Witney goods station served the Oxfordshire town of Witney on the Oxford, Witney and Fairford Railway. It consisted of seven sidings, a goods shed, a wooden parcel office and a cattle dock. It also had an engine shed, which was demolished early in the twentieth century. Following the opening of the East Gloucestershire Railway in 1873, the station became a goods depot, with passengers using the second station situated to the south. The original station remained open to goods traffic until 1970.
Witney (Goods) | |
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General information | |
Location | Witney, West Oxfordshire England |
Coordinates | 51.77722°N 1.48056°W / 51.77722; -1.48056 |
Grid reference | SP357090 |
Platforms | 2 |
Other information | |
Status | Disused |
History | |
Original company | Witney Railway |
Pre-grouping | Great Western Railway |
Post-grouping | Great Western Railway |
Key dates | |
14 November 1861 | Station opens |
15 January 1873 | Station closes to passengers |
2 November 1970 | Station closes to goods |
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The station was opened by the Witney Railway on 4 November 1861 as the western terminus of its line from Yarnton.[1][2] A single platform was provided in addition to a run-around loop and a carriage siding.[3] A large stone goods shed was served by two sidings, one of which was accessed by a short spur from a wagon turntable.[3] The station building was a small weather-boarded structure with a hipped roof and a platform canopy.[3] At the end of the line stood a single-road engine shed and water tank.[4][5][6][7] The shed, which lost its locomotive allocation when the new Witney station opened, was demolished during November 1905 after having been used for storage purposes.[8][6]
When the East Gloucestershire Railway opened an extension of the line in 1873,[9] a new passenger station was constructed on a different site to the south,[10] opening on 15 January 1873.[1][2][11][12][13][14] This left the old station on a spur line, and it became the town's goods depot on the same date.[1][2][15] The directors of the Witney Railway had first been opposed to the downgrading of their station but the Great Western Railway, which was to work the new line,[16] insisted that agreement would need to be reached between the East Gloucestershire and the Witney as to a new station which would be operated on a joint basis.[17][12] Following its conversion to a goods depot, the station's basic layout remained essentially intact, so much so that it continued to resemble the old passenger station.[8] The Great Western made several later additions including extensions to the goods shed, a stable block to accommodate the shunting and dray horses, a wood store, a corrugated iron warehouse and a stationmaster's house.[8][18] The house is said to be the last to have been constructed by the Great Western before the Second World War.[8][19] The station canopy was boarded in to increase the storage space for parcels.[7]
The station remained busy right up until the later years of the line.[20] In 1957, over 44,000 tons of goods were handled as well as 66,000 parcels.[20] 99,000 bales of blankets were dispatched by rail every year,[20] the main source of traffic.[14] After the withdrawal of services on the East Gloucestershire Railway, British Railways began deliberately running down the Witney Railway to ensure its closure; it offered the Witney Blanket Company a cheaper rate if it agreed to transfer its goods to road.[21][22] Staff at the station was reduced to a single person as the service was cut back to a coal train on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays and subsequently only Tuesdays and Fridays.[21] The sidings in the goods yard were lifted in Winter 1968, leaving the large goods shed and siding to fall derelict.[21] The remaining traffic was dealt with behind the station building or in the coal sidings.[21]
Witney goods station was closed along with the Witney Railway on 2 November 1970.[1][2][23] The last train to traverse the line was the "Witney Wanderer" on 31 October, but this did not actually enter the Witney terminus.[24][22]
Preceding station | Disused railways | Following station | ||
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Terminus | Great Western Railway Witney Railway |
South Leigh Line and station closed |
The station building survived into the 1980s engulfed by an industrial estate constructed on the site of the former goods depot.[25] It was accidentally damaged in 1980 when a chimney stack was brought down after a tractor-mounted loading shovel became caught up in an electric cable attached to the chimney.[26] The station building was subsequently moved to Wallingford on the Cholsey and Wallingford Railway.[27][28] The goods yard, weighbridge and parcel shed continued to be used by Marriott's coal merchants until May 1995 when they were demolished and subsequently replaced by a Sainsbury's supermarket.[29][30][23]
The former goods shed was converted into a club known as "Sidings" which used a 1955 British Railways Mark 1 coach as its entrance.[31] Both the goods shed and the stationmaster's house remain.[23]
Closed railway stations in Oxfordshire | |
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Great Western Main Line |
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Didcot, Newbury and Southampton Railway | |
Cherwell Valley line |
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Witney Railway; East Gloucestershire Railway | |
Wycombe Railway |
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Watlington and Princes Risborough Railway |
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Chiltern Main Line |
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Banbury and Cheltenham Direct Railway |
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Great Central Main Line |
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Varsity Line |
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Banbury to Verney Junction branch line | |
Blenheim and Woodstock branch line | |
Short branches |
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