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Rugby Central railway station

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Place
  
Rugby, Warwickshire

Grid reference
  
SP513746

15 March 1899
  
Opened

Platforms in use
  
2

Area
  
Rugby

Pre-grouping
  
Great Central Railway

Original company
  
Great Central Railway

Rugby Central railway station Disused Stations Rugby Central Station

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

Similar
  
Nottingham Arkwright Street rail, Leicester Central railway st, Brandon and Wolston r, Nottingham Victoria railway st, Clifton Mill railway station

Rugby Central was a railway station serving Rugby in Warwickshire on the former Great Central Main Line which opened in 1899 and closed in 1969.

Contents

Rugby Central railway station The Opening of Rugby Central Station Our Warwickshire

It competed with the existing West Coast Main Line route for traffic to London which had served Rugby since the 1830s at Rugby Midland Station, which still exists, but since the closure of Rugby Central has reverted to its original name of "Rugby".

Rugby Central railway station Site of the former Rugby Central railway Andy F ccbysa20

History

Rugby Central railway station Site of the former Rugby Central railway Andy F Geograph

The station was opened on 15 March 1899. It had services between London Marylebone and Manchester Piccadilly via Leicester Central, Nottingham Victoria and Sheffield Victoria. As well as various cross country services to places such as Southampton and Hull.

Rugby Central railway station httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

The station was run by the Great Central Railway from 1899 until it was grouped into the London and North Eastern Railway in 1923. It then came under the management of British Railways in 1948.

Rugby Central was roughly midway along the Great Central Main Line (GCML) and was a stopping point for express services as well as a changeover point for local services. Until the early 1960s the station was served by about six London – Manchester expresses daily, and was the terminus for local services from Aylesbury or Woodford Halse to the south, and Leicester Central or Nottingham Victoria from the north. The line was then run down and the express services were removed, leaving only the local services and an infrequent semi-fast service to London.

Most of the GCML was closed on 5 September 1966 under Reshaping of British Railways. On this date, the line south of Rugby Central and north of Nottingham Victoria was closed. The section between Rugby Central and Nottingham (initially Nottingham Victoria, later cut back to Nottingham Arkwright Street) remained open as self-contained branch carrying a DMU operated local passenger service until 3 May 1969; the station formally closed on 5 May.

Buildings and situation

Rugby Central was situated on Hillmorton Road roughly half a mile east of the town centre. It was much smaller and less important than Midland Station. Rugby Central was built to the standard Great Central design with a single island platform which was 600 feet (180 m) long.

The booking office was at street level, built onto the side of the road bridge over the railway with the platform below. The platform was accessed by a covered staircase from the booking office. On the platform there were three waiting rooms and a toilet block, which was the only building not covered by the canopy.

On the preserved Great Central Railway in Leicestershire, the preserved Loughborough Central station is a similar design to the former Rugby Central.

The site today

The station buildings were demolished after closure, although the platform still exists. Rugby Borough Council bought the whole of the former Great Central Railway trackbed through Rugby in 1970, and it is now a nature walk called the Great Central Way.

The former goods yard was west of the station, and was used as a timber yard until the mid-1990s when houses were built on it.

Reopening Proposals

In August 2000, Chiltern Railways suggested reopening the former Great Central Main Line between London Marylebone and Rugby Central to a parkway station in Leicestershire near the M1/M6. This proposal is a "secondary aspiration" of Chiltern's franchise agreement. However, Chiltern stated in 2013 that the plan is "no longer active". In recent years proposals to reopen the railway line as an alternative route to HS2 has been proposed and In 2015 opponents of HS2 called for the GCR to be reopened as an alternative to HS2.

References

Rugby Central railway station Wikipedia