Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/united-kingdom

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Fort William railway station

Railway station in the Scottish Highlands

Fort William railway station

Railway station in the Scottish Highlands

FieldValue
nameFort William
native_name
symbol_locationgb
symbolrail
imageFort William railway station - geograph.org.uk - 5391567.jpg
captionThe station entrance, 2017
boroughFort William, Highland
countryScotland
coordinates
grid_nameGrid reference
grid_position
managerScotRail
platforms2
codeFTW
originalBritish Rail
years7 August 1894
eventsFirst station opened
years19 June 1975
events1First station closed
years213 June 1975
events2Present station opened
{{Rail pass boxpass_year2020/21passengers= 22,316interchange= 39}}
{{Rail pass boxpass_year2021/22passengers= 0.114 millioninterchange= 197}}
{{Rail pass boxpass_year2022/23passengers= 0.146 millioninterchange= 204}}
{{Rail pass boxpass_year2023/24passengers= 0.192 millioninterchange= 323}}
{{Rail pass boxpass_year2024/25passengers= 0.176 millioninterchange= 224}}
footnotesPassenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road

Fort William railway station serves the town of Fort William, in the Highland region of Scotland. It is on the West Highland line, between Spean Bridge and Banavie, measured 99 mi from Craigendoran Junction, at the southern end of the line near Helensburgh. The station is managed by ScotRail, who operate most services from the station; Caledonian Sleeper and The Jacobite, an excursion operated by West Coast Railways, also use the station.

History

The original station in 1957
The original station alongside the loch

The first station was constructed by the West Highland Railway which was later absorbed by the North British Railway. They chose a site for the station alongside the town shipping pier, which required the purchase of a strip of the foreshore. The railway company bought this for £25 () an acre. Purchase of this land displaced some people from their houses and the railway company was obliged to provide replacement housing. Other residents realised too late that the railway line cut the town off from the shore and the company responded by providing some wicket gate crossings.

It was opened by the Marchioness of Tweedale, Candida Louisa Bartolucci, wife of the chairman of the North British Railway, William Hay, 10th Marquess of Tweeddale on 7 August 1894. They had departed by special train comprising two locomotives and eleven carriages from Glasgow at 8.15am, and arrived in Fort William at 1.30pm. It was sited to the west of the present station on what is now the A82 town bypass, alongside Loch Linnhe at Station Square, at the time in close proximity to then location of the former Caledonian MacBrayne bus station. The old station was a stone built construction featuring a turret and a double arched entranceway and had three platforms. Two of the platforms terminated under the platform canopy, but the third continued past the station, crossing the MacBrayne pier and terminated at the jetty just beyond.

In 1970 the British Railways Board put forward proposals to re-site the station 700 yd north of its location to allow the improvements to the A82 to be implemented. The last train from the old station departed on 7 June 1975 and the station closed on 9 June. It was demolished immediately afterwards to permit construction of the bypass.

The present Fort William station of grey concrete construction was opened on 13 June 1975. The current station lies in the shadow of Ben Nevis.

Accidents and incidents

During high winds in February 1980 a brick wall at the station collapsed onto the track and blocked a platform.

Signalling

Since its opening in 1975, the present Fort William station has been equipped with colour light signals. The signalling is controlled from an 'NX' (entrance-exit) panel in Fort William Junction signal box. The single line between the junction and the station is worked by the Track Circuit Block system, so no tokens are needed for that part of the route.

Facilities

Refurbishment of the facilities at Fort William railway station was completed in 2007 thanks to a £750,000 investment. The refurbishment includes new shower facilities and refurbished toilets. The shower facilities include two showers for ladies, two for gentlemen and one unisex shower facility for disabled people.

The island platform is also equipped with a few shops and restaurants, a ticket office, bike racks, a car park and a taxi rank, and some benches. All areas of the station are step-free.

A lounge for Caledonian Sleeper passengers opened in 2018.

Passenger volume

2006-072007-082008-092009-102010-112011-122012-132013-142014-152015-162016-172017-182018-192019-202020-212021-222022-23
Entries and exits115,510120,333121,920134,302135,488138,870135,556145,504144,106139,808138,514155,856160,418139,72222,316114,230
Interchanges19221124729536541445844038733935539341437739197

The statistics cover twelve month periods that start in April.

Services

Caledonian Sleeper and ScotRail services standing at Fort William station

Fort William has three daytime trains per day in each direction on Mondays to Saturdays, running between and . There is also a daily early morning service to Mallaig that starts at Fort William, with a similar return service in the evening, which connects with the Caledonian Sleeper. The regular Sunday service consists of two trains per day each way between Glasgow and Mallaig, with the schedule in the peak season supplemented by one service between Fort William and Mallaig.

The Caledonian Sleeper operates six nights per week (not Saturday nights) to and from , starting and terminating at Fort William. The sleeper also carries seated coaches and can thus be used as a regular service train to/from Glasgow Queen Street and Edinburgh Waverley.

The Jacobite operates non-stop between Fort William and Mallaig. This runs all year round, with a maximum of two trains per day Monday to Saturday and one on Sunday. A reduced Jacobite timetable is operated later in the summer. West Highland Line Highland Caledonian Sleeper The Jacobite Line mostly open; station closed Line and station open West Highland Railway West Highland Railway Line and station open Mallaig Extension Railway of West Highland Railway

References

Bibliography

References

  1. "Railway Codes".
  2. (2017). "TRACKatlas of Mainland Britain: A Comprehensive Geographic Atlas Showing the Rail Network of Great Britain". Platform 5 Publishing Ltd.
  3. Thomas, John. (1965). "The West Highland Railway". David St John Thomas.
  4. . (13 August 1894). ["West Highland Railway"](https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000295/18940813/085/0004). *DundeeAdvertiser*.
  5. Thomas, John. (1965). "The West Highland Railway". David St John Thomas.
  6. . (5 March 1970). ["British Railways Board. Re-siting of Fort William Railway Station"](https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000578/19700305/187/0010). *Aberdeen Press and Journal*.
  7. . (9 June 1975). ["Last train given big send off at Fort-William"](https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000578/19750609/395/0020). *Aberdeen Press and Journal*.
  8. Fort William re-sited ''[[The Railway Magazine]]'' issue 892 August 1975 page 377
  9. . (5 February 1980). ["Winds"](https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000445/19800205/006/0001). *Aberdeen Press and Journal*.
  10. (20 October 2007). "Full steam ahead for new transport hub". Lochaber News.
  11. "National Rail Enquiries -".
  12. "Caledonian Sleeper opens three new lounges at Scottish stations".
  13. "Estimates of station usage {{!}} ORR Data Portal".
  14. eNRT May 2022 Edition, Table 218
  15. eNRT December 2021 Edition, Table 218
  16. eNRT May 2022 Edition, Table 220
Info: 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.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Fort William railway station — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report