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Cressing railway station

Railway station in Essex, England


Summary

Railway station in Essex, England

FieldValue
nameCressing
symbol_locationgb
symbolrail
imageCressing railway station in 1976.jpg
captionCressing railway station in 1976
boroughCressing, Braintree
countryEngland
coordinates
grid_nameGrid reference
grid_position
managerGreater Anglia
platforms1
codeCES
classificationDfT category F2
originalEastern Counties Railway
pregroupGreat Eastern Railway
postgroupLondon and North Eastern Railway
years
eventsOpened as Bulford
years11 February 1911
events1Renamed Cressing
{{Rail pass boxpass_year2020/21passengers= 13,106}}
{{Rail pass boxpass_year2021/22passengers= 34,374}}
{{Rail pass boxpass_year2022/23passengers= 39,294}}
{{Rail pass boxpass_year2023/24passengers= 45,284}}
{{Rail pass boxpass_year2024/25passengers= 51,142}}
footnotesPassenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road

Cressing railway station is on the Braintree Branch Line in the East of England, serving the villages of Cressing and Black Notley, Essex. It is 42 mi down the line from London Liverpool Street via and it is situated between to the south and to the north. Its three-letter station code is CES. The platform has an operational length for nine-coach trains.

The station is currently managed by Greater Anglia, which also operates all trains serving it.

History

The Maldon, Witham & Braintree Railway (MWBR) was authorised in 1846 but prior to its opening the company was absorbed by the Eastern Counties Railway (ECR). The line opened for goods traffic on 15 August 1848, and for passenger services on 2 October 1848; it was double-tracked throughout until the Crimean War.

The station, originally named Bulford, was also opened on 2 October 1848. It was renamed Cressing on 1 February 1911. It is suggested that the large crossing gates were present because Cressing had a passing loop until after World War I, and retained the loop for freight purposes until goods traffic ceased on the line in 1964.

The station was owned by the Great Eastern Railway (GER) from 1862 to 1923, but as the building does not show typical GER architectural canopy support features, it is likely that it pre-dates the GER. Although there does not appear to be any obvious evidence (as in the case of Maldon East & Heybridge which displays "MWB" on the gulleys at the top of its downpipes) that it was built when the line first opened, that is a possibility and if so would make it the only surviving MWBR structure on this railway.

There was originally a signal box on the platform, next to the level crossing. This was removed and relocated to the preserved Colne Valley Railway at Castle Hedingham in the 1970s. [[File:Cressing Station Signal Box Derby DMU.jpg|thumb|Cressing signal box in 1976, before electrification]]

Services

All services at Cressing are operated by Greater Anglia using EMUs.

The typical off-peak service is one train per hour in each direction between and London Liverpool Street via with additional services calling at the station during the peak hours.

On Sundays, southbound services at the station run only as far as Witham.

References

References

  1. Awdry, Christopher. (1990). "Encyclopaedia of British Railway Companies". Guild Publishing.
  2. Butt, R.V.J.. (1995). "The Directory of Railway Stations". Patrick Stephens Ltd.
  3. {{NRtimes. December 2023. 11
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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