- Malton railway station
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For the railway station in Malton, Ontario, see Malton GO Station.
Malton Malton station in December 1986 Location Place Malton Local authority Ryedale Coordinates 54°07′55″N 0°47′49″W / 54.132°N 0.797°WCoordinates: 54°07′55″N 0°47′49″W / 54.132°N 0.797°W Grid reference SE787713 Operations Station code MLT Managed by First TransPennine Express Number of platforms 1 Live arrivals/departures and station information
from National Rail EnquiriesAnnual rail passenger usage 2004/05 * 0.237 million 2005/06 * 0.252 million 2006/07 * 0.271 million 2007/08 * 0.282 million 2008/09 * 0.282 million 2009/10 * 0.291 million History Opened 1845 National Rail - UK railway stations A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z * Annual passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Malton from Office of Rail Regulation statistics. Please note: methodology may vary year on year. Malton railway station serves the towns of Malton and Norton-on-Derwent in North Yorkshire, England. It is currently operated by First TransPennine Express who provide all passenger train services.
Contents
Services
The typical Monday-Saturday off-peak service is:
- 1 train per hour (tph) to Liverpool Lime Street, calling at York, Leeds, Huddersfield, Stalybridge, Manchester Piccadilly, Manchester Oxford Road, Birchwood and Warrington Central
- 1 tph to Scarborough, calling at Seamer
On Sundays this is reduced to:
- 1 train per 2 hours (tp2h) to Liverpool, calling at York, Garforth, Leeds and then as above
- 1 tp2h to Scarborough as above
A half-hourly service, with timetable and fares integration with Yorkshire Coastliner buses, has been suggested as a means of providing relief to the parallel A64 trunk road that would be considerably cheaper than the option of dual carriageway (Campaign for Better Transport and Gazette & Herald letters)
History
At present, the station is only served by trains between Scarborough and York (and beyond), however prior to the Beeching Axe Malton station was also served by the Pickering Branch of the York and North Midland Railway with trains heading north (diverging at Rillington junction) to Pickering and then onwards to Grosmont and Whitby. This line closed entirely north of Pickering in 1965, with a freight-only service to Pickering surviving until 1966.
Though trains still run from Pickering to Grosmont as part of the preserved North York Moors Railway, the tracks between Rillington, where the line branched, and Pickering have since been lifted.
Up until 1958 the Malton & Driffield Railway, with trains heading south to Driffield, survived for freight and the occasional (summer-only) through excursion to the coast, after 1958 these excursion trains had to reverse at Scarborough Road junction on the easterly edge of Malton, back down towards Malton station before reversing again and heading off to Scarborough. Prior to 1950 there had been a passenger service nicknamed the 'Driffield Dodger' between Malton and Driffield.
As an interchange between three lines, Malton station would therefore have been considerably busier than it is now.
Though Malton station now only has one platform in use, at its peak there were two through platforms, plus an additional bay platform serving (mainly) Whitby local trains. The George Townsend Andrews overall roof was removed in 1989 and replaced by the canopy recovered from the Whitby platform.
One of Malton stations claim to fame was the novel solution adopted to allow passengers to access the second (island) platform, instead of a footbridge or barrow crossing the NER installed a removable section of platform, in the form of a wheeled trolley running on rails set at right-angles to the (single) running line. When a train required to use the platform the trolley was wheeled back under the up (York) platform; the trolley was interlocked with the signals giving access to the platform.
Until Northern Rail took over in 2004, Arriva Trains Northern did have services that stopped at Malton, the current York to Blackpool service used to continue to Scarborough alongside TransPenninexpress services. This service was usually worked by a Metro liveried Class 158 DMU, occasionally a Class 155 DMU. There was also a local service from York to Scarborough usually worked by a Pacer DMU or a Class 156.
Future
There have been talks of reopening the old line between Rillington Junction and Pickering for some years - most notably in 2003[1] - but no attempt has come to fruition.
There is a petition on 10 Downing Street to reopen the line and upgrade the North Yorkshire Moors railway to cope with higher speeds (40 to 50 mph as opposed to 25 mph), to improve transport in the region, and to provide relief for the A64 more cheaply than dualling it in its entirety. The North Yorkshire Moors Railway eventually have plans to extend the line beyond Pickering to Malton, dependent on the level crossing at Pickering being re-instated[citation needed].
References
- ^ "Local Transport Plan Statement 2003". Ryedale District Council. http://www.ryedale.gov.uk/pdf/RYEDALE%20DISTRICT%20COUNCIL%20POLICY%20STATEMENT%202003_.pdf. Retrieved 2009-04-25.
- W.W.Tomlinson, (1967). North Eastern Railway Its Rise and Development. Newton Abbot, [Eng.]: David & Charles (Publishing) Ltd.
- North Eastern Railway, Its Rise and Development; by W.W.Tomlinson 1914 original available here
- Bill Fawcett, (1995). A History of the York - Scarborough Railway. Cherry Burton, Beverley, East Yorkshire, [Eng.]: The Hutton Press Ltd.. ISBN 1-87216-771-3.
External links
- Train times and station information for Malton railway station from National Rail
- Details from listed building database (329717) . Images of England. English Heritage.
- Malton Station from Ryedale on the Web
- Malton station at The Yorkshire Wolds Railway Restoration Project
Preceding station National Rail Following station First TransPennine Express Historical railways Huttons Ambo
Station closed; Line openY&NMR
York to Scarborough LineRillington
Station closed; Line openDisused railways Terminus Malton & Driffield Railway Settrington Heritage railways Terminus North Yorkshire Moors Railway
(Future Extension)Rillington Categories:- Railway stations in North Yorkshire
- Grade II listed buildings in North Yorkshire
- Former North Eastern Railway (UK) stations
- Railway stations opened in 1845
- Railway stations served by First TransPennine Express
- Railway stations served by Northern Rail
- DfT Category E stations
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