Great Haywood | |
---|---|
General information | |
Location | Great Haywood, Staffordshire England |
Coordinates | 52°48′02″N 2°00′24″W / 52.800694°N 2.006619°W |
Grid reference | SJ996225 |
Platforms | 2 |
Other information | |
Status | Disused |
History | |
Original company | North Staffordshire Railway |
Post-grouping | London, Midland & Scottish Railway |
Key dates | |
6 June 1887 | Opened[1] |
6 January 1947 | Closed[1] |
Great Haywood railway station is a disused railway station in Staffordshire, England.
The railway line between Stone and Colwich, England, was opened by the North Staffordshire Railway (NSR) in 1849[2] but a station to serve the village of Great Haywood was not opened until 1887. Although the line was a busy route for the NSR for traffic to and from Birmingham and the south; the amount of local traffic carried was low and passenger services were never intensive.
Passenger services on the line were, as a wartime measure, reduced in 1941 to a single train per day from Stoke which had no corresponding return journey.[1] In 1947 all stopping passenger services between Stone and Colwich were withdrawn and Great Haywood along with the neighbouring station, Hixon, closed.[3]
Preceding station | Historical railways | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Hixon Line open, station closed |
North Staffordshire Railway Stone to Colwich Line |
Colwich Line open, station closed |
References
- Notes
- 1 2 3 Quick (2009), p. 193.
- ↑ Christiansen & Miller (1971), p. 299.
- ↑ Jeuda (2010), p. 91.
- Sources
- Christiansen, Rex & Miller, Robert William (1971). The North Staffordshire Railway. Newton Abbot, Devon: David & Charles. ISBN 0-7153-5121-4.
- Jeuda, Basil (2010). The North Staffordshire Railway in LMS days. Vol. 1. Lydney, Gloucestershire: Lightmoor Press. ISBN 978-1899889-48-8.
- Quick, Michael (2009) [2001]. Railway passenger stations in Great Britain: a chronology (4th ed.). Oxford: Railway & Canal Historical Society. ISBN 978-0-901461-57-5. OCLC 612226077.