Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Abbotsbury railway station

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Place
  
Abbotsbury

Pre-grouping
  
Great Western Railway

1 December 1952
  
Station closes

Platforms in use
  
1

Area
  
West Dorset

9 November 1885
  
Station opens

Original company
  
Abbotsbury Railway

Abbotsbury railway station httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Post-grouping
  
Great Western Railway Western Region of British Railways

Similar
  
Portesham railway station, Upwey (Dorset) railway st, Coronation Chair

Abbotsbury was the terminus of the Abbotsbury branch railway in the west of the English county of Dorset. Serving the village of Abbotsbury, it was sited across the fields a mile from the village on the Weymouth to Abbotsbury road, because the railway could not buy the land needed to build the station nearer to the village. Plans for westward expansion came to nothing and led to the railway petering out in a shallow cutting to the west of the station.

Contents

History

Opened by the Abbotsbury Railway Company in 1885, it was operated from the start by the Great Western Railway. The line then passed on to the Western Region of British Railways on nationalisation in 1948.

Buildings

A typical William Clarke stone building served the single platform. The station also had a signal box and engine shed, although neither of these operated for long. The ruins of the engine shed remained until closure. The goods shed however functioned for the life of the branch.

The station closed with the branch in 1952.

The site today

The station building has now been replaced with a private dwelling although the platform remains underneath the length of the building.

Film

The station makes short appearances in the Powell and Pressburger film The Small Back Room.

References

Abbotsbury railway station Wikipedia