Neha Patil (Editor)

Ipswich Stoke Hill railway station

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Place
  
15 June 1846
  
Opened

Original company
  
Area
  
Borough of Ipswich

1 July 1860
  
Closed

Similar
  
Bentley (Suffolk) railway st, Claydon (Suffolk) railway st, Bramford railway station, Capel railway station, Horham railway station

Ipswich Stoke Hill railway station was the northern terminus of the Eastern Union Railway line from Colchester to Ipswich from its opening in June 1846 until 1860 when the present Ipswich station opened at the other end of the Stoke tunnel. Trains from London terminated at the station but from November 1846 when a new line was built by the Ipswich and Bury Railway to Bury St Edmunds trains from Bury used to pass the station, stop at Halifax Junction a short distance to the south and propel back into the terminus usually using the western platform. Trains for Bury would reverse out as far as Halifax Junction before travelling north.

The EUR and I&BR (who shared many directors, same engineer and secretary) worked as one organisation from January 1847.

For more than one hundred and twenty years after the station's closure, the site was in use as railway sidings. These consisted of a carriage and wagon works and Ipswich engine shed. Subsequently the site had its tracks removed and was redeveloped, including Bruff Road, named in honour of Peter Bruff the engineer who brought the railway to Ipswich.

Former Services

References

Ipswich Stoke Hill railway station Wikipedia


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