Place Rye Station code RYE DfT category E Opened 13 February 1851 | Grid reference TQ918205 Managed by Southern 2011/12 0.376 million Number of platforms 2 | |
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Address Rye TN31 7AB, United Kingdom Similar Winchelsea railway station, Appledore (Kent) railway st, Ore railway station, Hastings railway station, Camber Sands |
Rye railway station
Rye railway station serves Rye in East Sussex, England. It is on the Marshlink Line 11 1⁄4 miles (18.1 km) east of Hastings providing a passing place between two single track sections. Train services are provided by Southern. The staggered platforms are linked by footbridge. Owing to a prolonged threat by British Rail to close the line, the station remained unmodernised and gaslit well into the 1970s.
Contents
History
The station opened on 13 February 1851, six weeks before the 1851 census. The census lists the station master as 23-year-old James Broderick from London. In each of the four successive censuses, William Hunt from Devon is named as station master, indicating at least a 40-year spell in charge. In 1901 it shows Richard Hunnisett as station master and in 1911 it is George Geer.
Services
The typical off-peak service is one train per hour to Hastings and Brighton and one train per hour to Ashford International.
At peak times an Ashford to Rye shuttle also operates meaning that between 0600 and 0900 six trains operate towards Ashford International and the wider network of services available there. In the reverse direction in the evening some six trains operate between 1730 and 2000.