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Sudbury railway station

Sudbury railway station is the northern terminus of the Gainsborough Line, a branch off the Great Eastern Main Line in the East of England, serving the town of Sudbury, Suffolk. It is 11 miles 67 chains (19.05 km) down the line from the southern terminus of Marks Tey and 58 miles 32 chains (93.99 km) measured from London Liverpool Street; the preceding station on the branch is Bures. Its three-letter station code is SUY. The platform has an operational length for two-coach trains.[1]

Sudbury
Entrance to the station, 2011
General information
LocationSudbury, Babergh
England
Coordinates52°02′10″N 0°44′06″E / 52.036°N 0.735°E / 52.036; 0.735
Grid referenceTL876410
Managed byGreater Anglia
Platforms1
Other information
Station codeSUY
ClassificationDfT category F1
Passengers
2018/19 0.334 million
2019/20 0.335 million
2020/21 61,846
2021/22 0.224 million
2022/23 0.279 million
Notes
Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road

The station is currently operated by Greater Anglia, which also operates all trains serving it, as part of the East Anglia franchise. Sudbury is an unstaffed station with one platform as the line is single-track, and with a self-service ticket machine.

Volunteers from Sudbury In Bloom man the station, which is annually entered into the Anglia In Bloom station competition; it won the Silver Gilt award in 2006, 2007 and 2008. It also won the Best Station Garden at the 2008 ACoRP Community Rail Awards.[2]

History edit

Early history (1849–1862) edit

The first Sudbury station was built by the Colchester, Stour Valley, Sudbury & Halstead Railway, which even before the opening on 30 July 1849, had seen the line leased by the Ipswich and Bury Railway who then themselves merged with the Eastern Union Railway (EUR) in early 1849. The station was a single platformed terminus station at the end of a single-track line from Marks Tey. Trains then shared tracks with the Eastern Counties Railway into Colchester.

It is uncertain when the nearby engine shed was built although given the fact the Stour Valley was a far-flung branch of the EUR, it is likely engines were based here in the single-track brick-built engine shed from opening, as the next nearest facility for the EUR facility was Ipswich engine shed.[3]

The Eastern Union Railway was taken over by the Eastern Counties Railway in 1854.

By the 1860s the railways in East Anglia were in financial trouble and most were leased to the Eastern Counties Railway (ECR). Although they wished to amalgamate formally, they could not obtain government agreement for this until 1862, when the Great Eastern Railway (GER) was formed by the amalgamation.[4]

Great Eastern Railway (1862–1922) edit

The original station was replaced in 1865 by the Great Eastern Railway when the line was extended to Cambridge to create the Stour Valley Railway.

In 1866 Sudbury engine shed was part of the Cambridge district and the diaries of the District Locomotive Supervisor referred to Sinclair Y and Z 2-4-0 classes as well as some of the original EUR 2-2-2 locomotives active there.[5]

An 1886 plan of the station area showed two platforms and a back road used for goods trains. The station was approached by a tree lined road whilst the extensive goods yard served a number of maltings and a timber yard as well as the small engine shed. The goods yard incorporated the original station site.[6]

In 1889 extensive signalling and block working was introduced on the line through Sudbury. In addition to the existing signal box located just west of Sudbury station, Sudbury Goods Junction signal box was opened, located east of the station and controlled a level crossing and entrance to the goods yard and engine shed.[7]

On the last day of the GER (31 December 1922) the following locomotives were allocated to Sudbury:[8]

Class (LNER classification) Wheel Arrangement Number allocated
E4 2-4-0 1
F4 2-4-2T 1
J15 0-6-0 1

London and North Eastern Railway (1923–1947) edit

After the grouping of 1923 operation of the station passed to the London and North Eastern Railway (LNER).

The station signal box was closed in 1934 with the signalling all being controlled by Sudbury Goods Junction signal box.[9]

British Railways (1948–1994) edit

After nationalisation on 1 January 1948, Sudbury became part of the Eastern Region of British Railways. The engine shed was demolished in July 1956, although watering and stabling of locomotives still took place until October 1959.[10]

The station was unstaffed from 14 August 1966, when Paytrain operation of the line began, and local goods services were withdrawn on 31 October 1966. Sudbury became a terminus again following the Beeching cuts to railway services, which led to the closure of the through Stour Valley route on 6 March 1967.[11] The track was removed and the station only required a single platform. The footbridge was moved to the East Anglian Railway Museum, where it is in use today.[12]

Despite the fact that all of the track bar a single line into the platform remained, Sudbury Goods Junction signal box was retained to control the level crossing. It was not until 15 February 1981 that the level crossing and signal box were closed.[13]

The station building was unused between 1966 and 1974, and housed the Sudbury Museum until a fire in 1985. In 1982, following the sectorisation of British Rail, the station became part of the London and South East sector, which was renamed Network SouthEast in July 1986.

In 1991, to make way for the construction of the Kingfisher Leisure Centre, the station was re-sited to the edge of the town centre, making it the third station site.[14]

The privatisation era (1994–present day) edit

From privatisation the track at Sudbury station was the responsibility of Railtrack.Following the collapse of this organisation in 2002 responsibility fell to Network Rail.

The train services have been operated by the following train operating companies:

Accidents edit

On 27 January 2006 at least four passengers were slightly injured when a Class 156 train ran into the buffer stop at Sudbury. The 18:05 service from Marks Tey was travelling at a speed at the time of the collision of approximately six miles per hour. An investigation determined that the driver failed to apply the brakes in a "timely and appropriate manner".[15]

Services edit

The typical off-peak service is one train per hour to Marks Tey, with frequency increased slightly during the weekday peak:[16]

Operator Route Rolling stock Frequency
Greater Anglia Sudbury - Bures - Chappel & Wakes Colne - Marks Tey Class 755 1x per hour

Historic services – July 1922 edit

July 1922 was during the last summer of Great Eastern Railway operation before the LNER took over I January 1923. The services were detailed on table 290 of Bradshaw's timetable guide for that year. Down services were towards Bury St Edmunds and Cambridge (the line split at the next station Long Melford) and towards Marks Tey in the up direction.

The first weekday departure in the down direction was the 0645 departure to Cambridge and the 0729 departure to Bury St Edmunds. Both trains offered arrivals in those stations around 08.10. The first through train of the day was the 08.44 Colchester - Cambridge calling at Sudbury at 09.39 and departing three minutes later. There was a connecting train for Bury St Edmunds at Long Melford. Similarly the 1105 Colchester - Cambridge train arrived at Sudbury at 11.47 departing two minutes later. The 01.26 (pm) Colchester service to Bury St Edmunds called at Sudbury 0221 departing at 02.30 - the long wait the result of Anup service from Cambridge. The next down services departed Sudbury at 04.22 (to Cambridge) and 0643 (Bury St Edmunds), before the last train of the day which was the 0640 Colchester to Bury St Edmunds calling at Sudbury at 07.30.

In the up direction Bradshaw records the first Sudbury departure as 08.16 towards Colchester (the 0726 through service from Bury St Edmunds) which arrived at Colchester at 08.59. This was followed by three through trains from Cambridge at 10.14, 12.13 (pm) and 02.46. A Wednesday only working from Bury St Edmunds arrived at Sudbury at 05.08 and then the 04.57 service from Cambridge which terminated at Sudbury at 06.22. This connected into the 05.50 Bury St Edmunds which departed Sudbury at 06.37 and was the last up movement towards Colchester. Finally the 07.22 Cambridge terminated at Sudbury at 04.42.

With trains terminating and originating from Sudbury some carriages would have been kept in the station area overnight.

On Sundays three trains operated from Sudbury to Colchester and return (although one started at Marks Tey).[17]

References edit

  1. ^ Brailsford, Martyn (2016). Railway Track Diagrams Volume 2 Eastern. Frome: Tackmaps. p. 5. ISBN 978-0-9549866-8-1.
  2. ^ ACoRP Winners List- Community Rail Awards Winners List 14 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Reeve, George; Hawkins, Chris (1987). Great Eastern Engine Sheds volume 2. Didcot UK: Wild Swan. p. 303. ISBN 0-90686748-7.
  4. ^ Vaughan, Adrian (1997). Railwaymen, Politics and Money. London: John Murray. pp. 134, 135. ISBN 0-7195-5150-1.
  5. ^ Reeve, George; Hawkins, Chris (1987). Great Eastern Engine Sheds volume 2. Didcot UK: Wild Swan. p. 305. ISBN 0-90686748-7.
  6. ^ Catford, Steve. "Sudbury". Disused stations. Steve Catford. Retrieved 27 January 2020.
  7. ^ Paye, Peter (July 2004). "Sudbury North". Great Eastern Journal. 119: 31.
  8. ^ Reeve, George; Hawkins, Chris (1987). Great Eastern Engine Sheds volume 2. Didcot UK: Wild Swan. p. 379. ISBN 0-90686748-7.
  9. ^ Underwood, David (January 2005). "Sudbury Goods Junction Signal Box (Letter)". Great Eastern Journal. 121: 36.
  10. ^ Reeve, George; Hawkins, Chris (1987). Great Eastern Engine Sheds volume 2. Didcot UK: Wild Swan. p. 305. ISBN 0-90686748-7.
  11. ^ Riley, Richard; Walsh, Bernard; Watling, John (August 1991). "Sudbury (photo caption)". Great Eastern Journal. 69: 19.
  12. ^ Mitchell, Vic (2012). Branch Lines to Sudbury. Midhurst,UK: Middelton Books. p. 116. ISBN 978-1-908174-19-2.
  13. ^ Underwood, David (January 2005). "Sudbury Goods Junction Signal Box (Letter)". Great Eastern Journal. 121: 36.
  14. ^ Catford, Nick. "Station Name: SUDBURY (2nd site)". www.subbrit.org.uk. Retrieved 29 October 2008.
  15. ^ http://www.railwaysarchive.co.uk/documents/RAIB_Sudbury2006.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  16. ^ Table 10 National Rail timetable, May 2016
  17. ^ St John Thomas, David (1985). Bradshaw's July 1922 (reprint). Newton Abbot,UK: David & Charles. p. 290. ISBN 978-0715387085.

External links edit

  • History page at Subterranea Britannica showing the station before and after redevelopment
Preceding station   National Rail Following station
Bures   Greater Anglia
Gainsborough Line
  Terminus
Disused railways
Bures
Line and station open
  Great Eastern Railway
Stour Valley Railway
  Long Melford
Line and station closed

sudbury, railway, station, this, article, about, suffolk, england, other, uses, disambiguation, northern, terminus, gainsborough, line, branch, great, eastern, main, line, east, england, serving, town, sudbury, suffolk, miles, chains, down, line, from, souther. This article is about Sudbury railway station in Suffolk England For other uses see Sudbury railway station disambiguation Sudbury railway station is the northern terminus of the Gainsborough Line a branch off the Great Eastern Main Line in the East of England serving the town of Sudbury Suffolk It is 11 miles 67 chains 19 05 km down the line from the southern terminus of Marks Tey and 58 miles 32 chains 93 99 km measured from London Liverpool Street the preceding station on the branch is Bures Its three letter station code is SUY The platform has an operational length for two coach trains 1 SudburyEntrance to the station 2011General informationLocationSudbury BaberghEnglandCoordinates52 02 10 N 0 44 06 E 52 036 N 0 735 E 52 036 0 735Grid referenceTL876410Managed byGreater AngliaPlatforms1Other informationStation codeSUYClassificationDfT category F1Passengers2018 190 334 million2019 200 335 million2020 2161 8462021 220 224 million2022 230 279 millionNotesPassenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road The station is currently operated by Greater Anglia which also operates all trains serving it as part of the East Anglia franchise Sudbury is an unstaffed station with one platform as the line is single track and with a self service ticket machine Volunteers from Sudbury In Bloom man the station which is annually entered into the Anglia In Bloom station competition it won the Silver Gilt award in 2006 2007 and 2008 It also won the Best Station Garden at the 2008 ACoRP Community Rail Awards 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1849 1862 1 2 Great Eastern Railway 1862 1922 1 3 London and North Eastern Railway 1923 1947 1 4 British Railways 1948 1994 1 5 The privatisation era 1994 present day 2 Accidents 3 Services 3 1 Historic services July 1922 4 References 5 External linksHistory editEarly history 1849 1862 edit The first Sudbury station was built by the Colchester Stour Valley Sudbury amp Halstead Railway which even before the opening on 30 July 1849 had seen the line leased by the Ipswich and Bury Railway who then themselves merged with the Eastern Union Railway EUR in early 1849 The station was a single platformed terminus station at the end of a single track line from Marks Tey Trains then shared tracks with the Eastern Counties Railway into Colchester It is uncertain when the nearby engine shed was built although given the fact the Stour Valley was a far flung branch of the EUR it is likely engines were based here in the single track brick built engine shed from opening as the next nearest facility for the EUR facility was Ipswich engine shed 3 The Eastern Union Railway was taken over by the Eastern Counties Railway in 1854 By the 1860s the railways in East Anglia were in financial trouble and most were leased to the Eastern Counties Railway ECR Although they wished to amalgamate formally they could not obtain government agreement for this until 1862 when the Great Eastern Railway GER was formed by the amalgamation 4 Great Eastern Railway 1862 1922 edit The original station was replaced in 1865 by the Great Eastern Railway when the line was extended to Cambridge to create the Stour Valley Railway In 1866 Sudbury engine shed was part of the Cambridge district and the diaries of the District Locomotive Supervisor referred to Sinclair Y and Z 2 4 0 classes as well as some of the original EUR 2 2 2 locomotives active there 5 An 1886 plan of the station area showed two platforms and a back road used for goods trains The station was approached by a tree lined road whilst the extensive goods yard served a number of maltings and a timber yard as well as the small engine shed The goods yard incorporated the original station site 6 In 1889 extensive signalling and block working was introduced on the line through Sudbury In addition to the existing signal box located just west of Sudbury station Sudbury Goods Junction signal box was opened located east of the station and controlled a level crossing and entrance to the goods yard and engine shed 7 On the last day of the GER 31 December 1922 the following locomotives were allocated to Sudbury 8 Class LNER classification Wheel Arrangement Number allocated E4 2 4 0 1 F4 2 4 2T 1 J15 0 6 0 1 London and North Eastern Railway 1923 1947 edit After the grouping of 1923 operation of the station passed to the London and North Eastern Railway LNER The station signal box was closed in 1934 with the signalling all being controlled by Sudbury Goods Junction signal box 9 British Railways 1948 1994 edit After nationalisation on 1 January 1948 Sudbury became part of the Eastern Region of British Railways The engine shed was demolished in July 1956 although watering and stabling of locomotives still took place until October 1959 10 The station was unstaffed from 14 August 1966 when Paytrain operation of the line began and local goods services were withdrawn on 31 October 1966 Sudbury became a terminus again following the Beeching cuts to railway services which led to the closure of the through Stour Valley route on 6 March 1967 11 The track was removed and the station only required a single platform The footbridge was moved to the East Anglian Railway Museum where it is in use today 12 Despite the fact that all of the track bar a single line into the platform remained Sudbury Goods Junction signal box was retained to control the level crossing It was not until 15 February 1981 that the level crossing and signal box were closed 13 The station building was unused between 1966 and 1974 and housed the Sudbury Museum until a fire in 1985 In 1982 following the sectorisation of British Rail the station became part of the London and South East sector which was renamed Network SouthEast in July 1986 In 1991 to make way for the construction of the Kingfisher Leisure Centre the station was re sited to the edge of the town centre making it the third station site 14 The privatisation era 1994 present day edit From privatisation the track at Sudbury station was the responsibility of Railtrack Following the collapse of this organisation in 2002 responsibility fell to Network Rail The train services have been operated by the following train operating companies First Great Eastern between 1997 and 2004 when the First Great Eastern franchise became part of the Greater Anglia Franchise National Express East Anglia between 2004 and 2012 Abellio Greater Anglia from 2012 with the current franchise renewed in 2016 to be operated until 2025 Accidents editOn 27 January 2006 at least four passengers were slightly injured when a Class 156 train ran into the buffer stop at Sudbury The 18 05 service from Marks Tey was travelling at a speed at the time of the collision of approximately six miles per hour An investigation determined that the driver failed to apply the brakes in a timely and appropriate manner 15 Services editThe typical off peak service is one train per hour to Marks Tey with frequency increased slightly during the weekday peak 16 Operator Route Rolling stock Frequency Greater Anglia Sudbury Bures Chappel amp Wakes Colne Marks Tey Class 755 1x per hour Historic services July 1922 edit July 1922 was during the last summer of Great Eastern Railway operation before the LNER took over I January 1923 The services were detailed on table 290 of Bradshaw s timetable guide for that year Down services were towards Bury St Edmunds and Cambridge the line split at the next station Long Melford and towards Marks Tey in the up direction The first weekday departure in the down direction was the 0645 departure to Cambridge and the 0729 departure to Bury St Edmunds Both trains offered arrivals in those stations around 08 10 The first through train of the day was the 08 44 Colchester Cambridge calling at Sudbury at 09 39 and departing three minutes later There was a connecting train for Bury St Edmunds at Long Melford Similarly the 1105 Colchester Cambridge train arrived at Sudbury at 11 47 departing two minutes later The 01 26 pm Colchester service to Bury St Edmunds called at Sudbury 0221 departing at 02 30 the long wait the result of Anup service from Cambridge The next down services departed Sudbury at 04 22 to Cambridge and 0643 Bury St Edmunds before the last train of the day which was the 0640 Colchester to Bury St Edmunds calling at Sudbury at 07 30 In the up direction Bradshaw records the first Sudbury departure as 08 16 towards Colchester the 0726 through service from Bury St Edmunds which arrived at Colchester at 08 59 This was followed by three through trains from Cambridge at 10 14 12 13 pm and 02 46 A Wednesday only working from Bury St Edmunds arrived at Sudbury at 05 08 and then the 04 57 service from Cambridge which terminated at Sudbury at 06 22 This connected into the 05 50 Bury St Edmunds which departed Sudbury at 06 37 and was the last up movement towards Colchester Finally the 07 22 Cambridge terminated at Sudbury at 04 42 With trains terminating and originating from Sudbury some carriages would have been kept in the station area overnight On Sundays three trains operated from Sudbury to Colchester and return although one started at Marks Tey 17 References edit Brailsford Martyn 2016 Railway Track Diagrams Volume 2 Eastern Frome Tackmaps p 5 ISBN 978 0 9549866 8 1 ACoRP Winners List Community Rail Awards Winners List Archived 14 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine Reeve George Hawkins Chris 1987 Great Eastern Engine Sheds volume 2 Didcot UK Wild Swan p 303 ISBN 0 90686748 7 Vaughan Adrian 1997 Railwaymen Politics and Money London John Murray pp 134 135 ISBN 0 7195 5150 1 Reeve George Hawkins Chris 1987 Great Eastern Engine Sheds volume 2 Didcot UK Wild Swan p 305 ISBN 0 90686748 7 Catford Steve Sudbury Disused stations Steve Catford Retrieved 27 January 2020 Paye Peter July 2004 Sudbury North Great Eastern Journal 119 31 Reeve George Hawkins Chris 1987 Great Eastern Engine Sheds volume 2 Didcot UK Wild Swan p 379 ISBN 0 90686748 7 Underwood David January 2005 Sudbury Goods Junction Signal Box Letter Great Eastern Journal 121 36 Reeve George Hawkins Chris 1987 Great Eastern Engine Sheds volume 2 Didcot UK Wild Swan p 305 ISBN 0 90686748 7 Riley Richard Walsh Bernard Watling John August 1991 Sudbury photo caption Great Eastern Journal 69 19 Mitchell Vic 2012 Branch Lines to Sudbury Midhurst UK Middelton Books p 116 ISBN 978 1 908174 19 2 Underwood David January 2005 Sudbury Goods Junction Signal Box Letter Great Eastern Journal 121 36 Catford Nick Station Name SUDBURY 2nd site www subbrit org uk Retrieved 29 October 2008 http www railwaysarchive co uk documents RAIB Sudbury2006 pdf bare URL PDF Table 10 National Rail timetable May 2016 St John Thomas David 1985 Bradshaw s July 1922 reprint Newton Abbot UK David amp Charles p 290 ISBN 978 0715387085 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sudbury railway station History page at Subterranea Britannica showing the station before and after redevelopment Preceding station nbsp National Rail Following station Bures Greater AngliaGainsborough Line Terminus Disused railways BuresLine and station open Great Eastern RailwayStour Valley Railway Long MelfordLine and station closed Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sudbury railway station amp oldid 1191269028, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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