Dursley and Midland Junction Railway
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The Dursley and Midland Junction Railway was a company formed to build a short railway in Gloucestershire, England linking the town of Dursley to the Midland Railway's Bristol to Gloucester line at Coaley. The line was built in 1856 and was 2.5 miles (4km) long. Apart from the terminus and the junction stations, there was also a station at Cam, about halfway between the two.[1]
The railway company built all three stations on the line, including the junction station, but the passenger trains were run by the Midland Railway. Passenger numbers disappointed, and the Midland absorbed the company entirely from 1861. Much of the traffic on the line was freight, and Dursley railway station, rather inconveniently situated for the town, became surrounded by the Lister engineering company which provided a lot of the goods.[2]
Journeys between Coaley Junction railway station and Dursley took only 10 minutes and around half a dozen trains were provided each day, with excursion traffic in the summer.[3] The trains that ran on the line were affectionately known as the "Dursley Donkey". [4]
The railway survived both the Grouping and nationalisation, but closed to passenger traffic in 1962. Stopping passenger services continued between Bristol and Gloucester, calling at Coaley Junction, until 1965. Goods traffic on the branch, primarily from Lister's, continued until 1968 and after that the line was worked as a private siding until it was severed by a road accident in 1970.[1]
Few traces of the Dursley branch now remain, but a new station, called Cam and Dursley opened on the Bristol to Gloucester line in 1994 about 300 yards from the original site of Coaley Junction station.[5]
[edit] References
- ^ a b The Dursley Railway. Dursley Glos Web. Retrieved on 2008-04-25.
- ^ Mike Oakley. Gloucestershire Railway Stations, 2003, Dovecote Press, Wimborne, pp65–66.
- ^ Bradshaws Railway Guide, April 1910, 1968 reprint, David and Charles, Newton Abbot, p611.
- ^ The Dursley Donkey. Cotswold Edge. Retrieved on 2008-04-25.
- ^ Mike Oakley. Gloucestershire Railway Stations, 2003, Dovecote Press, Wimborne, pp31–32.