Chard Junction railway station

Chard Junction
The signal box built in 1982
Location
Place Chard
Area South Somerset
Operations
Pre-grouping London and South Western Railway
Post-grouping Southern Railway
Platforms 3
History
1860 Opened as Chard Road
1863 Chard branch opened
1872 Renamed Chard Junction
1962 Chard branch closed
1966 Closed to passengers
1980 Milk depot closed
1982 New signal box built
Disused railway stations in the United Kingdom
Closed railway stations in Britain
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Chard Junction railway station was situated on the London and South Western Railway’s West of England Main Line in Somerset, England. It was the junction of a short branch line to Chard. It was opened in 1860 as Chard Road and closed in 1966. An adjacent milk depot was served by its own sidings from 1937 to 1980. A signal box remains to control Station Road level crossing and a passing loop on the long section of single track railway between Yeovil Junction and Pinhoe.

Although no longer a station nor a junction, the name 'Chard Junction' still appears on the signal box and official maps.[1]

Contents

History

The London and South Western Railway's (LSWR) line from Yeovil to Exeter was opened on 19 July 1860. A station named 'Chard Road' was provided on the SomersetDevon border to serve the nearby town of Chard, the 'Road' part of the name indicating that it was not in the town. On 8 May 1863 a 3.6-mile (5.8 km) branch line was opened to Chard Town, but it was not until August 1872 that Chard Road was renamed 'Chard Junction'. A signal box was erected at the junction in 1875.[2]

From 1 January 1917 the branch line was worked by the Great Western Railway (GWR) with the trains and staff that worked its own branch from Taunton to the Chard Joint station that had been opened in 1866.[3] In 1923 the LSWR became a part of the larger Southern Railway (SR).

Sidings to serve a new milk depot were laid on the south side of the station in 1937,[2] shunted by the dairy's own Ruston and Hornsby four-wheel diesel locomotive (works number 183062 built 1937). In 1974 a second hand Ruston and Hornby 0-4-0 replaced it (304470 built 1951), which had previously been locomotive 12 at Windsor Street gas works in Birmingham. The original locomotive was retired into preservation two years later.[4]

1948 saw the SR and GWR nationalised to become the Southern Region and Western Region respectively of British Railways. Things continued much as before but traffic was dwindling. Passenger trains were withdrawn from the Chard branch on 10 September 1962, although goods traffic continued for a few years more.[2] From 1963 the line west of Salisbury was transferred to the Western Region and just a few months later The Reshaping of British Railways report recommended the closure of many rural stations and lines. In 1964 through trains beyond Exeter were mostly rerouted off the line through Chard Junction and along the Bristol to Exeter line instead.[5] Just two years later, on 7 March 1966, Chard Junction was closed to passengers and on 3 October that year the remaining goods traffic on the branch line was withdrawn and the line closed completely.[2] Further rationalisation saw the main line reduced to just a single track in 1967, although a passing loop was retained at Chard Junction. The 21.4 miles (34.4 km) eastwards to Sherborne was singled on 7 May, followed by the 15.3 miles (24.6 km) westwards to Honiton on 11 June. The old level crossing gates were removed in January 1968 and replaced by full road-width lifting barriers.[5]

The sidings serving the milk factory were taken out of use in 1980, although two years later a new signal box was built to replace the original that was then more than 100 years old.[2] Additional loops have been installed since the 1960s; from December 2009 the single-line sections will be 17.4 miles (28.0 km) eastwards to Yeovil Junction and 3.7 miles (6.0 km) westwards to the long loop at Axminster.[6]

Description

The railway here climbs eastwards at a gradient of 1 in 120 (0.8%). At the north-east end of the station was the level crossing of Station Road and the Chard Road Hotel that served railway passengers at this remote location. The main station buildings were on the north-west side, the side nearer to Chard and on the platform for trains going towards Yeovil and London. On the opposite platform there was only a small waiting room and basic facilities. In front of the station entrance was the road approach and, opposite this, a separate platform used by the Chard branch trains. The track layout did not allow trains to run directly between the branch and main line, instead traffic to and from the branch had to be shunted through a connection in the goods yard which was at the Exeter end of the station between the main and branch lines. This included a goods shed and facilities for handling cattle traffic. The private sidings for the milk depot were behind the Exeter platform.[5]

Today the old London and Chard platforms can still be seen, along with the signal box next to the level crossing. The goods shed still stands and is in use, but not for railway business. The station hotel still stands to the north east of the level crossing; it is now known as now the Three Counties Hotel.[2]

Signalling

The first signal box was provided on the eastbound platform next to the level crossing in 1875. The next signal box to the west was 2 miles (3.2 km) away at Broom Gates (a level crossing), and one was opened at Hewish Gates in 1900, shortening the section towards Crewkerne in the east by 5 miles (8.0 km). A separate signal box known as Chard Junction Branch controlled movements in and out of the branch platform. It was reduced in status to a ground frame on 5 March 1935 and was closed entirely in 1964. The signal box on the main line platforms was replaced in 1982 but it continues to be known as 'Chard Junction', despite the lack of any kind of junction since 1966.[5] Adjacent signal boxes are now located at Yeovil Junction eastwards, and Honiton westwards.[6]

Services

Long distance services on the main line were operated by the LSWR and its successors between London Waterloo station and various stations in Devon and Cornwall such as Plymouth Friary, Ilfracombe and Padstow. Local trains often operated between Salisbury or Yeovil Town and Exeter Queen Street.

Branch line services were operated between Chard Junction and Chard Town from 1863 to 1866, and between Chard Junction and Chard Joint (or Central as it was later known) from 1866 to 1962. These were operated by the LSWR until 1916 and then by the GWR, although only very seldom were they advertised as running though to Taunton on the latter’s branch.

Preceding station Historical railways Following station
Crewkerne   London and South Western Railway
West of England Main Line
  Axminster
Terminus   London and South Western Railway
Chard Branch Line (1863 to 1916)
  Chard Town
Great Western Railway
Chard Branch Line (1917 to 1962)
Chard Central

Proposed reopening

There are proposals to re-open Chard Junction as part of a Chard town regeneration scheme; this has the support of Mayor Martin Wale and of David Laws, the Yeovil MP.[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ Taunton and Lyme Regis. Landranger 1:50,000. 193. Southampton: Ordnance Survey. 1974. 
  2. ^ a b c d e f Oakley, Mike (2006). Somerset Railway Stations. Bristol: Redcliffe Press. ISBN 1-904537-54-5. 
  3. ^ St John Thomas, David (1973). West Country Railway History. Newton Abbot: David and Charles. ISBN 0-715363-63-8. 
  4. ^ Hately, Roger, ed (1977). Industrial Locomotives of South Western England. Handbooks. Greenford: Industrial Railway Society. p. 71. ISBN 0-901096-23-7. 
  5. ^ a b c d Phillips, Derek; Pryer, George (1997). The Salisbury to Exeter Line. Sparkford: Oxford Publishing Company. ISBN 0-86093-525-6. 
  6. ^ a b Jacobs, Gerald (2008) [1994]. Railway Track Diagrams Book 5: Southern and TfL (3rd ed.). Bradford-on-Avon: Trackmaps. ISBN 0-9549866-4-3. 
  7. ^ "Chard Junction may be back on track". This is Dorset. 2009-01-23. http://www.thisisdorset.co.uk/news/Chard-Junction-track/article-638863-detail/article.html. Retrieved 2009-11-12. 

External links