- Swanage railway station
Swanage railway station is a railway station located in
Swanage , on theIsle of Purbeck in the English county ofDorset . Originally the terminus of aLondon and South Western Railway (L&SWR) branch line from Wareham, the line and station were closed byBritish Rail in 1972. It has since reopened as a station on theSwanage Railway , aheritage railway that currently runs from Norden station just north of Corfe Castle to Swanage station.History
Swanage lies at the tip of the Isle of Purbeck, a
peninsula bordered by theEnglish Channel to the south, and by the marshy lands of the River Frome andPoole Harbour to the north and east. Since the 12th century, the area around Swanage has been well known for thePurbeck Marble that was mined locally and shipped out by sea. The presence of this industry, together with thePurbeck Ball Clay works in the area to the north, attracted railway promoters once the L&SWR main line reached Wareham in 1847.Several schemes were promoted and failed, but eventually the Swanage Railway received its Act in 1881 and opened on the 20th May 1885.cite book | title = The Railways of Purbeck | publisher = The Oakwood Press | last = Kidner | first = R.W. | edition = Third Edition | year = 2000 | isbn = 0-85361-557-8 ]Swanage station was constructed with two platform tracks, on either side of a single passenger platform. The longer of these tracks had a run round loop, and was flanked by a station building built in the grey Purbeck stone. A single track
goods shed provided facilities for general merchandise, and a turntable,coaling stage and single track locomotive shed were provided for use by thesteam locomotive s that operated the line. In order to handle the anticipated volumes of stone traffic, a four track goods yard was constructed. One of the lines in the goods yard was extended as a tramway running in a narrow alley behind Station Road to a stone store near the waterfront. This tramway should not be confused with the earlierSwanage Pier Tramway that linked nearby stone stores to a pier in Swanage Bay.cite book | title = The Railways of Purbeck | publisher = The Oakwood Press | last = Kidner | first = R.W. | edition = Third Edition | year = 2000 | isbn = 0-85361-557-8 ]Towards the end of the 19th century, Swanage started to develop as a tourist resort. Through coaches and through trains were operated to Swanage from both
London and from the industrial towns of theMidlands andNorth of England . To accommodate this traffic, the station was extensively altered in 1937, with extensions to the station buildings using matching materials and in a design blending well with the 1885 original. The new facilities provided a parcels office, ticket office, a waiting hall, a newsagents shop, and an extended goods shed. However the collapse of both the clay and marble industries, and the increase in private car ownership in the second half of the 20th century eventually made the line unprofitable. Closure was first proposed in 1967, and despite local opposition the line finally closed on the 3rd January 1972.cite book | title = The Railways of Purbeck | publisher = The Oakwood Press | last = Kidner | first = R.W. | edition = Third Edition | year = 2000 | isbn = 0-85361-557-8 ] cite web | title = A brief history of the Swanage Railway | url = http://www.swanagerailway.co.uk/history.htm | publisher = Swanage Railway | accessdate = 2007-08-18]After closure, a strong campaign was waged to allow the railway to reopen both as an independent community railway linking with the main line at Wareham and as a
steam locomotive operatedheritage railway . The Swanage Railway began operating a steam service at the Swanage end of the line in 1982. The passenger station, goods shed and locomotive facilities have been restored to their 1937 configuration, although the goods yard is now the site of asupermarket .cite book | title = The Railways of Purbeck | publisher = The Oakwood Press | last = Kidner | first = R.W. | edition = Third Edition | year = 2000 | isbn = 0-85361-557-8 ]Services
Services run every day from the beginning of April to late October, with weekend only operation in March, November and December. The level of service varies from 6 to 17 trains a day in each direction, depending the season and the day of the week. Northbound, trains operate to stations at Herston (trains stop only on request), Harman's Cross (10 mins), Corfe Castle (20 mins), and Norden (23 mins).cite web | title = 2008 Timetable | url = http://www.swanagerailway.co.uk/08broch/08times.pdf | publisher = Swanage Railway | accessdate = 2008-03-06]
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Facilities
* "Birds Nest Buffet" - Open daily.
* "Railway Shop" - Selling railway books and paraphernalia, open daily.
* "Bus Station" - Three bus stops where all of Swanage's bus services terminateReferences
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