Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Llandyssul railway station

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Place
  
Grid reference
  
SN411399

Post-grouping
  
Pre-grouping
  
Platforms in use
  
2

Llandyssul railway station httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

3 June 1864
  
Station opened as Llandyssil

Similar
  
Llanybydder railway station, Maesycrugiau railway station, Llanilar railway station, Blaenplwyf Halt railway st, Llangurig railway station

Llandyssul (previously Llandyssil) was a railway station near the village of Llandysul, West Wales, on the originally broad gauge Teifi Valley line of the Carmarthen and Cardigan Railway.

History

The Teifi Valley Railway was originally conceived as a 7 ft 14 in (2,140 mm) broad-gauge line between Carmarthen and Cardigan. The line was opened temporarily in 1860, under the South Wales Railway and was fully opened the following year. It was operated by the Carmarthen and Cardigan Railway between Carmarthen and Cynwyl Elfed. In 1864, the line was extended to Pencader and Llandysul.

It was converted to standard gauge (4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)) by 1872. However, the company was bankrupt. The line was purchased by the Great Western Railway and extended to a terminus at Newcastle Emlyn in 1895, The GWR did not build the line on to Cardigan and Newcastle Emlyn remained the terminus.

Although passenger services ceased in 1952, goods services continued until 1973 because of the milk train services to the Co-operative Group creamery at Newcastle Emlyn.

The station has been destroyed by the building of a bypass. The old station had a stationmaster's house, cattle pens, a large goods shed, weighing machine, a signal box, etc.

References

Llandyssul railway station Wikipedia


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