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Watlington railway station

Railway station in Norfolk, England


Summary

Railway station in Norfolk, England

FieldValue
nameWatlington
symbol_locationgb
symbolrail
imageWatlington railway station.jpg
captionWatlington railway station in 2005
boroughWatlington, King's Lynn and West Norfolk
countryEngland
grid_nameGrid reference
grid_position
ownedNetwork Rail
managerGreat Northern
platforms2
codeWTG
classificationDfT category E
years27 October 1846
eventsOpened as Watlington
years11 June 1875
events1Renamed Magdalen Road
years29 September 1968
events2Closed
years35 May 1975
events3Reopened
years43 October 1989
events4Renamed Watlington
mpassengers
{{Rail pass boxpass_year2018–19passengers= 0.154 million}}
{{Rail pass boxpass_year2019–20passengers= 0.138 million}} --
{{Rail pass boxpass_year2020–21passengers= 39,078}}
{{Rail pass boxpass_year2021–22passengers= 0.106 million}}
{{Rail pass boxpass_year2022–23passengers= 0.108 million}}
{{Rail pass boxpass_year2023–24passengers= 0.119 million}}
{{Rail pass boxpass_year2024–25passengers= 0.134 million}}
footnotesPassenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road

-- Watlington railway station (formerly known as Magdalen Road) is on the Fen line in the east of England, serving the village of Watlington, Norfolk. It is 90 mi measured from London Liverpool Street and is situated between and stations. Its three-letter station code is WTG.

The station and all trains calling are operated by Great Northern (with service to and from .)

History

The Bill for the Lynn and Ely Railway received Royal Assent on 30 June 1845. Work started on the line in 1846 and the line and its stations were opened on 27 October 1846. Watlington station opened with the line and was, as it is now, situated South of Lynn station (now King's Lynn). The station to the south was St Germain's station. The line ran from Ely to Downham, the eventual destination being Ely.

Watlington station, from 1847 part of the East Anglian Railway, became part of the Great Eastern Railway in 1862, and was renamed Magdalen Road in 1875 (a name which, perhaps, better reflects its lonely rural location in the middle of the flatlands of the East Anglian Fens). From 1848 onwards, Watlington was a junction, as a line once branched off from there to Wisbech. The branch, along with Magdalen Road station, was closed in 1968.

Due to local efforts, however, Magdalen Road station was reopened in 1975, and in 1989 returned to its original title of Watlington. The signal box at the station, in active use today, still bears a Network SouthEast sign with the Magdalen Road name. The current southbound platform, behind the signal box, dates from the early 1990s; the original station buildings on the southbound side have since been converted into a private residence. The original wooden waiting room on the northbound platform was replaced around the same time, though the original platform still survives as part of an extended platform.

Before electrification, services were normally operated by InterCity (latterly Network SouthEast) locomotive-hauled trains, normally pulling British Rail Mark 2b coaches (many services featured restaurant cars). The locomotives were usually Class 37 diesel-electrics, sometimes Class 31s or 47s. Off-peak links were often provided by Metro-Cammell diesel multiple units.

The station is mentioned by author Lisa St Aubin de Teran in a memoir as being the station closest to her Norfolk home - she reminisced about conversations with the train guard who was checking tickets, where she requested that the train stop at the station (for many years, most trains only called at the station if a passenger requested it, rather than it being a regular timetabled stop).

Services

All services at Watlington are operated by Great Northern using EMUs.

The typical off-peak service in trains per hour is:

  • 1 tph to
  • 1 tph to

Additional services call at the station during the peak hours.

References

References

  1. Butt, R.V.J. (1995). ''The Directory of Railway Stations'', Patrick Stephens Ltd, Sparkford, {{ISBN. 1-85260-508-1, pp. 152 & 243.
  2. C.J. Allen {{full citation needed. (January 2016)
  3. {{NRtimes. December 2023. 25
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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