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Pentrecourt Platform railway station

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Steamybrian2 (talk | contribs) at 17:31, 14 October 2016 (The station: Platform demolished). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Pentrecourt Platform[1]
General information
LocationCarmarthen
Platforms1
History
Original companyGreat Western Railway
Key dates
1 February 1912[1]Station opened
15 September 1952[1]Station closed
1973Line closed

Pentrecourt Platform was a minor railway station near the village of Pentrecwrt, West Wales, on the originally broad gauge Teifi Valley line of the Carmarthen and Cardigan Railway. The halt opened in 1912 to serve the old Alltycefn Woollen Mill and the village, lying some 5 miles and 21 chains from the junction at Pencader and situated between the villages of Llandysul and Henllan.[2]

History

The Teifi Valley Railway was originally conceived as a 7 ft 14 in (2,140 mm) broad-gauge line between Carmarthen and Cardigan. The line was opened temporarily in 1860, under the South Wales Railway and was fully opened the following year. It was operated by the Carmarthen and Cardigan Railway between Carmarthen and Cynwyl Elfed. In 1864, the line was extended to Pencader and Llandysul.

Converted to standard gauge (4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm)) by 1872, however the company was bankrupt. The line was purchased by the Great Western Railway and extended to a terminus at Newcastle Emlyn in 1895,[3] The GWR did not build the line on to Cardigan and Newcastle Emlyn remained the terminus.

Although passenger services ceased in 1952, goods services continued until 1973 because of the milk train services to the Co-operative Group creamery.[4]

The station

The blocked up entrance to the Alltycefn Tunnel.

The single line crossed from the south side of the valley over the Afon Teifi to the north side via a plate girder bridge supported on stone piers. A farmer's occupation bridge pierced the embankment a little further on, and then a culvert for a stream before the single short wooden platform and pagoda style corrugated iron hut on the up side of the running line was reached. The Platform was referred to as a Halt in timetables.[2]

The line ran downstream from the station towards Henllan, passing under the minor road supported on the Alltycefan Bridge before curving to the right alongside the steep hillside above the river and then passing into the 167 yard long Alltycefan tunnel.[2]

The station was demolished after closure. In 2015 the platform site was now overgrown with the trackbed now an unofficial footpath.


Preceding station   Disused railways   Following station
Llandyssul   Newcastle Emlyn Branch
Carmarthen and Cardigan Railway
  Henllan

References

Notes
  1. ^ a b c Butt 1995, p. 184.
  2. ^ a b c Pentrecourt Halt model Retrieved : 2012-09-27
  3. ^ "Newcastle Emlyn railway station". isused-stations.org.uk. Retrieved 2012-01-28.
  4. ^ "Dairies in Ceredigion". Ceredigion.gov.uk. Retrieved 2012-01-28.
Sources
  • Holden, John S. Holden (2007). The Manchester & Milford Railway. The Oakwood Press. ISBN 0-85361-658-2.
Manchester and Milford Railway
Aberystwyth
Llanrhystyd Road
Llanilar
Felindyffryn Halt
Llanidloes
Trawscoed
Caradog Falls Halt
Llangurig
unbuilt connection
15 miles (24 km)
Aberayron
Llanerch-Ayron Halt
Strata Florida
Crossways Halt
Alltddu Halt
Ciliau-Aeron Halt
Tregaron
Felin Fach
Pont Llanio
Talsarn Halt
Olmarch Halt
Blaenplwyf Halt
Llangybi
Silian Halt
Derry Ormond
Newcastle Emlyn
Pontgoch
Lampeter
Henllan
Pencarreg Halt
Alltycefn Tunnel
Llanybydder
Pentrecourt Platform
Maesycrugiau
Llandyssul
Bryn Teifi
Teifi Valley route
(Carmarthen & Cardigan Rly)
Pencader Junction
Pencader
Pencader Tunnel
985 yd
901 m
Llanpumpsaint
Conwil
Danycoed Halt
Llwyfan Cerrig
Bronwydd Arms
Abergwili Junction
Carmarthen Town
Carmarthen