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North Thoresby railway station

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Place
  
North Thoresby

Grid reference
  
TF301986

Platforms in use
  
2

Area
  
East Lindsey

Pre-grouping
  
Great Northern Railway

North Thoresby railway station httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Original company
  
East Lincolnshire Railway

Post-grouping
  
London and North Eastern Railway Eastern Region of British Railways

Operator
  
Lincolnshire Wolds Railway

Similar
  
Lincolnshire Wolds Railway, Ludborough railway station, Coronation Chair

North Thoresby is a heritage railway station in North Thoresby, Lincolnshire. The station, which was previously part of the East Lincolnshire Railway, closed in 1970, but has recently been reopened by the Lincolnshire Wolds Railway. The first services to the station from Ludborough, to the south, ran in August 2009, the first in 47 years. There are proposals to extend the line further in both directions towards Holton-Le-Clay and Louth.

Contents

History

The station was opened on 1 March 1848 to serve the Lincolnshire village of North Thoresby. It was constructed by contractor John Waring and Sons of Rotherham who, in December 1846, had agreed to construct the line between Grimsby and Louth for the sum of £46,102 (£NaN as of 2017). The architects of the station buildings were John Grey Weightman and Matthew Ellison Hadfield of Sheffield.

The station was provided with staggered platforms either side of a level crossing; the up platform to the south of the crossing and the down to the north. The stationmaster's house, similar to that at Ludborough, was adjacent to the down platform and comprised the booking office and passenger waiting room.

A signal box which contained 25 levers was situated on the north side of the level crossing and controlled the crossing gates as well as access to the small goods yard with a siding on each side of the line. The siding on the down side ran into a loading dock behind the down platform. Unlike Ludborough, the station had no goods shed. The goods yard closed on 30 December 1963, but the station remained open to passengers until 5 October 1970. In 1956-57, around a dozen passenger trains bound for Grimsby called at the station on weekdays, with the first two being local workings from Louth, save for a Mondays only service which called only to set down passengers. In the other direction, fewer services ran through to Peterborough North, but the up/down passenger workings balanced once services to Louth were taken into account. North Thoresby was the only intermediate station between Grimsby and Louth to remain open until October 1970.After 1970 the down line was removed and only the up line through the station remained. The line finally closed in December 1980.

Preservation and reopening

On 28 September 1991, a Light Railway Order was granted authorising the reinstatement of the East Lincolnshire Railway between Waltham and the former Keddington Road level crossing near Louth, which would include the line through North Thoresby.

Tracklaying by the Lincolnshire Wolds Railway reached North Thoresby in 2008 and the first train for 47 years between the two stations ran on 26 August 2009. The south (up) platform has been restored and a waiting shelter erected. The level crossing to the north has been tarmaced over, but the north crossing gate has survived. The stationmaster's house remains in private occupation.

There are plans to extend the line beyond North Thoresby to Holton-Le-Clay, which will involve reinstating the level crossing at the station.

References

North Thoresby railway station Wikipedia