Lord's Bridge railway station

Coordinates: 52°10′14″N 0°02′20″E / 52.1706°N 0.0389°E / 52.1706; 0.0389
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Lord's Bridge
General information
LocationSouth Cambridgeshire
Line(s)Bedford & Cambridge Railway
Platforms2
History
Pre-groupingLondon and North Western Railway
Post-groupingLondon, Midland and Scottish Railway
London Midland Region of British Railways (1948-1958)
Eastern Region of British Railways (1958-1968)
Key dates
1 August 1862Opened
13 July 1964[1]Closed to goods
1 January 1968[2]Closed to passengers

Lord's Bridge was a railway station on the Varsity Line which ran between Oxford and Cambridge. Situated in the north of the parish of Harlton on the western outskirts of Cambridge, it was the penultimate station before the line's eastern terminus at Cambridge. The station opened in 1862 and closed more than a century later in 1968. It is now the home to the Mullard Radio Astronomy Observatory's rail-mounted radio-telescopes.

History

The station in December 1966

As with the neighbouring Old North Road station, Lord's Bridge was built in open country. It was principally a stop for the local Lord of the Manor.[3] The station's platforms were lengthened on 17 July 1907 to accommodate the longer trains running on the line.[4]

The station was equipped with a LNWR type 4 signal box from which a key could be obtained to unlock the Toft & Kingston siding to the west which handled sugar beet and hay traffic.[5] The traffic through Lord's Bridge was to change during the Second World War when a large ammunition store was built up at the station which brought many new workings to the line including an ex-Midland 2F tank locomotive which was kept permanently there for the purposes of shunting each train into the depot as they arrived and preparing the empties for return.[6]


Preceding station   Disused railways   Following station
Old North Road   British Railways
Varsity Line
  Cambridge

Present day

MRAO lecture hall and exhibition centre in the station house of Lord's Bridge railway station in June 2014

Following closure of the line between Bedford and Cambridge on New Year's Eve 1967, a section from Lord's Bridge station towards Cambridge became the site of the University of Cambridge's Mullard Radio Astronomy Observatory. The long and level stretch of line, the nearest suitable abandoned line to Cambridge, was ideal for the Observatory's CLFST, AMI, One-Mile and Ryle rail-mounted radio-telescopes which move along a 4.8 km length of track of approximately 20 ft gauge.[7]

The goods shed remains as does a single length of the eastbound platform.[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ Clinker, C.R. (October 1978). Clinker's Register of Closed Passenger Stations and Goods Depots in England, Scotland and Wales 1830-1977. Bristol: Avon-AngliA Publications & Services. p. 89. ISBN 0-905466-19-5. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  2. ^ Butt, R.V.J. (1995). The Directory of Railway Stations, Patrick Stephens Ltd, Sparkford, ISBN 1-85260-508-1, p. 149.
  3. ^ Bedford & Cambridge Railway. Archived 2008-07-07 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Simpson, Bill (1981). Oxford to Cambridge Railway (Vol. 2). Poole, Dorset: Oxford Publishing Co. p. 94. ISBN 0-86093-121-8.
  5. ^ Simpson, B., p. 123.
  6. ^ Simpson, B., p. 83.
  7. ^ Joby, R.S. (1985). Forgotten Railways: Vol. 7 East Anglia. Newton Abbott, Devon: David & Charles. p. 104. ISBN 0-946537-25-9. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  8. ^ RT02 - Mullard Radio Astronomy Observatory

External links

52°10′14″N 0°02′20″E / 52.1706°N 0.0389°E / 52.1706; 0.0389