Carterhatch Lane railway station

Carterhatch Lane
Carterhatch Lane
Location of Carterhatch Lane in Greater London
Location Enfield
Local authority Enfield
Railway companies
Pre-grouping Great Eastern Railway
Post-grouping London and North Eastern Railway
Key dates
1915 Opened
1919 Closed
Other information
Lists of stations
London Transport portal
UK Railways portalCoordinates: 51°39′37″N 0°02′57″W / 51.6604°N 0.0493°W

Carterhatch Lane Halt was a railway station built by the Great Eastern Railway in 1915 on the Southbury Loop line to the north east of London in the United Kingdom. It was opened in 1915 for munitions workers to access factories in the Lea Valley area. The Southbury Loop line was only operated by goods trains as the passenger service had been withdrawn in 1909 having not been very successful.

Design

The station was a very basic affair - a wooden platform long enough for two coaches and a couple of oil lamps for illumination. At the time the up line (towards Liverpool Street) was used for goods wagon storage so the platform was built on the down line. The platform was accessed via a wooden staircase from Carterhatch Lane which crossed the line at a loop at this point.

Services

Services were operated by a Great Eastern Railway Auto-train operating 15 trains per day operating between Lower Edmonton Low-Level station and Cheshunt (although later some terminated at White Hart Lane).[1] Motive power for the train was normally a Great Eastern Railway Y65 class (LNER classification F7) 2-4-2T tank engine.[2]

Withdrawal of Service

Once World War I was over, the need for the service all but disappeared and the service was withdrawn in 1919. The station name boards and lamps were removed soon after but the structure lasted at least until the outbreak of World War II.[3]

Preceding station Historical railways Following station
Turkey Street
Line and station open
  Great Eastern Railway
Southbury Loop
  Southbury
Line and station open

Electrification

In the late 1950s the site was used for an electrification depot as the local Lea Valley Lines were electrified. A temporary signal box was opened to facilitate operation of the depot. This opened in early 1958 but was rarely used after electrification was completed in 1960 so the box was downgraded on 7 July 1960 to a ground frame (the line was being resignalled at the time) and then closed in February 1965.[4]

The Southbury Loop was electrified in 1959/1960 and passenger services serving the other stations on the loop commenced on 21 November 1960.[5] Carterhatch Lane station did not re-open.

Trivia

The oil lamps were lit by the train guard and all had shades so the light would shine downwards as a war time precaution. When Zeppelin raiders were close the train would be positioned under the bridge and passengers would join the crew there until the danger passed. [6]

References

  1. Brennand, Dave; Mitchell, Vic. Stratford to Cheshunt. Midhurst UK: Middleton Press. p. 111. ISBN 978 1 908174 53 6.
  2. Jackson, Alan A (1999). London's local railways. Harrow Weald UK: Capital Transport Publishing. p. 367. ISBN 1 85414 209 7.
  3. Paye, Peter (July 1980). "Carterhatch Lane Halt". Great Eastern Journal 23: 23.
  4. Brennand, Dave; Mitchell, Vic. Stratford to Cheshunt. Midhurst UK: Middleton Press. p. 112. ISBN 978 1 908174 53 6.
  5. Mitchell, Vic; Brennand, Dave (2014). Stratford to Cheshunt. Midhurst UK: Middleton Press. p. 109. ISBN 978 1 908174 53 6.
  6. Paye, Peter (July 1980). "Carterhatch Lane Halt". Great Eastern Journal 23: 23.