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Milton Halt railway station

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Place
  
Milton

Grid reference
  
SP452352

1 January 1908
  
Station opens

Platforms in use
  
1

Area
  
Cherwell

Pre-grouping
  
Great Western Railway

Original company
  
Great Western Railway

Milton Halt railway station httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Post-grouping
  
Great Western Railway Western Region of British Railways

Similar
  
Chalcombe Road Halt railway st, Carterton (Oxfordshire) railway st, Kelmscott and Langford, Horspath Halt railway st, Fritwell & Somerton railway st

Milton Halt railway station is a former railway station that served the village of Milton in northern Oxfordshire, England.

History

The station was built by the Great Western Railway. It opened to passengers on 1 January 1908 (Jenkins gives the date as 1 January 1906 but the Board of Trade plan on the same page is dated 14 November 1907 suggesting that the 1908 date given by other sources is correct). The Halt had a 120-foot-long (37 m) wooden platform and "pagoda" shelter. There was also a small corrugated iron shed, identified as "office" on the 1907 Board of Trade plan, with the area between the two buildings identified as "space for milk churns". Although no goods facilities were provided, milk traffic was important and as soon as the halt opened two farmers paid £5 a year each for milk carriage.

The halt was located on an embankment and approached by a cinder path from the road below. It was unstaffed and the guards of the first and last trains of the day would light and extinguish the oil lamps. Milton Halt came under the control of the Bloxham stationmaster and a porter from Bloxham would visit occasionally to re-fuel the lamps.

When Britain's railways were nationalised in 1948 the B&CDR became part of the Western Region of British Railways, which then closed the line through Milton to passengers in 1951.

References

Milton Halt railway station Wikipedia