Nidd Bridge railway station
54°02′03″N 1°32′36″W / 54.034262°N 1.543382°W / 54.034262; -1.543382
North Eastern Railway
British Railways (North Eastern)
Nidd Bridge railway station served the village of Nidd, North Yorkshire, England from 1848 to 1964 on the Leeds-Northallerton Railway.
History
The station was opened as Ripley on 1 June 1848 by the Leeds Northern Railway. It was situated on the south side of the B6165. The goods yard was behind the down platform, which consisted of four sidings. One passed through the goods yard, one served a 5-ton crane and two docks, one was alongside the line and the goods line and the other was behind the down platform. Its name was changed to Nidd Bridge on 1 June 1862, although it cost £411 for this change to happen. The main freight handled at the station was timber (155 tons). 105 wagons of livestock were also dispatched in 1911. The station was closed to passengers on 18 June 1962[1] and to goods traffic on 10 August 1964.[2]
References
External links
Preceding station | Historical railways | Following station | ||
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Wormald Green Line and station closed | Leeds Northern Railway Leeds-Northallerton Railway | Starbeck Line closed, station open |
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- Cattal
- Hammerton
- Harrogate
- Hornbeam Park
- Knaresborough
- Pannal
- Starbeck
- Weeton
- Birstwith
- Boroughbridge
- Copgrove
- Dacre
- Darley
- Goldsborough
- Hampsthwaite
- Harrogate (Brunswick)
- Hopperton
- Knaresborough Hay Park Lane
- Lofthouse-in-Nidderdale
- Melmerby
- Nidd Bridge
- Pateley Bridge (NER)
- Pateley Bridge (NVLR)
- Ramsgill
- Ripley Valley
- Ripon
- Spofforth
- Wath-in-Nidderdale
- Wormald Green
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