Details |
Railway station, still in use, built in 1849. The station was opened on the 1st of November 1849, and closed on the 4th of September 1967. It was later restored and reopened in May 2009. It is a single-storey, four-bay railway station that is predominantly harled, with a bull-faced battered red sandstone base course, continuous red sandstone cill course and crowstepped gables. The south-east (railway) elevation is symmetrical, with timber lined walls, two central recessed bays and a pair of architraved bipartite windows to the centre that are flanked by notice boards. A cast-iron canopy oversails the recess and platform, with depressed arches supported on cast-iron columns. The outer bays are gabled with three-light canted windows to each and panelled timber doors with small-pane skylights to the inside returns. The symmetrical north-west elevation is four-bay, with a pair of bipartite windows to the centre bays and an eaves blocking course above. The outer bays are advanced and gabled, with a bipartite window to the centre of each. The south-west elevation is blank. The grey slate roof has tiled ridges and there is a glazed roof to canopy. Coped harled stacks with circular cans break the pitch. The 2nd edition map also shows a goods shed and signal box to the east, footbridge and weighing machine.
|