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Lydd Town railway station

Coordinates: 50°57′24″N 0°55′03″E / 50.9567°N 0.9174°E / 50.9567; 0.9174
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Lydd Town
General information
LocationFolkestone & Hythe
Owned bySouthern Railway
Southern Region of British Railways
Managed byLydd Railway Company
South Eastern Railway
South Eastern and Chatham Railway
Platforms2
Key dates
7 December 1881Opened as Lydd
4 July 1937Renamed Lydd Town
6 March 1967Closed to passenger traffic[1]
4 October 1971Closed to regular goods traffic

Lydd Town was a railway station which served the town of Lydd in Kent, England. Opened on 7 December 1881 by The Lydd Railway Company. It closed to passengers in 1967 but the line through the station remained open for freight.

History

Lydd Town railway station in 2008

The Lydd Railway Company (LRC) obtained authorisation to construct a standard gauge single track line from Appledore to Dungeness with intermediate stops at Lydd and Brookland. Having opened the line to traffic on 7 December 1881, the railway company subsequently decided on 16 February 1882 that the line would be worked and maintained by the South Eastern Railway, whose chairman, Edward Watkin, was the father of Alfred Mellor Watkin, chairman of the LRC. On 24 July, the company was authorised to extend the line by building a branch from Lydd to New Romney which opened on 19 June 1884. The LRC was taken into the South Eastern in January 1895, itself becoming part of the South Eastern and Chatham Railway four years later.[2]

Lydd, situated 7 miles (11 km) from Appledore, was the principal station on the line, with a considerable goods yard and a long siding to the nearby military firing range (Lydd Ranges) via the 6-mile (10 km) Lydd Military Railway (1883 - c1926).[3] The approach to Lydd from Brookland saw the line travel over nine level crossings before passing under the line's sole overbridge carrying the B2075 Station Road, before reaching a final level crossing just before the station. The station had two platforms as well as a passing loop and a signal box on the down side.[2]

Following the opening of the Romney, Hythe and Dymchurch Railway in 1927, the extra holiday traffic generated persuaded the Southern Railway (who had taken over the line upon the railway grouping) to realign its branch to New Romney by moving it nearer to the sea and opening two new halts - Lydd-on-Sea and Greatstone-on-Sea - in 1937. The opening of Lydd-on-Sea Halt led to the renaming of Lydd station as "Lydd Town" to avoid any confusion. The station closed on 6 March 1967 in the face of dwindling passenger traffic and insignificant freight returns, although the line remained open through Lydd Town as far as a siding near Dungeness for freight traffic to serve the BNFL nuclear power plant at Dungeness.[4]


Preceding station   Disused railways   Following station
Brookland Halt
Line and station closed
  Southern Railway
New Romney branch
  New Romney and Littlestone-on-Sea
Line and station closed
  BR Southern Region
New Romney branch
  Lydd-on-Sea Halt
Line and station closed
  Southern Railway
Dungeness branch
  Dungeness
Line and station closed

Present and future

Close-up of the station building

The main station building and goods yard remain in an empty and derelict state, having been used as a vehicle repair workshop until the mid-1980s, which led to some internal walls being removed. The up platform has also survived, but the down platform and signal box were demolished in the early 1970s, and the original passing loop was lifted after 1993. The station has suffered from vandalism, with a recent fire destroying a modern shed on the site and lightly damaging the southern end of the main building.[5] In May 2006, British Rail put the site on the market for redevelopment.[6] In March 2008, planning permission was granted to Kent County Council to use the goods yard for the temporary storage of refuse collection vehicles.[7] In July 2013, a new passing loop was added.

The future reuse of the station as a "rail transport interchange" has been written into Shepway District Local Plan which safeguards the route against development prejudicial to the reopening of the line from Appledore to the public.[8] Although reopening of the line to passengers has been mooted from time to time - particularly with regard to improving public access to Lydd Airport[9] - the plans have never materialised. One obstacle in the way of reopening is the 13 level crossings and occupational farm crossings between Appledore and Lydd, which would have to be converted to automatic full-barrier crossings with obstacle detection. Furthermore, neither the line through Lydd nor the Ashford to Hastings line is electrified, requiring passengers to change at Ashford International to diesel railcars.[10]

References

  1. ^ Butt, R.V.J. (1995). The Directory of Railway Stations, Patrick Stephens Ltd, Sparkford, ISBN 1-85260-508-1, p. 151.
  2. ^ a b Harding, Peter (1983). The New Romney Branch Line. Woking, Surrey: Peter A. Harding. pp. 5–8, 12. ISBN 0-9523458-8-9.
  3. ^ White, H.P. (1987). Forgotten Railways: Vol. 6 South-East England. Newton Abbot, Devon: David St John Thomas. p. 98. ISBN 0-946537-37-2.
  4. ^ Oppitz, Leslie (2003). Lost Railways of Kent. Newbury, Berkshire: Countryside Books. p. 82. ISBN 978-1-85306-803-4.
  5. ^ Subterranea Britannica, "Lydd Town".
  6. ^ Kent Rail, "Lydd Town".
  7. ^ Kent County Council, Planning Applications Committee, 18 March 2008.[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ Shepway District Local Plan (March 2006), Policy TR3.
  9. ^ Airport Operators Association, "Lydd: the airport that roared", 31 October 2005. Archived 30 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ Stanford Parish Council, "Proposals for the erection of a terminal building and the construction of a 294m runway at London Ashford Airport", 28 February 2007. Archived 25 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  • Marshall, Chapman F. D. (1963). A History of the Southern Railway. I. Allen. p. 531. OCLC 8610529. Lydd Town (Opened as 'Lydd')...7 Dec., 1881

50°57′24″N 0°55′03″E / 50.9567°N 0.9174°E / 50.9567; 0.9174