- Westerham railway station
Infobox UK disused station
name = Westerham
gridref = TQ448544
manager = South Eastern Railway
SECR | locale =Westerham
owner = Southern Railway
Southern Region of British Railways
borough = Sevenoaks
platforms = 1
years =3 July 1881 [http://www.subbrit.org.uk/sb-sites/stations/w/westerham/index.shtml Subterranean Britannica's page on Westerham railway station] - Nick Catford - Accessed8 September 2007 ]
events = Opened
years1 =30 October 1961
events1 = ClosedWesterham railway station served the village of
Westerham inKent from1881 until its closure in1961 .History
No railway was ever constructed all the way between
Sevenoaks and Redhill to parallel what is now theA25 road and thePilgrims' Way . Reasons for this may include: a) theRedhill to Tonbridge Line had been built quite early in railway history and served the settlements between Redhill andGodstone , b) the difficult choice between boggy land in the valley bottom and the gradients encountered on the A25 route atLimpsfield and Nutfield, c) the "pull" ofLondon which meant that the emphasis was on radial routes from the capital.However in
1881 the Westerham Valley Railway Company built theWesterham Valley Branch Line from theSouth Eastern Main Line at Dunton Green to Westerham with one intermediate station at Brasted. The branch was built as single track with provision fordouble track as an ambitious extension to Oxted was envisaged. The South Eastern Railway took over the company soon after construction, itself becoming part of theSouth Eastern and Chatham Railway in1899 . The Southern Railway took over responsibility for the line upon the railway grouping in1923 , followed by the Southern Region of British Railways upon nationalisation in1948 .The line was ostensibly closed in
1961 due to low patronage and was the subject of a revival/preservation attempt which was scuppered by plans for the M25 which called for the use of much of the line. The Westerham Valley Railway Association had succeeded in obtaining a lease of Westerham Station from British Rail in April1962 and had carried out maintenance works. However, this was no avail when, faced with the determination of Kent County Council to realise the construction of the M25, the Association was unable to meet the costs of constructing a overbridge for the motorway at Chevening and the Council promptly in-filled the section, effectively cutting the line in two. The station buildings were swept away and the track lifted by March 1967, with construction of the motorway commencing in1976 . [Gould, D., "Westerham Valley Railway", Locomotion Papers no. 72, The Oakwood Press, Blandford, 1974, p. 28-29.]Present day
The Westerham Flyer, the Class H 0-4-4T No. 31518 locomotive which pulled the morning trains on the last day of service on Saturday 26 October 1961, is remembered in the name of the
industrial estate which covers the footprint of the former station site and goods yard. "The Flyers Way Industrial Estate", served by "The Flyers Way" road, is made up of six light industrial units and backs on to original railway cottages. There is no plaque to commemorate the station's history, the only reminder of it being the base of the goods yard crane which is situated on a grass verge near the entrance to the site. It is, however, possible to trace the line of the trackbed eastwards around the site, past the railway cottages on an embankment and into nearby allotments.Gallery
Other stations
* Brasted
* Chevening Halt
* Dunton GreenReferences
See also
*
List of closed railway stations in Britain External links
* [http://www.subbrit.org.uk/sb-sites/stations/w/westerham/index.shtml Westerham railway station on Subterranea Britannica]
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