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Grayrigg railway station

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Grayrigg railway station
General information
LocationSouth Lakeland
Platforms2
History
Pre-groupingLondon and North Western Railway
Post-groupingLondon, Midland and Scottish Railway
Key dates
1849first station opened
November 1861resited
1 February 1954Closed to passengers

Grayrigg railway station in Lambrigg parish, was situated on the course of the original Lancaster and Carlisle Railway (L&CR) (the West Coast Main Line) between Lancaster and Penrith. It served the village and rural district of Grayrigg, Cumbria, England. The new station opened in November 1861, and closed on 1 February 1954[1] replacing the L&CR station that was located 3.22km west of the station and closed in 1849.[1]

Lancaster and
Carlisle Railway
Carlisle Citadel
Brisco
Wreay
Southwaite
Calthwaite
Plumpton
Penrith
Clifton Moor
Clifton and Lowther
Shap
Shap Summit
914 ft
278.6 m
Tebay
Low Gill
(2nd)
Low Gill
(1st)
Grayrigg
(1st)
Grayrigg
(2nd)
Oxenholme
Milnthorpe
Burton and Holme
Carnforth
Bolton-le-Sands
Hest Bank
Lancaster Castle
Lancaster (Greaves)

The station

The scene at the Grayrigg derailment.

The station had two platforms, a signal box to the north and a station master's house. The goods yard had a weighing machine and a coal yard.[2] The much modified station house survives, the platforms have however been demolished and the line has been electrified. An electricity supply sub-station is located here and the railway becomes triple track here for a distance running north.

The old Ingleton Branch Line's Low Gill Viaduct lay nearby. This line was completed in 1861 and served the towns of Ingleton, Kirkby Lonsdale and Sedbergh. It closed to passengers in 1954 and was dismantled in 1967.[3]

The Grayrigg derailment

A fatal railway accident occurred on 23 February 2007, just to the south of Grayrigg. The derailment was caused by a faulty set of points controlled from the Lambrigg ground frame. The points which caused the derailment, and points on the opposite line, were removed from the track following the derailment. The track is now welded continuously for 2.2 miles here, including the line over the Docker Viaduct. The overhead line equipment had to be replaced, double-line catenary from a single stand being used.

Stations on the line

The next station on the line towards Carlisle was Low Gill and the preceding station was Oxenholme.

References

Notes
  1. ^ a b Butt 1995, p. 108
  2. ^ Old Maps Retrieved : 2012-09-15
  3. ^ Butt, Page 207
Sources
  • Butt, R.V.J. (1995). The Directory Of Railway Stations. Patrick Stephens Limited. ISBN 978-1-85260-508-7.