Harker railway station

Disused railway station in Harker, Cumbria From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Harker railway stationmap

Harker railway station served the settlement of Harker, Cumbria, England, between 1861 and 1969 on the Waverley Line.

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Harker
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The site of the station, looking north towards Harker, in 1997
General information
LocationHarker, Cumbria
England
Coordinates54.939°N 2.9603°W / 54.939; -2.9603
Grid referenceNY385605
Platforms2
Other information
StatusDisused
History
Original companyBorder Union Railway
Pre-groupingNorth British Railway
Post-groupingLNER
LMR
Key dates
29 October 1861 (1861-10-29)First station opened
1 November 1929Closed
1 March 1943New unadvertised station opened south of first station
6 January 1969 (1969-01-06)Closed
Location
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Harker
Location in the present-day City of Carlisle district, Cumbria
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Harker
Location in present-day Cumbria, England
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History

The first station was opened on 29 October 1861 by the North British Railway to the north of on an unnamed minor road . It closed on 1 November 1929 but was used as an unadvertised halt for military personnel to the nearby airfield from 1936 until circa 1941. A new unadvertised station for RAF staff was opened on 1 March 1943 by the LNER on the other side of the bridge from the first station. Near the station was an RAF stores depot, which was the reason why the station opened. The short platforms could not be extended because the goods yard, to the north, was still in use. The depot was renamed from RAF Kingston to RAF Carlisle and was home to the 14 maintenance unit. It was used to store equipment from aircraft parts to firearms, ammunition and aircrew clothing. The station closed on 6 January 1969[1] along with the line. RAF Carlisle closed in 1996 and was unoccupied until 2010 when the Stobart group acquired it.[2]

References

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