Ashford West Railway Station
History
Opening
The station opened on 1 July 1884 as the new terminus of the Maidstone Line by the London, Chatham and Dover Railway (LCDR), who had extended it from Maidstone East. A connection between the LCDR and the rival SER South Eastern Railway's South Eastern Main Line opened to traffic on 1 November 1891. The station was located off Gasworks Lane, near Ashford's cattle market, and was used for cattle and sheep traffic after it had closed to passengers.
Facilities comprised three platforms. There was a carriage shed and an engine shed, with a turntable, which was removed and installed at Deal in 1904. Two signal boxes controlled the station.
Closure
From 1 January 1899, passenger services were transferred to the former SER station. The engine shed closed on this date. was later converted into a works for cleaning cloths used in locomotive cleaning. Over a million were processed annually, with the reclaimed oil being re-used in the lubrication of points and point rodding. The platform canopies were intact in the mid-1930s, but had been removed by July 1957.
The station site was largely intact as late as 1985. The main station building was used for railway offices and residential accommodation, and was still standing as of 1994. Much of the track around the station was used by the engineers department until the 1990s. The remaining buildings and track were removed in 1999 for the construction of HS1.
Preceding station | Disused railways | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Terminus | London, Chatham and Dover Railway Maidstone Line |
Hothfield |
References
- ^ Mitchell & Smith 1994, Historical Background.
- ^ Mitchell & Smith 1994, Ashford West.
- ^ Mitchell & Smith 1994, Illustration 117.
- ^ Mitchell & Smith 1994, Illustration 112.
- ^ Mitchell & Smith 1994, Illustration 115.
- ^ "Ashford". Kentrail. Retrieved 13 May 2015.
- ^ Mitchell & Smith 1994, Illustration 116.
- ^ Mitchell & Smith 1994, Illustration 113.
- ^ Mitchell & Smith 1994, Illustration 119.
- ^ Mitchell & Smith 1994, Illustration 114.
- ^ Ashton, Ben. "The second abandoned Ashford railway station everyone has forgotten about". Kent Live. Local World. Retrieved 9 January 2020.
- Sources
- Mitchell, Vic; Smith, Keith (1994). Swanley to Ashford. Midhurst: Middleton Press. ISBN 1 873793 45 6.