Shotton Bridge railway station

Coordinates: 54°45′54″N 1°23′38″W / 54.7649°N 1.3939°W / 54.7649; -1.3939
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Shotton Bridge
The site of the station in May 2018. The road over-bridge is behind the photographer.
General information
LocationShotton Colliery, County Durham
England
Coordinates54°45′54″N 1°23′38″W / 54.7649°N 1.3939°W / 54.7649; -1.3939
Grid referenceNZ39084128
Platforms2
Other information
StatusDisused
History
Original companyNorth Eastern Railway
Pre-groupingNorth Eastern Railway
Post-grouping
Key dates
1877 (1877)Opened
9 June 1952 (1952-06-09)Closed

Shotton Bridge railway station was a railway station built by the

turnpike road,[1]
further to the east.

History

The Hartlepool Dock & Railway

Construction of the HD&R was first authorised by an Act of Parliament obtained on 1 June 1832 which granted the railway company powers to construct a 14-mile railway from

Durham & Sunderland Railway (D&SR)) diverted along other routes much of the traffic that the company had been intending to access [3] thus meaning that the H&DR only reached as far as Haswell and most of its branches were either cut short or left unbuilt. Nonetheless, the curtailed line opened (as far as Haswell) on 23 November 1835.[4] Passenger services were operated over the line but no station was initially provided at Shotton: the nearest station at the time was Thornley
.

Hutton Henry Colliery
Castle Eden
Castle Eden Colliery
Hesleden
Hesleden Bank Top
(Site of stationary winding engine)
Original rope-worked
incline (1 in 34)
NER deviation lines
(1 in 50)
Sunderland via Seaham
Culvert over
Crimdon Beck
Crimdon Dene Viaduct
over
Crimdon Beck
Durham Coast Line
to Stockton
Hart West Hartlepool
& Railway
NER
branch
& Railway
Stockton & Hartlepool Railway
to West Hartlepool Docks
Coal drops on
demolished dock wall
Victoria Dock
Staithes
Victoria Dock
Hartlepool
(second)
Stockton & Hartlepool Railway
to West Hartlepool Docks
Hartlepool
(original)

The most likely reason that no station was provided here when the line first opened in 1835 is that the area was then rural: the line passed some distance from Old Shotton and the fairly deep Permian Magnesian Limestone overlying Carboniferous Coal Measures meant that large-scale mining activity had yet to begin in the area. Sinking of Shotton Grange Colliery began in 1840 and once in production it was linked first to the southbound H&DR route by the Shotton Wagonway[1] and soon afterwards, in 1841, to the northbound Pesspool Branch of the South Hetton Railway.[5]

The NER and the opening of the station

In 1846, the newly formed

York, Newcastle & Berwick Railway (YN&BR) (the successor to the Y&NR). On the 31 July 1854, the YN&BR was amalgamated with other companies to form the North Eastern Railway.[6]

The NER initiated a programme of improvements to ex-HD&R and ex-D&SR lines during the 1870s: in 1874, the tracks up the original 1 in 34 rope-worked incline at Hesleden Bank were realigned to ease the gradients and enable locomotive working[7] and, in 1877, a chord was built at Haswell to allow through passenger trains to run between the ex-HD&R and ex-D&SR networks, creating a direct route between West Hartlepool and Sunderland.[4] By this time, the new village of Shotton Colliery (referred to as New Shotton on early OS maps) had developed to provide housing for the colliery workers[1] and so, as part of these improvement works, in 1877 the NER opened a station at Shotton Bridge[4] to serve the new community.

The station offices were located on a widened road bridge over the tracks and were linked to the two platforms by covered stairways. Each platform had a brick waiting room. Unlike other contemporary stations of the NER, the station never had any goods facilities,[4] perhaps due to the colliery being served by its own wagonway branch.

However, in the year that the station was opened, Shotton Grange Colliery [8] and its waggonway closed[5] (the limited technology of the time was unable to extract coal economically from the depths at which it was present)[1] meaning that the village lost its main source of employment. Thus, in 1894 it was reported that many of the village's workmen's houses were abandoned.[1] In 1901 the station served a population of 959 within the immediate vicinity[4] but the reopening of the colliery (and the southern section of the wagonway) later that year[5] was one cause of the increase to 6,280 in 1911.[4]

Decline and closure

Despite the improvements of the 1870s, the route through Shotton Bridge continued to provide a steep and indirect route between West Hartlepool and Sunderland and so, on 1 April 1905, the NER opened a new coastal line linking the former Londonderry, Seaham & Sunderland Railway at Seaham with the ex-HD&R line near the coast at Hart.[6] The new line allowed the steepest sections of the inland route to be bypassed[3] and thus led to the gradual diversion of much of the longer-distance traffic away from Shotton Bridge station and onto the new line.[4]

The NER became part of the

1984 miner's strike.[5] Shotton Grange Colliery continued to be served by the remaining section of waggonway until its closure in 1972.[10]

Shortly before the station's closure, the new town of Peterlee was established in 1948[11] and was to be located a short distance to the east of Shotton Colliery. However, by the time construction of the town had actually commenced, the station had already closed.

Once the remaining tracks were lifted on the line, work commenced on converting the disused section (south of Haswell) into the Hart to Haswell Walkway[2] which was linked into the Castle Eden Walkway to form a continuous north–south cycleway. This was eventually extended to Ryhope after the closure of the remaining section of the line between Hawthorn Colliery and Ryhope Junction in 1991.[12]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Hatcher, Jane. "Shotton – a short history" (PDF). Durham in Time. Retrieved 15 June 2019.
  2. ^ .
  3. ^ .
  4. ^ .
  5. ^ a b c d e Goodyear, Alan (January 1992). "MURTON CLOSURE ENDS AN ERA". Railway Magazine. 138 (1089). London: 56–57.
  6. ^ .
  7. .
  8. ^ "Durham Mining Museum - Shotton Colliery". Durham Mining Museum. Retrieved 15 June 2019.
  9. .
  10. ^ Whitehead, Tony (30 July 2013). "Shotton Colliery | Durham Records Online Library". Durham Records Online. Retrieved 15 June 2019.
  11. ^ "Peterlee History". Apollo Pavilion. Retrieved 15 June 2019.
  12. ^ "Colliery Railways: Hartlepool to Sunderland via Haswell 1835/6-1993 | Durham Records Online Library". Durham Records Online. Retrieved 8 January 2018.

External links

Preceding station Historical railways Following station
Thornley
Line and station closed
 
Hartlepool Dock & Railway
  Haswell
Line and station closed