Derby Midland railway station
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Derby Midland | |||
Location | |||
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Place | Derby | ||
Local authority | Derby | ||
Operations | |||
Station code | DBY | ||
Managed by | East Midlands Trains | ||
Platforms in use | 6 | ||
Live departures and station information from National Rail | |||
Annual Rail Passenger Usage | |||
2004/05 * | 2.623 million | ||
2005/06 * | 2.621 million | ||
History | |||
Key dates | Opened 1839 Partially rebuilt 1952 and 1985 Major renovations 2005-2009 |
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National Rail - UK railway stations | |||
* Annual passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Derby Midland from Office of Rail Regulation statistics. | |||
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Derby Midland Station (often called Derby Station) is a main line railway station serving the city of Derby in England. Owned by Network Rail and managed by the East Midlands Trains train operating company, the station is also used by CrossCountry services. It is situated to the south-east of Derby city centre, and is close to the west bank of the River Derwent.
Through-fares were made available from Derby to Paris, Brussels and other destinations in France and Belgium in late 2007 which must be booked through Eurostar.[1]
Contents |
[edit] Overview
Derby's central location and former importance as a 'railway town' have made it an important node of the rail network. Until recently, major carriage and locomotive workshops as well as the Research Division in the Railway Technical Centre were housed there.
The station is an interchange point between the Midland Main Line from London St Pancras to Leeds and long-distance services on the Cross-Country route from Aberdeen through Birmingham to Penzance (the zero milepost on the Birmingham-bound Cross-Country route is at the south end of platform 1, at the divergence of the two major routes), or Bournemouth. Until the mid twentieth century, the station was host to through trains from Manchester and Glasgow to London. It is still a busy station, the section to Sheffield having the highest train frequency (passenger and freight) of any line in the East Midlands.
Local services to Matlock along the Derwent Valley Line originate from Derby, and the station also sees local and semi-fast services to Nottingham and Skegness, Stoke-on-Trent and Crewe, and Birmingham, Hereford and Cardiff.
Derby station today has six platforms (all but Platform 5 are through platforms), connected by a footbridge, used as an exit to Pride Park and a new car park.
[edit] History
[edit] Early East Midlands railway schemes
After the building of the Stockton and Darlington Railway in 1825, a number of ambitious projects for long-distance lines between cities had been mooted. Among these were a 'Grand Trunk railway' between London and Edinburgh, for both goods and passengers, via Bedford and Leeds, taking in the various cities in between and passing between Carlisle and Newcastle.
Meanwhile a number of short lines were built for specific purposes. Among these were the Mansfield and Pinxton and the Leicester and Swannington. Both these were feeders for canals, the former a wagonway, but were pivotal in later events. Possibly the longest was the Cromford and High Peak Railway, opened in 1833, to connect the Cromford Canal with the Peak Forest Canal. It attracted interest because it provided access to Manchester through the Peak District of Derbyshire, even today an obstacle to transport.
In the 1830s, lines were already in progress between Bristol and London and from each to Birmingham and thence to Liverpool and Manchester, and their promoters were looking ahead. Three schemes came to the fore for the East Midlands. The Grand Junction Railroad would connect Birmingham with Sheffield and Derby, with a branch to Nottingham and another branch from Sheffield to Manchester. There would also be a line to the East Coast at Goole. In 1824 the London Northern Railroad Company was formed to link Birmingham, Derby, Nottingham, Hull and Manchester with London. Two options were proposed. One would branch at Loughborough, with branches for Nottingham and Derby, and proceeding to Manchester by the Cromford and High Peak Railway. The other option would pass through Northampton, with a branch to Birmingham, go on to Derby, with a branch to Nottingham, and thence to the Cromford and High Peak. The Grand Midland Railway was a proposal to branch from the London to Birmingham railway, already under consideration, at Northampton, and bring it through Leicester, Loughborough and Derby to the Cromford and High Peak.
Towards the end of the 1820s, however, the economic climate of the country had deteriorated, and many investors were waiting to see how the new Liverpool and Manchester Railway would succeed. Moreover, not everyone shared the dream. For most people the canals were adequate for the carriage of goods, while few travelled very far. Most people lived their lives within a few miles of their birthplace. The later story of the railways was a classic one of a product generating a demand, rather than the other way around. Thus, what investment that was forthcoming was for ventures for which a need could be clearly perceived, with a reasonable expectation of a good, and rapid, return. Although the surveys were useful in the planning of later lines, the three were never built.
Derby investors, naturally, favoured the scheme by the Grand Junction Railway to connect to the Cromford and High Peak Railway and Manchester, through Derby (at what was to be called the Grand Central Station), since the London and Northern would pass through Sandiacre, some ten miles away. In the event, neither line was built. In addition, the Cromford and High Peak Railway was not ideally suited to passenger working, and an alternative via Bakewell and Chapel-en-le-Frith would encounter very difficult terrain. (Manchester was not, in fact, reached until later in the century by the Manchester, Buxton, Matlock and Midlands Junction Railway and its extensions.)
[edit] Three railways
The Midland Counties Railway was originally proposed to connect the Mansfield and Pinxton Railway to Leicester because of competition to supply coal. However, with the existing canal network, and the navigability of the River Trent to Nottingham, there had been few people willing to invest.
On the other hand, although the River Derwent flowed from Derby into the Trent, navigation was not easy. The Derby Canal had been opened in 1793 but, due to financial restrictions placed on it by Parliament, and the complex local politics of the day it had not been a resounding success. Thus the financiers in Derby vigorously supported any scheme which would bring a railway to the town.
George Hudson was chairman of the York and North Midland Railway, a proposed line from York towards the industrial markets of Manchester and Liverpool. He was interested in a southwards route and encouraged the building of North Midland Railway, later becoming its chairman. Meanwhile financiers in Birmingham, including G.C.Glyn, a banker and chairman of the London and Birmingham Railway, were looking to expand their system. Derby was in between. The Birmingham and Derby Junction Railway would it give a link from Yorkshire to London, and access to the coalfields, as well as other minerals.
Meanwhile the promoters of the Midland Counties Railway found investors further afield, who suggested a line linking Nottingham, Derby and Leicester, with an extension to Rugby for London. Their original plan in 1833 had been to bring their line to Derby at Darby's Yard and Exeter Gardens, at the east side of the present Market Place, with a bridge over the Derwent. Following Vignoles's reassessment in 1835 a new route was proposed, either North or South of the Derby Canal to a terminus near St. Mary's Bridge with a branch to Full Street near to John Lombe's Silk Mill. Both options would cross the North Midland lines north of the other station.
The North Midland planned to build their station near Nottingham Road, avoiding a river bridge, while the Birmingham and Derby planned to build theirs nearby. Possibly with encouragement from the Derby financiers, they realised the value of a link with the North Midland, and decided to bridge the river and share its station. It was usual in those days for new railways to build their own termini, but, while Derby people were enthusiastic about railways, they were less so about a multiplicity of stations. In 1836 the Town Council suggested a single station for all three companies. The Midland Counties engineer pointed out to his financiers that a good deal of money would be saved by joining the other two railways on a single site.
An alternative that was considered was an island bounded by the River Derwent and the canal, called The Holmes, now Bass's Recreation Ground. Not only was the space restricted and susceptible to flooding, the necessary trackwork would be complicated. Eventually, the present site was chosen, further south on the west bank, Borough's Fields, in the neighbouring hamlet of Litchurch, at the southern side of the Castlefields estate. It was a mile from the town, but the Council agreed to build a carriageway to the town centre, along Siddals Lane, now Siddals Road. The whole arrangement was confirmed by the North Midland Railway Act of 1839.
[edit] The Tri Junct Station
Although the intention of its builders seems to have been to call it the 'Great Central Station' (note that this has nothing to do with the later Great Central Railway), it became known as the 'Tri Junct Station', though some literature refers to it as the 'Tripartite Station'. It was 1,050 feet long with one through platform plus a north and a south bay, the main platform and bays connected to seven stabling roads by a series of carriage turntables (rolling-stock was moved around the station by hand). These platform and stabling roads were all beneath a three-bay train shed.
Although the three lines would terminate there, by virtue of the lines meeting end-on it was in effect a through station. It was therefore built after the pattern of such stations with a single line for passengers to board and alight. This would remove the necessity for them to cross running lines when changing trains. The station was partitioned into three sections, each line having its own offices and maintenance facilities.
Fronting this was a magnificent two-storey stone building designed by Francis Thompson. The North Midland also built a group of workers' houses. It also built a cluster of workers' houses of which the present Midland Terrace remains preserved as a conservation area.
At each end was a hotel. The Midland Hotel, for first class passengers, is said to be the first provincial railway hotel. The Brunswick Inn was for second class passengers and railway workers. The saying went that patrons of the first chatted about hunting and shooting, of the other, shunting and hooting.
The first departure from a temporary platform was on 4 June 1839 when a Midland Counties train ran to Nottingham. The first train to Birmingham departed on 12 August in the same year, from another temporary platform further south. The Tri Junct Station finally opened when the North Midland line was completed to Rotherham Masborough on 11 May 1840, reaching Leeds seven weeks later
[edit] Midland Railway
In 1844 all three railways amalgamated to become the Midland Railway, and Derby station became the new company's headquarters. The story goes that Joseph Paxton, a director of the railway, produced his first sketch for the Crystal Palace during a board meeting there. The North Midland had built a repair shop, with the other two building locosheds. These were amalgamated to form the Midland's main locomotive works. Among a number of innovations was the use of steel rail developed by Robert Forester Mushet using Bessemer steel.
In 1846 a north facing spur (Derby North Junction) was added from the Midland Counties line. In 1867 a loop was added to the south, allowing through running for trains from London. The original section remained in occasional use for passenger trains until it was closed in 1969. (What nowadays would be considered the major junction, to the south, is called London Road.)
In 1858 the station was extended with extra offices, improved facilities and a covered areas for carriages for arriving and departing passengers. Traffic increased such that an island platform, the present 2 and 3, was built with, in 1871, Platforms 4 to 6 (Platform 5 being a bay to the south). At this time the turntables were removed and replaced by scissors crossovers, the whole complex controlled by a signal box on the centre platform.
In 1878, the Great Northern Railway opened its "Derbyshire and North Staffordshire Extension" with a station at Derby Friargate Station. It was probably then that the older station became known as 'Derby Midland Station'
The station and the extensive complex of railway workshops adjoining it were of sufficient strategic importance for them to have been the target of a Zeppelin bombing raid during World War I, in 1916, though only slight damage was inflicted.
[edit] London, Midland and Scottish Railway
Until the line through Millers Dale was closed in the Beeching era, the 'main line' was that from London to Manchester, carrying named expresses such as the 'Palatine' and the 'Peaks', while trains to Leeds and Scotland tended to use the Erewash Valley Line and expresses to Edinburgh, such as the The Waverley travelled through Corby and Nottingham. The line from Leeds was nevertheless busy with trains to the south west and Cornwall, and summer specials to Paignton and Torquay. It had a named express, the 'Devonian', which ran from Bradford to Bristol.
In World War II the station was attacked again, becoming one of the few locations in Derby to suffer significant bomb damage. The overall roof of the train shed and platform six were severely damaged, with the loss of most of the rest of the glass, although the Victorian frontage of the station survived.
[edit] British Railways
Comparison of photographs taken of the street side of the station in the early 1900s and the 1970s show little outward change. On the track side, however, extensive rebuilding of the platform buildings, footbridge and awnings in 1952, using pre-stressed concrete, gave the station a very different appearance, with simple functional lines. The station signal box was also rebuilt, becoming known to the staff as 'the cupboard under the stairs'.
With the advent of power signalling in 1969, the signal box and the crossovers disappeared, and the tracks approaching the station were relaid to allow trains from any direction to enter or leave any platform.
Further work in 1985 saw the final replacement of the ageing Victorian station entrance and booking hall by a more modern design. The entrance's original clock was moved to the north end of the car park and the coats of arms of the Midland Railway and of the City of Derby were affixed to the new frontage. The decision to demolish the old building was a controversial one at the time - even today opinion is divided on whether the demolition should have been allowed to take place or not.
[edit] Post privatisation
Upon the privatisation of British Rail, the station became owned by Railtrack and later Network Rail, though, in common with most British railway stations, the day-to-day operation is contracted out to the principal user of the station, in this case East Midlands Trains. Prior to November 2007, the station was managed by Midland Mainline, who continued to refurbish the station with the installation of a large electronic departure board in the station entrance hall and smaller boards on all platforms.
In 2005, the footbridge connecting the platforms, which had been temporarily supported for about a decade, was replaced. Whilst doing this, engineers discovered that there were stresses in the concrete of the 1950s canopy. Temporary supports have been installed, and, as owners of the infrastructure Network Rail are to replace the conopy and transform Derby station over the next 18 months starting in January in four phases thanks to Network Rail's commitment to spend £18 million on rebuilding.[2]
[edit] Facilities
- Cash points
- WH Smith
- Upper Crust
- Dry cleaners
- Photo booths
- FastTicket machine
- The station has a PlusBus scheme where train and bus tickets can be braught together for a cheaper price.
[edit] Bibliography
- Pixton, B., (2000). North Midland: Portrait of a Famous Route. Part 1 , Derby to Chesterfield. Cheltenham: Runpast, ISBN 1-87075-447-6
- Stevenson.P.S. (ed.), (1989). The Midland Counties Railway. Mold: Railway and Canal Historical Society, ISBN 0-901461-11-3
- Higginson, M, (1989). The Midland Counties Railway: A Pictorial Survey. Derby: Midland Railway Trust, ISBN 1-87219-400-1
- Heath, J. & Christian, R., (1985). Yesterday's Town: Derby. Buckingham: Barracuda Books, ISBN 0-86023-211-5
[edit] References
[edit] Services
Preceding station | National Rail | Following station | ||
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Willington | CrossCountry Cardiff Central to Nottingham Line |
Spondon | ||
Burton upon Trent | CrossCountry Cross-Country Route |
Chesterfield | ||
Long Eaton | East Midlands Trains Midland Main Line |
Belper | ||
East Midlands Trains Midland Main Line |
Willington | |||
Peartree | East Midlands Trains Crewe to Derby or Skegness Line |
Terminus or Long Eaton | ||
Terminus | East Midlands Trains Derwent Valley Line |
Duffield | ||
Disused Railways | ||||
Terminus | Regional Railways Sinfin Line |
Ramsline Halt |
[edit] External links
- Train times and station information for Derby Midland railway station from National Rail
- Map of the station in 1887
- Page with more info on the station
- Science and Society: Trackside view of original Station
- Science and Society: 'Derby Railway Station and Midland Hotel', 1840
- "Derbyshire Photographs" Derby Station as it was in 1902
- "Geograph British Isles" Derby Station as it is now
- Derby Midland signalling 1839-2006
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