Rosherville Halt railway station

Rosherville Halt railway station

Infobox UK disused station
name = Rosherville Halt
gridref = TQ638740


caption =
manager = London, Chatham and Dover Railway
South Eastern and Chatham Railway
owner = Southern Railway
locale = Gravesend
borough = Gravesham, Kent
platforms = 2
years = 10 May 1886
events = Opened (Rosherville)
years1 = 17 June 1928
events1 = Renamed (Rosherville Halt)
years2 = 16 July 1933
events2 = Closed [Butt, R.V.J. (1995). "The Directory of Railway Stations", Patrick Stephens Ltd, Sparkford, ISBN 1-85260-508-1, p. 199.]

Rosherville Halt was a railway station on the Gravesend West Line which was built to serve the popular Rosherville Gardens, a pleasure garden in Gravesend, Kent which closed in 1910. The station survived a further 23 years before itself closing in 1933.

History

The route of the Gravesend West branch through Gravesend adjoined the famous Rosherville Pleasure Gardens which had opened in 1839 on land leased by the Rosher family who gave their name to the popular attraction. Although already served by steamer, the London, Chatham and Dover Railway decided to open a station in the hope of attracting some of their custom. It was an initially successful venture with 14,000 people visiting Rosherville Gardens on Whit Sunday in 1886, many of whom arrived by rail. However, the steamers were not going to give up their passengers without a fight and began to undercut the fares charged by the railway company. In the event, the popularity of Rosherville Gardens was on the wane and it eventually closed in 1910. [cite book | last = Oppitz | first = Leslie | title = Lost Railways of Kent | publisher = Countryside Books | date = 2003 | location = Newbury, Berkshire | pages =p. 97 | isbn = 978-1853068034 ] Dwindling traffic led to the station being downgraded to an unstaffed halt in 1928, before eventually closing in 1933.

As with Southfleet and Longfield stations, Rosherville Halt was situated in a cutting near a road overbridge from which a footbridge led down to a single island platform. [Cite book | author=Kidner, R.W. | title=Southern Railway Halts: Survey and Gazetteer | date=1985 | publisher=The Oakwood Press | location=Headington, Oxford | isbn=0-85361-321-4 | pages=p. 53] Rosherville lay just to the west of a bridge carrying the A226 Dartford - Gravesend road over the line. The covered footbridge complete with two generously wide staircases to accommodate the expected traffic to Rosherville Gardens led from the station buildings at ground level to the platform. [cite book | last = Pallant | first = N. | title = The Gravesend West Branch | publisher = The Oakwood Press | date = 1984 | location = Blandford, Dorset | pages =p. 9 | isbn = 0853613079 ] Two wooden canopy sections were installed on the platform, and a signal box was installed in a recess in the brick retaining wall on the down side of the station. A stationmaster's house was sited some distance from the main station buildings, overlooking the cutting.

Post-closure

The signal box was removed following closure and the ground level buildings were subsequently converted into domestic use. [Pallant, N., op. cit. p. 23-24.] The platform buildings remained intact until the mid-1960s [ [http://www.kentrail.co.uk/Rosherville.htm Kent Rail, "Rosherville".] ] . What remained was swept away when the trackbed of the Gravesend Branch from Vale Road as far as Gravesend West was converted into the A2260 Thames Way. The cutting was deepened and widened requiring the demolition of the dilapidated stationmaster's house. Only the former railway tunnel to the north-east of the station, now part of the A2260, remains as the surviving remnant of the railway which once served Rosherville. [ [http://www.subbrit.org.uk/sb-sites/stations/r/rosherville_halt/index.shtml Subterranea Britannica, "Rosherville Halt".] ]

References


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