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Ystradowen railway station

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Place
  
Ystradowen

Post-grouping
  
Great Western Railway

26 November 1951
  
Closed to passengers

Area
  
Vale of Glamorgan

18 September 1865
  
Station opens

Platforms in use
  
1

Original company
  
Cowbridge Railway Taff Vale Railway

Original companies
  
Cowbridge railway station, Taff Vale Railway

Ystradowen railway station served the village of Ystradowen in the Vale of Glamorgan in South Wales. It was on the Cowbridge and Aberthaw line.

History and Description

Ystradowen was initially the only intermediate station between Llantrisant and Cowbridge. The cutting immediately before the station was the heaviest earthwork on the line, at fifteen feet deep, and itself preceded a stiff gradient of 1 in 45. The station as completed consisted of a passing loop, with the single platform on the 'up' line with one small siding which served a stone goods shed to the rear of the platform. The goods shed was a 'dead end' type, with the roadway diagonally opposite the rail approach. This involved the somewhat awkward process of reversing carts up to the loading platform. When the line was inspected in 1864, the inspector disapproved of the location of Ystradowen station, due the steep gradients, and the fact that a number of slips had been made in the cuttings. The station was subsequently dismantled and re-located to satisfy the Board of Trade, meaning that it was a considerable distance from the village. It was finally opened when passenger services began on 18 September 1865.

Ystradowen station closed in 1951 when passenger services on the branch were withdrawn. The goods facilities lasted until 1960, but the sidings remained for a number of years.

References

Ystradowen railway station Wikipedia