Hartfield railway station

Hartfield was a railway station serving Hartfield, England, on the Three Bridges to Tunbridge Wells Central Line which closed in 1967, a casualty of the Beeching Axe.[1]

Hartfield
Location
PlaceHartfield
AreaWealden, East Sussex
Grid referenceTQ480362
Operations
Pre-groupingLondon, Brighton and South Coast Railway
Post-groupingSouthern Railway
Southern Region of British Railways
Platforms1
History
1 October 1866Opened
7 May 1962Closed to goods traffic
2 January 1967Closed to passenger traffic
Disused railway stations in the United Kingdom
Closed railway stations in Britain
A B C D–F G H–J K–L M–O P–R S T–V W–Z

The station opened on 1 October 1866 and the buildings were designed by Charles Henry Driver.[2]

The station building is now divided between a day nursery and a private house. The route of the railway line is now a cycle path (the Forest Way).[3] A.A. Milne, the creator of Winnie-the-Pooh, lived in Hartfield.

The station appears in a British Transport Film entitled Farmer Moving South, which recounted the moving of the entire farm stock of Robert Ropner, by special train from Skutterskelfe Hall in Yorkshire to Perryhill Farm, Hartfield in December 1950. The entire move took 30 hours and was nine hours late in arriving at East Grinstead on 15 December.[4] The film is available on a BFI DVD.

Preceding station   Disused railways   Following station
Forest Row   British Rail
Southern Region

Three Bridges to Tunbridge Wells Central Line
  Withyham
gollark: ?tag create "lyricly initialization" ++userdata set lyricly LyricLy is UTTERLY quite bad. Also, Macron will never actually be finished. !demote☭lyricly☭establish☭somethingelse!
gollark: Oh wait, it's fine.
gollark: OH BEE
gollark: OH BEE
gollark: ++data get lyricly

See also

References

  1. Hartfield railway station on Subterranea Britannica
  2. "Opening of the Tunbridge Wells and East Grinstead Branch of the London, Brighton & South Coast Railway". Sussex Advertiser. British Newspaper Archive. 3 October 1866. Retrieved 8 August 2016 via British Newspaper Archive.
  3. "Forest Way" (PDF). East Sussex CC. Retrieved 12 August 2007.
  4. Gould, David (1983). Three Bridges to Tunbridge Wells. The Oakwood Press. p. 47. ISBN 978-0-85361-299-5.


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