin 1 August 2012 Yorkshire has its Day and the world s longest railway platform seat The Guardian Archived from the original on 24 April 2019 Retrieved 24 April 2019 Bickerdyke Paul ed November 2018 When Saturday came Scarborough Rail Express Horncastle Mortons Media 270 23 ISSN 1362 234X Scarborough station facilities Archived 29 November 2016 at the Wayback Machine National Rail Enquiries Retrieved 8 December 2016 Table 39 43 National Rail timetable December 2022 Now it s Midland Mainline to Scarborough The Railway Magazine issue 1189 May 2000 page 39 A New Era for the East Midlands as Abellio starts its fifth franchise Today s Railways UK issue 214 October 2019 page 24 The Scarborough Express Spa Journey West Coast Railways Archived from the original on 3 September 2014 Retrieved 9 September 2014 North Yorkshire Welcomes Rail Franchise Improvements Yorkshire Coast Radio 9 December 2015 Archived from the original on 27 April 2018 Retrieved 26 April 2018 Northern franchise improvements Archived 24 July 2019 at the Wayback Machine Department for Transport n d TransPennine Franchise Improvements Archived from the original on 29 March 2016 Retrieved 31 March 2016 New train service for Malton and Norton delayed Archived 29 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine Dunning D Minster FM news article 15 October 2019 Retrieved 19 November 2019 Rail Firm Invests 7m in Scarborough Yorkshire Coast Radio 4 December 2017 Archived from the original on 26 April 2018 Retrieved 26 April 2018 LNER report on the 1943 accident PDF Archived PDF from the original on 5 June 2011 Retrieved 17 October 2008 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Scarborough railway station Historic England Details from listed building database 1243452 National Heritage List for England The Flying Scotsman arriving in Scarborough Webshots com Scarborough s Urban Renaissance Scarborough Station Re development Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Scarborough railway station amp oldid 1147727349, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.