Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Thornton Dale railway station

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Place
  
Thornton-le-Dale

Grid reference
  
SE833821

1882
  
opened

Platforms in use
  
1

Area
  
Ryedale

Pre-grouping
  
North Eastern Railway

Original company
  
North Eastern Railway

Thornton Dale railway station httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Post-grouping
  
London and North Eastern Railway

Thornton Dale railway station was situated on the North Eastern Railway's Pickering to Seamer branch line. It served the village of Thornton-le-Dale in North Yorkshire, England. The station opened to passenger traffic on 1 May 1882, and closed on 3 June 1950.

The station remained open for freight traffic to Pickering after the rest of the Forge Valley Line was closed and pulled up. A daily train took limestone (brought by lorry from a quarry north of the village) to Pickering from where it was taken forwards to Skinningrove Ironworks. Unfortunately the quarry company lost the contract to supply the ironworks and this traffic ceased in the early 1960s. The last traffic into the station was two Presflo wagons of bulk cement for repairs to the village hall.

The station finally closed completely with no ceremony in 1963. Shortly afterwards two Wickham Railmotors from Pickering visited the line to check that all the fences were stock-proof and in due course contractors arrived and removed the track.

The station building was cleared and converted into offices for a company building a (short lived) gas pipeline to Pickering and later the station site was converted into a caravan site, with the station buildings divided and refurbished as three holiday cottages.

References

Thornton Dale railway station Wikipedia