Tochieneal railway station

Tochieneal
Location
Place Tochieneal
Area Moray
Coordinates 57°40′41″N 2°48′01″W / 57.67814°N 2.800212°WCoordinates: 57°40′41″N 2°48′01″W / 57.67814°N 2.800212°W
Grid reference NJ 5238 6565
Operations
Pre-grouping Great North of Scotland Railway
Post-grouping London and North Eastern Railway
Platforms 2
History
1 April 1884 Great North of Scotland station opened[1]
1922 London and North Eastern Railway
1 October 1951[1][2] 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
UK Railways portal

Tochieneal railway station was a railway station that served the small industrial village of Tochieneal,[3] close to Cullen in Moray. The railway station was opened by the Great North of Scotland Railway (GNoSR) on its Moray Firth coast line in 1886, served by Aberdeen to Elgin trains. The station closed to regular passenger traffic on 1 October 1951, more than a decade before the total closure of the line itself in 1968.[4]

In 1921 the GNoSR became part of the London and North Eastern Railway and at nationalisation in 1948 became part of British Railways. The line itself was later recommended for closure by Dr Beeching's report "The Reshaping of British Railways" and closed on 6 May 1968.

History

Background

In 1881 the Great North of Scotland Railway put a bill to parliament to extend its Portsoy line along the Moray Firth as far as Buckie.[5] In 1882 the Great North of Scotland applied for permission to build a 25 14-mile (40.6 km) line from Portsoy following the coast to Buckie and then running on to Elgin.

Great North of Scotland Railway

The GNoSR station opened as 'Tochieneal' on 1 April 1884[1] with the central section of the coast line, served by through Aberdeen to Elgin trains.[6] In the 1921 Grouping, the Great North of Scotland Railway was absorbed by the London and North Eastern Railway. This was nationalised in 1948, and services provided by British Railways. The line itself was recommended for closure by Dr Beeching's in his report "The Reshaping of British Railways"[7] and closed on 6 May 1968.[8][9]

Services

The GNoSR station was served by through trains running between Aberdeen and Elgin.[6] There were no Sunday services.[10]

The station infrastructure

Tochieneal station had two platforms, a passing loop, originally two signal boxes, a water tower and a road bridge overlooked the site.[11]The 1902 OS map shows station buildings on both platforms and a foot bridge. A station agent's or stationmaster's cottage sat near to the site. Several sidings were present with a loading dock and a goods shed.[12]

The line was predominantly single track apart from a double track section between Buckie and Portessie.[9] Track lifting took place shortly after closure in 1968.[9]

Station remnants

In 2009 the loading dock survived intact.[13]

Preceding station Historical railways Following station
Cullen   Great North of Scotland
1886–1868
  Glassaugh

References

Footnotes

Sources

External links