Grange Road railway station

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Platforms1
StatusDisused
Grange Road
General information
LocationCrawley Down, Mid Sussex, West Sussex
England
Grid referenceTQ346375
Platforms1
Other information
StatusDisused
History
Pre-groupingLondon, Brighton and South Coast Railway
Post-groupingSouthern Railway
Southern Region of British Railways
Key dates
March 1860First station opened
1876resited
2 January 1967 [1]Closed
Location
Grange Road, c1905

Grange Road was a railway station on the Three Bridges to Tunbridge Wells Central Line. The first station opened in 1860 and was sited on the east side of the level crossing. In 1876 a new enlarged station was opened on the west side of the level crossing, with a footbridge added in 1897.[2] The station and railway closed in 1967, a casualty of the Beeching Axe.[1] Good facilities in the station were withdrawn from 2.10.1961.[3]

The original proposal to construct the railway line drew objections from one J. H. Wilson, the owner of "The Grange" house, who refused to allow a station on his estate and demanded that the line be deviated through a tunnel. The railway company was not prepared to go to such expense and it was agreed instead that the route of the line would be shifted north. Wilson still stubbornly refused to part with his land and required the matter to be taken to arbitration under the Lands Clauses Consolidation Act 1845 (8 & 9 Vict. c. 18). Before the arbitrator he demanded £5,500 compensation, but only received £1,400.[4] In deference to Mr Wilson, the station, which opened in March 1860, was named "Grange Road" and later "Grange Road for Crawley Down and Turners Hill".

Development

At first, only three trains a day called at the station but this changed from 2 April 1860 when all trains would stop there upon request. It ceased to be a request stop in 1865 and was resited with a larger station in 1876, with a footbridge added in 1897. The arrival of the railway provided the impetus for wealthy Victorian entrepreneurs to build large estates in what had previously been an entirely agricultural area. Seeing the development potential, farmers such as Arthur Royds, the owner of Down Park Farm, sold off their farmland. Royds' farm was sold to James Harrison, a barrister from Caterham, who had a mansion built on the site.[5] These large estates required domestic staff and became major employers in the area, drawing yet more migrants many of whom married and settled in the area.

Closure

Although the railway did attract a large influx of migrants to what became Crawley Down which developed further in the 1930s, the real expansion of the community came between the years 1971 to 1981 when the population more than doubled, notably with the construction of the Burleigh Wood housing estate. This was too late to save the railway line and Grange Road station which closed in 1967 under the programme put forward by East Grinstead resident and British Rail Chairman, Richard Beeching.[6] The station was closed irrespective of the fact that annual takings were over £5,000, and 80 people were using the station every day to commute up to London.[4]

The site today

See also

References

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