Passing under the line immediately to the northwest, a curved deviation in the road replaced the previous level crossing for the goods line at this location.[1] Opened as Ayr Road in 1866, the station was renamed Dalserf in 1903.[2] Being an exhausting 1.6-mile (2.6km) walk along the road from the village, many locals considered the new name a joke.[3] Progressively doubled, the main line to Coalburn via Tillietudlem was again singled in 1940.[2] Temporarily closed from January 1941 to May 1945,[4] the station closed permanently in 1951.[5] The line closed to freight southwards in 1960, and northwards in 1964.[6]
The railways of South Lanarkshire in 1905
Infrastructure
The station comprised side platforms linked by a footbridge. The main building and goods yard were on the southwest side. On the northeast side was a platform shelter and the Cornsilloch Colliery siding.
The signal box was immediately southeast beside Stonehouse Junction (renamed Dalserf Junction). Farther southeast were sidings at one-half mile (0.8km) for Ashgillhead Colliery, and at three-quarters mile (1.2km) for Auldton Colliery.[7] Immediately northwest was Milburn Chemical Works/Colliery (formerly Skellyton).[8]
Only the station house remains, now a private dwelling.[2] A stone abutment from the railway bridge, 300 yards (270m) southeast from the station, still stands.[9]
Passenger trains proceeded as far north as Ferniegair[1] from December 1866, and via Motherwell to Glasgow Buchanan Street from April 1868. Horse-drawn buses connected Ferniegair to Hamilton West prior to the October 1876 opening to passenger traffic of the new rail link offering onward travel to Glasgow Southside.[10]
In 1887, weekday trains were: 6 via Netherburn to Brocketsbrae (called Lesmahagow at the time), and 5 via Stonehouse to Blackwood.[11] Each southeast-bound train to Ayr Road, comprising up to 8 carriages, was then split for the separate routes.[12] In 1905, when Larkhall Central opened, Larkhall became Larkhall East,[13] and Stonehouse trains no longer travelled via Dalserf. In 1910, weekday trains were 4, terminating at either Netherburn, Brocketsbrae, or Coalburn.[14] The 1935 closure of Stonehouse–Dalserf to passenger and freight traffic[6] suggests that some passenger services used the route after 1905. In 1947, weekday trains were 6, terminating at either Tillietudlem or Brocketsbrae.[15] In 1948, weekday trains were 3, terminating at either Brocketsbrae or Coalburn.[16]
Accidents
1867: When the driver of a coal train, slowly passing the station, slipped on stepping to the ground, the engine wheels cut him in two.[17]
1874: While shunting on the Cornsilloch Colliery siding about 100 yards (91m) from the station, the passenger train from Stonehouse ran over two sleeping trespassers. One died from a crushed skull. The other suffered a mangled hand and serious injury to the opposite arm.[18]
1877: A passing engine severed a pointsman's leg and he died a week later.[19]
1878: While loading ballast stone, a jib crane fell on a worker, who later died of his injuries.[20]
1886: A pack of hare-hunting hounds narrowly escaped total destruction near Ayr Road when an engine driver stopped his train before the pack was cut to pieces.[21]
1889: Nearby, a passing train fatally struck a man walking along the line.[22]
1890: Several runaway wagons smashed together in the vicinity, and the wreckage blocked the main line for several hours.[23] The following month, while coupling a van, the buffers fatally caught a brakeman.[24]
1891: During shunting from the Milburn Chemical Works, a worker slipped between the wagons and died of internal injuries an hour later.[25]
1898: Appearing to have been knocked down by a passing train, the death of a signalman[26] appeared suspicious.[27]
1900: A porter was killed while uncoupling wagons.[28]
1903: A light engine fatally struck a brakeman at the Millburn Colliery.[29]
1908: While standing on a wagon, a brakeman lost two toes caught between the buffers.[30]
"Scotsman, 19 Sep 1891". p.6 – via British Newspaper Archive. James Galsworthy, employed at the Milburn Chemical Company's Works….whilst seeing some waggons shunted….to….Ayr Road Station….his foot slipped, and he fell between the wheels….receiving internal injuries; He died an hour afterwards.
"Edinburgh Evening News, 3 Feb 1898". p.2 – via British Newspaper Archive. Considerable mystery….death of Peter Baxter….body was a mutilated condition on the railway….if foul play….
"Edinburgh Evening News, 2 Jun 1900". p.2 – via British Newspaper Archive. James Budge, a porter, employed Ayr Road Railway Station….killed….when engaged uncoupling waggons….
Jowett, Alan (March 1989). Jowett's Railway Atlas of Great Britain and Ireland: From Pre-Grouping to the Present Day (1sted.). Sparkford: Patrick Stephens Ltd. ISBN978-1-85260-086-0. OCLC22311137.
Sellar, W.S. & Stevenston, J. L. (1981). The Last Trains. (3) South-West Scotland. Edinburgh: Moorfoot Publishing. ISBN0-906606-03-9.
Stansfield, Gordon (1997). Lanarkshire's Lost Railways. Ochiltree: Stenlake. ISBN978-1-872074-96-2.
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