Pontefract Monkhill
National Rail
A Class 153 unit at platform 2
General information
LocationPontefract, City of Wakefield
England
Coordinates53°41′56″N 1°18′14″W / 53.6988°N 1.3040°W / 53.6988; -1.3040
Grid referenceSE460227
Managed byNorthern Trains
Transit authorityWest Yorkshire Metro
Platforms2
Other information
Station codePFM
Fare zone3
ClassificationDfT category F1
History
Opened1848
Passengers
2018/19Increase 0.272 million
2019/20Increase 0.293 million
2020/21Decrease 78,436
 Interchange  1,240
2021/22Increase 0.229 million
 Interchange Increase 3,670
2022/23Decrease 0.198 million
 Interchange Increase 4,381
Notes
Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road

Pontefract Monkhill railway station is the busiest station in the town of Pontefract, West Yorkshire, England. The station is on the Pontefract Line managed by Northern but is also served by Grand Central and is 14 miles (23 km) south east of Leeds.

The other stations in the town are Pontefract Tanshelf and Pontefract Baghill.

History

The station in 1987.

The lines to Leeds via Castleford and Wakefield Kirkgate separate immediately west of the station, which was opened by the Wakefield, Pontefract & Goole Railway (one of the constituent companies of the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway) in April 1848.[1] The branch to Castleford (Cutsyke) & Methley Junction was completed the following year (on 1 December) and a pair of short curves were subsequently constructed from the eastern end to link up with the Swinton & Knottingley Joint line following its opening in the spring of 1879. One of these was used by passenger trains between Leeds & Pontefract Baghill until 1964, although it has since been lifted. The Wakefield to Goole passenger service was withdrawn on 2 January 1967[1] (although trains to and from Goole continued, running instead to Castleford & Leeds) but the line remained open to carry coal to the power stations to the east of Knottingley. Services on the Wakefield to Knottingley route were reinstated in May 1992.

Facilities

The station is unstaffed and no longer has permanent buildings other than standard waiting shelters. There is an automated ticket machine on the Leeds bound platform. There are digital information screens and timetable posters on both platforms, along with a customer help point on platform 1. Step-free access is only available from the car park to platform 1, as platform 2 (towards Knottingley and Goole) can only be reached via the footbridge (which has stairs).[2]

Services

From Mondays to Saturdays, there is a roughly half-hourly service operated by Northern between Leeds and Knottingley.

In the Leeds direction, alternate trains run via Castleford or Featherstone and Wakefield Westgate.[3] Three trains via Castleford are extended to or from Goole: one service from Goole to Leeds in the morning (which is formed from an empty train that runs towards Goole earlier) and one return trip from Leeds to Goole in the evening.

On Sundays the service is hourly, with trains also running alternately via Castleford and Wakefield to Leeds, and no services operate past Knottingley to Goole.

Preceding station National Rail National Rail Following station
Northern Trains
Doncaster   Grand Central
West Riding
  Wakefield Kirkgate

London

In January 2009, open access operator Grand Central was given the go ahead by the Office of Rail Regulation (ORR) to operate a service between Bradford Interchange and London King's Cross[4] which call here (giving the station a regular service to the capital for the first time). Three daily paths in each direction are allocated for these new trains, although one morning northbound service uses a different route between Doncaster and Wakefield and consequently does not call here.

The service is operated and branded by Grand Central, using refurbished Class 180 units, and started on 23 May 2010.[5] However, according to a recent document submitted the ORR, only 15 passengers a day (on average)[6] are making use of the new service.

The timetable has though been altered to serve Mirfield in addition to the other intermediate stops since December 2011, although only one of the three northbound trains actually serves both this station and Mirfield (the evening departure from King's Cross is routed via Adwick and Fitzwilliam and so does not call here, whilst the morning one calls but omits the Mirfield stop).

As of 2023, there are three southbound services and two northbound services per day on weekdays. On Saturdays this is increased to four southbound services but reduced to one northbound service. There is no Grand Central service on Sundays.[7]

Rail services in Pontefract

Notes

  1. 1 2 Body, p. 143
  2. Pontefract Monkhill station facilities National Rail Enquiries; Retrieved 19 January 2017
  3. Table 32 National Rail timetable, May 2019
  4. ORR Track Access Applications Decision for the ECML - 28 January 2009 Archived 24 March 2009 at the UK Government Web Archive ORR Website; Retrieved 29 January 2009
  5. RAIL issue 641
  6. "End of the line for rail link?". Pontefract and Castleford Express News. Archived from the original on 4 June 2012. Retrieved 19 March 2011.
  7. West Yorkshire and Doncaster timetable

References

  • Body, G. (1988), PSL Field Guides - Railways of the Eastern Region Volume 2, Patrick Stephens Ltd, Wellingborough, ISBN 1-85260-072-1

Media related to Pontefract Monkhill railway station at Wikimedia Commons

Platform 1
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