Desborough railway station was built by the Midland Railway on its extension from Leicester to Bedford and Hitchin.
The station opened on 8 May 1857[1] as Desborough. It was renamed on 1 October the same year as Desborough for Rothwell.
On 20 May 1899, Elizabeth Palmer and her five-year-old child, Dixon Palmer, were hit by a fish train whilst crossing the line at the station to get to the opposite platform and killed instantly.[2] By August 1899 the Midland Railway Company had received instructions from the Board of Trade to erect a footbridge over the line.[3]
In response to a requisition from the ratepayers of Rothwell, the Midland Railway Company decided to inaugurate a bus service between Rothwell and Desborough station in 1899.[4] The station was renamed Desborough and Rothwell on 17 October 1899.[5]
The station closed in 1968.[6] The station building still stands but the goods yard area is now built-over, mainly given over to a Co-op Food store and its car park. The remainder of the area is occupied by Albany Sheds.
Preceding station | Disused railways | Following station | ||
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Market Harborough | Midland Railway Midland Main Line |
Glendon and Rushton |
Closed railway stations in Northamptonshire | |
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Northampton–Market Harborough line |
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Banbury to Blisworth |
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Stratford-upon-Avon & Midland Junc Rly |
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Northampton and Peterborough Railway |
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Rugby to Peterborough East |
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Market Harborough to Bedford | |
Higham Ferrers branch |
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Great Central Main Line |
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Northampton loop |
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Rugby–Bletchley |
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Kettering–Huntingdon |
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Kettering–Melton Mowbray |
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Rugby and Stamford Railway | |
Weedon–Marton Junction |
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Other stations |
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