Woodkirk railway station

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

LocationWoodkirk, City of Leeds
England
Coordinates53°43′19″N 1°35′28″W / 53.722°N 1.591°W / 53.722; -1.591
LineBatley to Beeston Line
Woodkirk railway station
An image of raised stone setts surrounded by trees and leaves (autumn time)
Woodkirk railway station
General information
LocationWoodkirk, City of Leeds
England
Coordinates53°43′19″N 1°35′28″W / 53.722°N 1.591°W / 53.722; -1.591
Grid referenceSE270251
LineBatley to Beeston Line
Platforms2
Tracks2
History
Pre-groupingGreat Northern Railway
Post-groupingLondon and North Eastern Railway
Key dates
1 July 1890Opened to goods traffic
1 August 1890Opened to passenger traffic
23 September 1939Closed
Location

Woodkirk railway station was a Great Northern Railway (GNR) station on the Batley to Beeston line, which connected Batley to Leeds Central, in West Yorkshire, England. The station opened in July 1890 and was closed in September 1939 to passengers, but the line stayed open until 1964. The station was 1+34 miles (2.8 km) north of Batley railway station, and 6+34 miles (10.9 km) south of Leeds Central railway station.

The 4+34-mile (7.6 km) line connecting Batley to Tingley and Beeston (commonly called the Batley & Beeston Line), was authorised by an Act of Parliament in 1881.[1][2] The line served an infill purpose, connecting the Great Northern Railway's Batley station with Beeston railway station on what is now the Leeds arm of the East Coast Main Line.[3] At Tingley railway station, it intersected with the line between Bradford and Wakefield via Morley Top.[4]

Although the southern end from Batley railway station was connected to Soothill Wood Colliery in 1887, the station at Woodkirk and the section on to Tingley and Beeston did not open until 1890. Batty speculates money was an issue due to the heavy engineering on a short 5-mile (8 km) line, having cuttings, tunnels and a viaduct over the ECML at Beeston.[5] On being awarded the Act of Parliament for the line in 1881, the GNR allocated £125,000 (equivalent to £15,902,000 in 2023) to the line's construction.[6] Goods traffic started in July, and passengers trains first started calling at the station from 1 August 1890 onwards.[7] The Railway Clearing House handbook on stations from 1904 shows Woodkirk to have had a crane which could lift 10 tonnes (11 tons), and had six goods sidings in the immediate vicinity (mostly quarries). It also details that the Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway (L&YR) had running powers over the line.[8]

The station closed to passengers in September 1939, however, the line remained open to passenger trains until October 1951. The southern section of 1+34 miles (2.8 km) from Batley to Woodkirk closed completely in July 1953, but freight continued on the line northwards, (specifically the quarry traffic around Woodkirk) until June 1964.[9]

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