Stocksbridge Railway: Difference between revisions
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1874 The company was incorporated. The line was to be just under 2 miles in length. <ref>The Stock Exchange Year Book 1908</ref> | 1874 The company was incorporated. The line was to be just under 2 miles in length. <ref>The Stock Exchange Year Book 1908</ref> | ||
1876 The line was opened | 1876 The line was opened; it became a subsidiary of the steel company, under various ownerships, until 1992 when its separate existence was ended. | ||
Passenger services on the line commenced on 14th April 1877, making use of the bay platform of Deepcar station, to a platform in Stocksbridge, on the edge of the works complex. The service ceased in 1931. | Passenger services on the line commenced on 14th April 1877, making use of the bay platform of Deepcar station, to a platform in Stocksbridge, on the edge of the works complex. The service ceased in 1931. | ||
The line is still open ( | The line is still open (2018) and handles regular traffic to and from the works. | ||
==See Also== | ==See Also== |
Revision as of 10:16, 20 October 2020
of Stocksbridge, near Sheffield
The Stocksbridge Railway was a subsidiary of Samuel Fox and Co and linked the company's works at Stocksbridge, near Sheffield, South Yorkshire with the main line of the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway at Deepcar. [1]
1874 The company was incorporated. The line was to be just under 2 miles in length. [2]
1876 The line was opened; it became a subsidiary of the steel company, under various ownerships, until 1992 when its separate existence was ended.
Passenger services on the line commenced on 14th April 1877, making use of the bay platform of Deepcar station, to a platform in Stocksbridge, on the edge of the works complex. The service ceased in 1931.
The line is still open (2018) and handles regular traffic to and from the works.
See Also
Sources of Information
- [2]Stocksbridge History Society