Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Radstock North railway station

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Place
  
Radstock

20 July 1874
  
Opened (Radstock)

Grid reference
  
ST689550

Platforms in use
  
2

Radstock North railway station

Area
  
Bath and North East Somerset

Pre-grouping
  
Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway

Post-grouping
  
SR and LMSR Western Region of British Railways

Address
  
Radstock BA3 2WU, United Kingdom

Similar
  
Evercreech New railway st, Evercreech Junction railway st, Shoscombe and Single Hill Halt r, Bournemouth West railway st, Masbury railway station

Radstock North railway station was a station on the Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway in the county of Somerset in England.

Contents

History

Opened as Radstock on 20 July 1874, it was located immediately to the northeast of the GWR's Bristol and North Somerset Railway's (B&NSR) Radstock West (1854-1965). However, there was no direct connection between the two competing stations.

Due to the extensive collieries in the area sunk into the Somerset Coalfield, the station was more extensive than others serving similar sized communities. Immediately west of the station was a line to Middle Writhlington Colliery, leading to Clandown Colliery and onwards to the local gas works. Immediately to the east of the station were connections to Ludlow Colliery, and the wagon way to Tyning Colliery. Further east towards Shoscombe was a junction giving access to Lower Writhlington Colliery, Braysdown Colliery and Writhlington Colliery.

The station itself consisted of two platforms, a goods yard and cattle dock, wagon works, and a two-road engine shed with coaling and watering facilities. To the east of the station and locomotive servicing facilities were the former Wheeler & Gregory Wagon Works, and a private timber yard. Operations were controlled from two signal boxes, with a third to the east controlling access to the colliery line's there.

The station closed to goods in 1964. After the decision to close the S&DJR in 1966, a connection was made to the west of the station with the GWR mainline. This allowed trains on the former B&NSR to traverse a short spur through Radstock North to the Lower Writhlington, Braysdown and Writhlington collieries, to transport coal to Portishead power station. Passenger services were withdrawn when the SDJR closed on 7 March 1966. After the last coal from the Somerset Coalfield was extracted from Writhlington Colliery on 28 September 1973, the spur was dismantled.

Accident

A head-on collision at Foxcote near Radstock was the worst accident in the line's history.[1]

The site today

The site is now a green space alongside a road.

References

Radstock North railway station Wikipedia