Shottle Railway Station
History
Opened with other stations on the branch line to Wirksworth on 1 October 1867, it was designed by the Midland Railway company architect John Holloway Sanders.
Shottle remained open until 16 June 1947, when the Wirksworth branch passenger service was withdrawn on a temporary basis in response to post-war fuel shortages. This was made permanent with effect from May 1949, when the line was removed from the summer timetable. Freight facilities remained rail-served at Shottle until 2 March 1964, while the branch continued to be used for mineral traffic until December 1989.
The station buildings, platform and former railway cottages remain; the former and part of the station yard are owned by a local oil distribution company, which uses the building as their headquarters and have repaired its structure in a sympathetic manner. Public access to the site is limited.
The branch line is owned by WyvernRail plc and forms part of the heritage Ecclesbourne Valley Railway. The section of the line through Shottle is now in use by passenger services, as is the station itself that has now recently reopened to passengers for the very first time in 65 years since 1947. The platform is open but the station building remains private.
Principal traffic on this section comprises road/rail plant that uses the line as part of a formal acceptance procedure for the Rail Safety and Standards Board (RSSB). To support these operations, siding space has been reinstated at the site.
During the 2012 season, a passing loop was constructed at Shottle allowing train services to continue while the platform was being rebuilt; the pointwork at the southern end having slewed into a Y-shape over the winter months. A temporary 8 miles per hour (13 km/h) speed limit is in place. As of March 2016, two-train running is now possible following completion of rebuilding work, increasing train services to approximately seven round-trip services a day.
Stationmasters
- John Towler until 1873
- J. Clementson 1873 - 1874 (formerly station master at Long Preston)
- Eli Croft 1874 - 1876
- Herbert Barber 1876 - 1908
- Frederick George Arnson ca. 1912
- H. Swift 1914 - 1929 (also station master at Hazelwood)
- G.W. Marple 1929 - 1936 (also station master at Hazelwood until 1931, then also station master at Idridgehay, afterwards station master at Wirksworth)
- A.H. Webb 1936 - 1937 (also station master at Idridgehay)
- A. Harrison 1937 - 1938 (also station master at Idridgehay, afterwards station master at Little Eaton)
- W. Cooke 1938 - ???? (also station master at Idridgehay)
Location
The station is located just off the A517 road, which is the main route from Belper to Ashbourne. New access has been created and passengers can now enter the station from the step entrance off the A517 Belper - Ashbourne Road, near to the cross-roads with the B5023. Disabled access is currently still under construction at this time. The road to the east of the line is private, belonging to the company which owns the station buildings. It is a request-only stop.
The nearest settlement to the station is the group of dwellings and public house at the road junction, known as Cowers Lane. However, the station is more or less equidistant from the two slightly larger settlements of Turnditch to the west and Shottlegate to the east.
Service
The Ecclesbourne Valley Railway runs services between Duffield and Wirksworth, via Shottle and Idridgehay. Timetables vary during the year, with more services at weekends and school holidays; patterns include yellow, purple and green days. Trains only run to Ravenstor on special event days.
Preceding station | Historical railways | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Hazelwood | Midland Railway Wirksworth Branch |
Idridgehay | ||
Heritage railways | ||||
Duffield | Ecclesbourne Valley Railway | Idridgehay |
References
Citations
- ^ "Notes by the Way". Derbyshire Times and Chesterfield Herald. British Newspaper Archive. 1 November 1884. Retrieved 12 July 2016 – via British Newspaper Archive.
- ^ "Made Station-Master at Wirksworth". Derbyshire Times and Chesterfield Herald. England. 11 September 1936. Retrieved 16 February 2021 – via British Newspaper Archive.
- ^ "Shottle & Turnditch". Belper News. England. 25 June 1937. Retrieved 16 February 2021 – via British Newspaper Archive.
- ^ "Idridgehay Stationmaster". Derby Daily Telegraph. England. 30 December 1938. Retrieved 16 February 2021 – via British Newspaper Archive.
- ^ "Calendar and Timetable". Ecclesbourne Valley Railway (Wyvernrail plc). Retrieved 30 September 2024.
- ^ "Ravenstor Station". Ecclesbourne Valley Railway. Retrieved 30 September 2024.
Sources
- Kelly's Directory of the Counties of Derby, Notts, Leicester and Rutland, pub. London (May, 1891) – Hulland – pp.234-235 Hulland is described as "3½ miles west from Shottle station"
- Wirksworth – Parish Records 1608-1899 – Old Photos – Shottle Railway Station photos of the station from 1910 and 2004.
- Sprenger, Howard (2004). The Wirksworth Branch. London: Oakwood Press. ISBN 0-85361-625-6.
External links
- Technical note describing the test procedure for "Possession-only rail vehicles prevention of derailment assessment" which references the use of the Wirksworth Branch
- Ecclesbourne Valley Railway official website
- Ecclesbourne Valley Railway Association official website
- Statutory Instrument 1996 No. 2660: The Duffield and Wirksworth Light Railway Order 1996
- British Railways in 1960 - the Wirksworth branch