- Plymouth Millbay railway station
Plymouth Millbay railway station was the original railway terminus in
Plymouth ,Devon ,England . It was used for passenger trains from 1849 to 1941.History
The South Devon Railway originally planned to bring its RailGauge|84
broad gauge railway from Exeter St Davids to the Eldad area ofPlymouth , terminating on a hill above Stonehouse Pool. In the event, it was redesigned to end at a station situated between Union Street andMillbay itself.cite book| last = Gregory| first = R H| title = The South Devon Railway| publisher = Oakwood Press| date = 1982| location = Salisbury| id = ISBN 0-853612-86-2]The railway reached a temporary station at Laira on the eastern outskirts of Plymouth on
5 May 1848 and was extended to Millbay on2 April 1849 .cite book| last = MacDermot| first = E T| title = History of the Great Western Railway, volume II 1863-1921| publisher =Great Western Railway | date = 1931| location = London] At this time the station was just known as Plymouth as no other stations existed in the town. The station became known as "Plymouth Millbay" after other stations were opened in the town in 1876-7 at Mutley and North Road.cite book| last = Oakley| first = Mike| title = Devon Railway Stations| publisher = The Dovecote Press| date = 2007| location = Wimbourne| id = ISBN 1-904349-55-6]A separate
ticket platform was erected just outside the station in 1851 and was used until 1896. This enabled all tickets to be checked while the train paused outside the station and the opportunity was often taken for the engine to be detached and sent to theengine shed at this time and the train was then propelled into the platforms by a pilot engine.The station was expanded ready for the opening of the
Cornwall Railway on4 May 1859 and theSouth Devon and Tavistock Railway on22 June 1859 . The railway encouraged the private venture of the Plymouth Hotel Company to open the Duke of Cornwall Hotel opposite the station in 1862.cite book| last = Kitteridge| first = Alan| title = Plymouth: Ocean Liner Port-of-Call| publisher = Twelveheads Press| date = 1993| location = Truro| id = ISBN 0-906294-30-4] The South Devon Railway was amalgamated into theGreat Western Railway (GWR) on1 February 1876 . The lines were converted to RailGauge|ussgstandard gauge on21 May 1892 , although standard gauge goods trains were working to the docks from 1878 over mixed gauge tracks. The station was extensively rebuilt in 1900-03 when the old wooden buildings were replaced by a new stone terminus.The station was closed to passengers on
23 April 1941 after bombs destroyed the nearby goods depot; the passenger station being used thereafter only for goods traffic and access to the carriage sheds. All traffic ceased from14 December 1969 except for goods trains running through to the docks which continued until30 June 1971 .The site is now occupied by the
Plymouth Pavilions leisure complex. Two granite gate posts outside the Millbay Road entrance are all that is left of the station. An old railway goods shed on the docks branch still stands in what used to be Washington Place.Description
When first opened, the platforms were covered by a large wooden roof but more conventional canopies were provided when the station was redesigned in 1900-03. Outside the station was the South Devon Railway headquarters building on the east side of the forecourt and opposite was the independent Duke of Cornwall Hotel which accommodated passengers for the trains and ships.
The line from Millbay docks crossed Millbay Road on a level crossing and then climbed up a gradient between the main station and the goods shed. Alongside the level crossing was a bridge that carried some of the sidings of the goods depot.
The station was built at the higher level on the back of the hill that forms Plymouth Hoe. It was partly on a viaduct, the arches of which were rented out to local businesses and, later, used as a garage for local railway buses. Trains waiting to depart faced north-eastwards but, crossing Union Street on an iron bridge, the line swung northwards. It then passed a complex of carriage and
engine shed s [cite book| last = Lyons| first = E| coauthors = Mountford, E| title = Great Western Engine Sheds 1837 - 1947| publisher = Oxford Publishing Company| date = 1979| location = Poole| doi = 1986| id = 0-8609330-19-X] before reaching Cornwall Junction near the bridge carrying Five Fields Lane (now North Road West), where the line to Penzance diverged to the north-west and that to London turned to the east.Millbay Docks
The Plymouth Great Western Docks were constructed, as was the railway, under the supervision of
Isambard Kingdom Brunel but they were owned by an independent company in which the railway invested. The inner basin was opened in 1857 but before the end of the year a gale had caused extensive damage which lead to financial trouble which caused the South Devon Railway to acquire an increasing share in the company until the railway took full control in 1874.A siding had been laid into the docks in 1850 [cite book| last = St John Thomas| first = David| title = West Country Railway History| publisher = David and Charles| date = 1973| location = Newton Abbot| id = ISBN 0-715363-63-8] which crossed Millbay Road on a
level crossing and was worked by horses;South Devon Railway 0-4-0 locomotives operated in the docks from 1873. Extensions were laid to the West Wharf and Graving Dock in the late 1870s and, from18 June 1878 a third rail was added to allow access forLondon and South Western Railway (LSWR) goods traffic. The first passenger trains started to run through to the East Quay in 1882, generally running "non-stop" toLondon Paddington station except for locomotive changes.Competition with the LSWR's services from Ocean Quay on Stonehouse Pool lead to increasing speeds from 1904, although mail was only contracted to be carried on the GWR services. On
9 May 1904 "City of Truro" was the first locomotive recorded in excess of convert|100|mi/h|km/h|abbr=on while working one of the GWR's trains, with the whole journey to London taking just 3 hours 54 minutes. [cite journal| last = Andrews| first = David| title = Special Experimental Tests – More Pieces of the City of Truro Puzzle| journal = Backtrack| volume = 22| issue = 2| pages = 116–121| publisher = Pendragon Publishing| date = 2008] The GWR route was shortened by 20¼ miles on1 July 1906 with the opening of theCastle Cary Cut-Off line that avoided the "Great Way Round" through Bristol Temple Meads, but in the early hours of30 June 1906 an LSWR special had derailed at high speed passing throughSalisbury railway station , after which speeds returned to a more sedate pace, with trains taking around five hours. The LSWR service was closed in 1910.The quayside was open to the elements until 1905 when a canopy was provided, although passengers and their luggage was dealt with in the lower floors of some Brunel-designed warehouses. Improved accommodation was provided in 1936, the new floor of which was decorated with the GWR's "land at Plymouth and save a day" advertising slogan, which referred to the time saved by trans-Atlantic passengers being carried ashore by lighter at Plymouth from liners bound for London via
Southampton ofLe Havre .A new swing bridge with a railway track was put in place in 1945to link Glasgow Quay (opposite the entrance from Millbay station) and South Quay.
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