Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Wirksworth railway station

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Place
  
Wirksworth

Grid reference
  
SK289540

4 December 1989
  
Last Freight train

Original company
  
Midland Railway

1 October 1867
  
opened

Area
  
Derbyshire

16 June 1947
  
closed (passenger)

Phone
  
+44 1629 823076

Platforms in use
  
3

1 October 2002
  
reopened

Wirksworth railway station

Operated by
  
Ecclesbourne Valley Railway

Address
  
Wirksworth Station, Coldwell St, Wirksworth DE4 4FB, UK

Similar
  
Ravenstor railway station, Duffield railway station, Idridgehay railway station, Peak Rail, Shottle railway station

Wirksworth Railway Station is a heritage railway station that serves the town of Wirksworth in Derbyshire. It was the former terminus of the Midland Railway Wirksworth branch line, leaving the Midland Main Line at Duffield. The line was reopened as the Ecclesbourne Valley Railway.

Contents

History

The station was opened by the Midland Railway on 1 October 1867. The station was designed by the Midland Railway company architect John Holloway Sanders.

Dale Quarry was opened in 1874, 0.7 miles (1.1 km) west of the station yard. Stone was initially conveyed by horse and cart, but plans for a tramway were unpopular as it would have passed through the town. A standard gauge tunnel was built under the town, linking the quarry and the station yard and was opened on 17 November 1877.

The final timetabled service ran between Derby and Wirksworth on 14 June 1947, although the line remained listed as 'suspended' for another two years before final closure in 1949. The station yard remained in use for the carriage of stone as the surrounding quarries and mineral lines were still operational. Unfortunately this resulted in the demolition of the station buildings in 1968 as the space was needed for construction of freight facilities.

In mid-1984 the station was the terminus for a number of test runs of the then newly introduced BR class 150 diesel multiple units, which were later combined with charity fund raising special excursions known as the Wirksworth Phoenix

The station was reopened on 1 October 2002 by Mr George Repton, who had been an engine driver on the line and the Wirksworth deputy mayor.

Film and TV appearances

In June 2007 Wirksworth was used as the fictional station of Lightbourne in the BBC television series Casualty, season 22, episode 05. In August 2009, the station was also used under the fictional guise of Castlebury for a new BBC Drama aired between 1 and 5 March 2010 called "Five Days II".

Operation

The service runs regularly at weekends, holidays and special events. Several separate services are provided from Wirksworth, depending on the event and the day. Platform 3 is reserved for the shuttle service to Ravenstor. Services to Ravenstor leave from platform 3 and the majority of services to Duffield operate from Platforms 2 and occasionally Platform 1. It has the national station code of WIR.

Station Facilities

  • Booking Hall with seating area
  • Rest facilities
  • Buffet/cafĂ© facilities (open 7 days a week all year)
  • Children's play area
  • Picnic area
  • 2ft Narrow Gauge line and 5 inch gauge miniature railway (open when staffed)
  • Charity gift shop (open operating weekends)
  • Historical railway museum (open operating weekends)
  • Model Railway layouts, including N and OO scale (open operating weekends)
  • References

    Wirksworth railway station Wikipedia