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Nancegollan railway station

Former railway station in England From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nancegollan railway stationmap
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Nancegollan railway station located in Nancegollan, Cornwall served an important agricultural district and was also the railhead for the fishing port of Porthleven.[1]

Quick Facts General information, Location ...
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History

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The station opened on 9 May 1887 when the Helston Railway opened the line between Helston and Gwinear Road on the Great Western Railway mainline to Penzance.[2][3]

The line was operated by the Great Western Railway and absorbed by that company on 2 August 1898.[3]

Originally it had a single passenger platform on the upside and a goods loop without a platform;[4] the connections were operated by a ground frame. In 1937 the facilities were considerably extended, with a full crossing facility for passenger trains and longer platforms on both lines, as well as a loop line behind the up platform and a large goods yard.[5]

In 1941 the station's goods sidings were further modified and extended in connection with airfield construction in the locality, and a new signal box with a lever frame that had been relocated from the Cornish Main Line at St Germans. A second, metal, bridge was also built at this time to carry the road over the new goods yard access lines. A camping coach was positioned here by the Western Region from 1958 to 1962.[6]

Due to the line's "uncoloured" classification, heavy locomotives such as GWR Classes 43XX 2-6-0 Tender Engine and 51XX 2-6-2T Tank Engines were allowed as far as Nancegollan only.[7] Although larger locomotives did run past Nancegollan in the branch's dying days the Class 22s ran on the branch even though they were a GWR blue classification, higher than the branch line.

In April 1957, Nancegollan won £10 (£238.65 in today's money[8]) in the British Railways Western Region Station Gardens Competition.[9]

The branch was closed for passengers on 5 November 1962. Goods traffic continued for a further two years, finally ceasing on 5 October 1964; the track was lifted by mid-1965.[2][10][11]

More information Preceding station, Historical railways ...
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Station Masters

The following people are known to have been Station Masters at Nancegollan Station, with approximate dates show.

  • S.J. Jeffery, Station Master (? - July 1955 - December 1957)[12][13]
  • A. Knight, Station Master (? - ?)[14]
  • T. Williams, Station Master (January 1958 - ?)[15]

The site today

Today the site of Nancegollan is an industrial estate.[16] There are plans for the Helston Railway to extend the line into Nancegollen at some point.

References

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