Kingswear railway station

Coordinates: 50°20′56″N 3°34′21″W / 50.34882°N 3.57253°W / 50.34882; -3.57253
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Kingswear
Station on
Paignton and Dartmouth Steam Railway
Managed bySouth Devon Railway
Platforms2
History
Opened1864
Original companyDartmouth and Torbay Railway
Pre-groupingGreat Western Railway
Post-groupingGreat Western Railway
Key dates
30 December 1972Preserved
Kingswear railway station, seen from above Dartmouth. The Passenger Ferry is alongside its pontoon, whilst the Lower (vehicle) Ferry is just leaving for Dartmouth.
The train shed seen from beyond the end of the tracks
The platform and canopy in 1970.

Kingswear railway station is the terminus of the Dartmouth Steam Railway, a heritage railway in Devon, England. It is situated in the centre of Kingswear, on the shores of the River Dart opposite Dartmouth.

The station has level access to the street and is adjacent to Yacht Club Hotel, the pontoon for the Dartmouth Passenger Ferry, and the slipway of the Dartmouth Lower Ferry.

History

The railway to Kingswear was built by the Dartmouth and Torbay Railway, opening on 16 August 1864.[1] The original aim had been to reach Dartmouth but the railway station in that town, which sold train tickets and processed parcels but lacked platforms and trains, was only ever reached by ferry. The railway company opened the Yacht Club Hotel at the southern end of the station in 1866, intended mainly for passengers on the ocean-going ships that called at Dartmouth at that time.

Goods trains were run to Kingswear from 2 April 1866 and these proved to be of great importance, not just in shipping goods out by sea, but also in carrying coal landed at Kingswear to the

gas works at Hollacombe between Paignton and Torquay railway stations
.

The Dartmouth and Torbay Railway was always operated by the

signal box
opened to control the trains; the following year more sidings were laid on land reclaimed from the river north of the station and a long footbridge constructed over the station to carry a footpath to the shore of the river.

The railway originally approached the station across three creeks on low timber viaducts. Those at Longwood and Noss being demolished after the line was moved inland around the creeks on 20 May 1923, and Hoodown Viaduct, just outside the station, was replaced by a double-track steel structure in 1928. This and the provision of a larger

turntable
enabled larger locomotives to work through to Kingswear. The platform was extended in 1929 to 850 feet (259 m) which allowed longer trains too.

The Great Western Railway was

British Railways in 1948. The signal box was given a new lever frame in 1960 but the run down of services soon commenced. The wharf was closed to freight traffic on 4 May 1964[1] and ordinary goods traffic was withdrawn on 14 June 1965.[2]

Except for peak season trains, most services from 18 April 1966 operated as a shuttle service from Paignton; Sunday trains were withdrawn from 24 September 1967, although some were run during the summer of the following year.[1] On 20 October 1968 the signal box was closed and the following month it was formally proposed that the line from Paignton should be closed entirely but instead, on 30 December 1972, the line was sold to the Dart Valley Light Railway plc, which operated a nearby heritage railway at Buckfastleigh. The Royal Dart Hotel was sold by the Dart Valley Railway into private hands in 1979, the revenue from this and other property sales going a long way to repay the £275,000 paid to British Rail for the line.

The second platform track was reinstated in 1976, points around the station being controlled by local ground frames. Since 1990 electric multiple aspect signals have been controlled from the signalling panel at Britannia Crossing.[2]

Description

The southern end of the platform and tracks is covered by a rare wooden 100 feet (30 m)[1] train shed, with a more conventional canopy extending further along the platform. The entrance to the station opens onto the main platform within the train shed; trains stop further along the platform to the right to allow the locomotive to run around the train using the crossover at this end of the platform track. The bay platform does not have a locomotive release road and so is only used for occasional departures that have been shunted onto this line to free up the main platform for a second train.

The old goods yard between the station and the waterfront is now a car park and boat storage; the long footbridge at the north end of the station is not connected to the platforms but instead carry a footpath from the main road across to the waterfront. Another car park at the north end of the station is on the site of the turntable and carriage sidings. A few sidings have been retained opposite the platform and alongside the line towards Britannia Crossing, the level crossing that leads down to the Dartmouth Higher Ferry and is the site of the railway's signalling centre.

Kingswear Station 23 July 2008

Services

A seasonal service of steam hauled trains operates to and from Paignton.

Preceding station Heritage Railways  Heritage railways Following station
Greenway Halt   Dartmouth Steam Railway   Terminus
  Ferry  
Terminus   Dartmouth Passenger Ferry   Dartmouth

References

Further reading

This station offers access to the South West Coast Path
Distance to path 50 yards (46 m)
Next station anticlockwise Churston 12 miles (19 km)
Next station clockwise Plymouth 65 miles (105 km)