Althorpe railway station

Althorpe railway station serves the village of Althorpe in North Lincolnshire, England. The station is also very close to the villages of Keadby and Gunness.

Althorpe
Entrance to the station
Location
PlaceAlthorpe
Local authorityNorth Lincolnshire
Coordinates53.58557°N 0.73300°W / 53.58557; -0.73300
Grid referenceSE839106
Operations
Station codeALP
Managed byNorthern
Number of platforms2
DfT categoryF2
Live arrivals/departures, station information and onward connections
from National Rail Enquiries
Annual rail passenger usage*
2014/15 10,086
2015/16 11,894
2016/17 10,702
2017/18 9,818
2018/19 7,978
History
Original companyGreat Central Railway
Post-groupingLondon and North Eastern Railway
1 October 1866Station opens
21 May 1916Station resited
National Rail – UK railway stations
* Annual estimated passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Althorpe from Office of Rail and Road statistics. Methodology may vary year on year.

Stopping services from Sheffield to Scunthorpe call at the station. Some stopping services terminate at Doncaster, but during the day others continue through to Sheffield and Lincoln Central.

Most services are provided by Northern who operate the station. Occasional services by TransPennine Express also call at this station.

The station is unstaffed and has very limited facilities. There is a shelter on each platform, with a telephone and a help point for contact with Customer Services and British Transport Police on Platform 1 (eastbound); train running information is also provided by timetable posters on each side. Platform 2 (westbound) is accessible only by a footbridge with 50 steps.[1]

The station is on the west bank of the River Trent, to the west of the combined road-and-rail King George V Bridge, which was a lifting bridge until the late 1950s.

History

The first Althorpe station, opened by the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway, was on the original line over the Trent and replaced the terminus, Keadby, on the South Yorkshire Railway, which became Keadby Goods. This station was originally known as Keadby and Althorpe.

When the line was again moved to a new alignment to cross the river by the present "King George V" bridge a new station was opened which is still in use. It replaced two earlier stations, Althorpe and Gunness & Burringham, which had been about half a mile apart.[2]

The station which now bears the name, became part of the London and North Eastern Railway during the Grouping of 1923. The station then passed to the Eastern Region of British Railways on nationalisation in 1948.

When Sectorisation was introduced in the 1980s, the station was served by Regional Railways until the Privatisation of British Railways.

Services

Services call here between approximately 06:00 and 23:15 Monday to Friday, and 06:00 to 22:15 Saturday on an hourly frequency each way.[3]

TransPennine Express serves the station with a single daily service in each direction. The westbound service runs to Manchester Airport in the early morning, while the eastbound return service runs to Cleethorpes in the late evening.[4]

No services call at this station on Sundays.

In February 2013 the line northeast of Hatfield and Stainforth station towards Thorne was blocked by the Hatfield Colliery landslip, with all services over the section halted. The line reopened in July 2013.

Preceding station   National Rail   Following station
Northern
South Humberside Main Line
Mondays-Saturdays only

Notes

  1. Althorpe station facilities National Rail Enquiries
  2. "Keadby deviation and rolling lift bridge". Railway Magazine. July 1916. p. 62. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  3. Table 29 National Rail timetable, December 2016
  4. South TransPennine Timetable
gollark: Nope.
gollark: ... no?
gollark: Nope, don't have that.
gollark: I shall preinstall a flight program for your inconvenience.
gollark: It should.

References

  • Butt, R. V. J. (1995). The Directory of Railway Stations: details every public and private passenger station, halt, platform and stopping place, past and present (1st ed.). Sparkford: Patrick Stephens Ltd. ISBN 978-1-85260-508-7. OCLC 60251199.
  • Jowett, Alan (2000). Jowett's Nationalised Railway Atlas (1st ed.). Penryn, Cornwall: Atlantic Transport Publishers. ISBN 978-0-906899-99-1. OCLC 228266687.
Train approaching from Keadby Bridge
Footbridge
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