Masbury railway station

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Masbury
Masbury Station, with Up express in 1959
Location
Place nr Shepton Mallet
Area Mendip
Grid reference ST604473
Operations
Pre-grouping Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway
Post-grouping SR and LMSR
Western Region of British Railways
Platforms 2
History
20 July 1874 Opened (Masbury)
26 September 1938 Renamed (Masbury Halt)
7 March 1966 Closed
Disused railway stations in the United Kingdom
Closed railway stations in Britain
A B C D–F G H–J K–L M–O P–R S T–V W–Z
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Masbury railway station was a small isolated station on the Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway's main line between Evercreech Junction and Bath. It was situated to the north of Shepton Mallet and near the summit of the line as it crossed the Mendip Hills. The station opened in 1874 and closed with the rest of the line under the Beeching Axe in March 1966.

Maesbury Railway Cutting is a 2 hectare geological Site of Special Scientific Interest between East Horrington and Gurney Slade and a Geological Conservation Review site because it exposes approximately 135 metres of strata representing the middle and upper Lower Limestone Shales and the basal Black Rock Limestone. Both formations are of early Carboniferous (Courceyan) age. It lies close to the Iron Age hill fort Maesbury Castle.

The station was never heavily used, and from 1938 it was reduced to a "halt" status. A feature of the station was a substantial stone-built stationmaster's house on the main northbound platform. The front of the house, which is still standing and in private hands, features a fanciful carving of Maesbury Castle as a medieval castle: in fact, Maesbury is an Iron Age fort nearby. There is about half a mile of ramparts and views to Glastonbury Tor. It is mostly on private land but a public footpath crosses it.

In May 2013 an online appeal was launched by the Somerset & Dorset Railway Heritage Trust to raise £500,000 by 30 September 2013 to purchase the station.[1]

Preceding station Disused railways Following station
Shepton Mallet
(Charlton Road)

Line and station closed
  Somerset & Dorset Joint Railway
LSWR and Midland Railways
  Binegar
Line and station closed

References

  1. £500k needed in three months to buy iconic railway station

Further reading

  • Somerset Railway Stations, by Mike Oakley, Dovecote Press, 2002.

External links

Coordinates: 51°13′22″N 2°34′07″W / 51.2229°N 2.5685°W / 51.2229; -2.5685


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