Angmering railway station

Angmering is a railway station on the West Coastway Line, on the border of Angmering and East Preston in the district of Arun. It was opened in 1846. The station itself is situated about 0.6 miles (1 km) away from the centre of Angmering village, and is 15 miles 44 chains (25.0 km) down the line from Brighton. Buses depart for Angmering village hourly (Monday to Saturday off-peak), or walking to the village takes about 20 min. The station is located near to the local secondary school The Angmering School, some of the students of which use the station daily to travel to and from school. Angmering station is also designed to be used by the residents of the nearby villages of Rustington and East Preston, with some of the station's signage actually reading 'Angmering for Rustington and East Preston'.

Angmering
The main station building and platform one, as seen looking west from platform two (June 2007)
Location
PlaceEast Preston (Littlehampton)
Local authorityArun
Grid referenceTQ065029
Operations
Station codeANG
Managed bySouthern
Owned byNetwork Rail
Number of platforms2
DfT categoryE
Live arrivals/departures, station information and onward connections
from National Rail Enquiries
Annual rail passenger usage*
2014/15 0.882 million
2015/16 0.865 million
2016/17 0.700 million
2017/18 0.801 million
2018/19 0.827 million
History
Key datesOpened 16 March 1846 (16 March 1846)
National Rail – UK railway stations
  • Annual estimated passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Angmering from Office of Rail and Road statistics. Methodology may vary year on year.

History

Opened by the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway, it became part of the Southern Railway during the Grouping of 1923. The line then passed on to the Southern Region of British Railways on nationalisation in 1948.

When Sectorisation was introduced, the station was served by Network SouthEast until the privatisation of British Rail.

Services

Off-peak, all services at Angmering are operated by Southern. The typical off-peak service in trains per hour is:[1]

During the peak periods, there are a small number of trains between Littlehampton, London Bridge and Bedford, operated by Thameslink.

Preceding station National Rail Following station
Southern
Southern
West Coastway line Littlehampton Branch
Thameslink
Bedford to Littlehampton
Peak Hours Only

Former and current train companies

Southern currently manage the station and the trains that call at Angmering. Previously, South West Trains also used the station, running four trains per day to Brighton via Angmering until December 2007.

Facilities

There is a ticket office, a waiting room, toilets, buffet, car park, taxi rank and cycle storage.

Deaths

A local woman, Maureen Weselby, committed suicide by jumping in front of a Brighton-bound express, operated by South West Trains, in May 2006.[2]

A local teenager, Adam Blackwood, was killed here when a Littlehampton-bound Southern Class 377 train approaching the station knocked him down at a nearby pedestrian level crossing in early 2007.[3]

Another local, 16-year-old Megan Moore of Angmering, was killed after being dragged under the 22:17 London Victoria to Bognor Regis train just before midnight on 21 November 2009. Tributes have been paid on her personal Facebook profile and her "RIP Megan" group, which has nearly 9,000 members. Flowers and messages from friends and family were left outside the station.[4]

gollark: See, the thing is, text files are actually *not big* and compress really well.
gollark: You can use "Kiwix" to browse/download copies of it.
gollark: Also, the images are probably downscaled a lot and they likely drop some other media bits.
gollark: Heavily compressed and minus revision history/user pages/talk pages, yes.
gollark: Wikipedia is only 85GB or so, so I'd still have room for other stuff. 15GB if I don't need images, actually.

References

  1. "Timetable 24: Littlehampton and Worthing to Brighton and London" (PDF). Southern, December 2019.
  2. "BBC News story about Weselby's death". Archived from the original on 14 October 2006. Retrieved 19 March 2007.
  3. "BBC News story about Blackwood's death". 3 January 2007. Retrieved 1 January 2010.
  4. "BBC News story about Moore's death". 23 November 2009. Archived from the original on 27 November 2009. Retrieved 1 January 2010.
  • 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.
  • Station on navigable O.S. map

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.