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Alveley Halt railway station

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Place
  
Pre-grouping
  
Original company
  
Area
  
Post-grouping
  
Great Western Railway

Platforms in use
  
1

1944
  
Station opens as Alveley Colliery Sidings

Unknown Date
  
Station renamed Alveley Colliery Halt

Similar
  
Coalport West railway st, Berrington railway station, Donnington railway station, Cressage railway station, Linley Halt railway station

Alveley Halt was a halt on the original Severn Valley Line, situated between the villages of Highley and Alveley, in the English county of Shropshire. The station, not used by the reopened heritage Severn Valley Railway, has been replaced by the adjacent Country Park Halt on that line.

Contents

History

Alveley Halt was built to serve Alveley Colliery which opened in 1938. The halt was opened in about February 1944 and was intended only for the use of colliery workers.

Ownership of the halt passed from the Great Western Railway to the Western Region of British Railways during the nationalisation of 1948. The Severn Valley Railway between Shrewsbury and Bewdley was closed to passenger and through goods traffic by the British Transport Commission in 1963. However the line from Alveley Colliery southwards, which included the halt, remained open for coal traffic until the Colliery closed in January 1969.

The site today

In summer 1973, during preparations for the 1974 re-opening of the line between Hampton Loade and Bewdley by the heritage Severn Valley Railway, the platform face was found to be collapsing towards the line, so the halt was demolished. The heritage trains of the Severn Valley Railway pass the site near Country Park Halt between the stations at Highley and Hampton Loade.

References

Alveley Halt railway station Wikipedia


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