Avon Lodge railway station

Avon Lodge railway station

Infobox UK disused station
name = Avon Lodge
gridref = SU137036


caption =
manager = Ringwood, Christchurch & Bournemouth Railway
London and South Western Railway
owner = Southern Railway
locale = Ringwood
borough = New Forest, Hampshire
platforms = ?
years = 3 November 1862
events = Opened
years2 = 30 September 1935
events2 = Closed

Avon Lodge was a private untimetabled railway station in the county of Hampshire, opened on 3 November 1862 by the Ringwood, Christchurch and Bournemouth Railway. Becoming part of the London and South Western Railway, it was taken into the Southern Railway in the grouping of 1923 and closed on 30 September 1935. [ [http://www.subbrit.org.uk/sb-sites/stations/a/avon_lodge/index.shtml Avon Lodge at Subterranea Britannica] ]

History

Construction

The route adopted by the Ringwood, Christchurch and Bournemouth Railway passed through several miles of land owned by Lord Malmesbury who, as a condition of the sale of his land to the railway, required that two private halts be provided: the first to serve his Heron Court residence in Hurn and the second for his tenants and staff at Avon Cottage (which later became "Avon Castle"). [ [http://www.2saintscommunity.org.uk/parish_history_3.html St Leonards and St Ives Parish History] ] The requirement for Avon Lodge Halt was written into the Ringwood, Christchurch and Bournemouth Railway Act 1859 (c.xcv) which authorised the line, Section 27 of the Act provided as follows:-

Section 40 of the Act further provided that the tolls charged upon the line should not exceed per mile 2½d. for each first-class passenger, 1¾d. for each second-class, and 1d. for each third-class passenger.

Dispute

Avon Castle and its private halt were sold to the Turner-Turner family on 25 June 1863 for £14,300, and the new owner exercised his right to travel on services running both ways on the line. In March 1872 a dispute arose between the owner and the London and South Western Railway (LSWR) which had introduced a new through-service to Bournemouth from London. The LSWR argued that these new services were not "ordinary services" within the meaning of the 1859 Act. The owner began an action for a declaration that he was entitled to stop the through-services, as well as an injunction restraining the LSWR from refusing to stop the trains. The railway company argued in its defence that to have to stop the fast services at Avon Lodge Halt would render it practically impossible to run express trains on the line, and that passengers travelling on such services were paying the maximum fares.

Giving judgment on 20 January 1874, Sir Charles Hall V-C rejected the owner's arguments, stating that, in his opinion, the new fast services were not "trains for the ordinary traffic and purposes of the branch line, and are not what are commonly or properly understood to be ordinary trains, particularly considering that they are substantially faster than the other trains; that they only stop at one of the two stations; that they have been put on to meet and be in connection with fast trains on the main line, and that they materially shorten the through journeys." [Turner v. London and South-Western Railway Company (1873-74) L.R. 17 Eq. 561 at 572.]

Decline

Closure of the Ringwood, Christchurch and Bournemouth line was first considered in 1920 due to dwindling passenger numbers. The opening in 1888 of a more direct route to London via Poole and New Milton left the Ringwood line as somewhat of a backwater. At the time Avon Lodge was generating some £50 in annual revenue, and neighbouring Hurn was doing little better. [Mitchell V. & Smith K., "Branch Lines around Wimborne", Middleton Press, 1997.]

Avon Castle became the seat of the Earl of Egmont from 1912 to 1938, although after 1932 the family saw little use for their private halt as the 11th Earl preferred to spend his time in Canada. [ [http://www.users.waitrose.com/~rod99/pages/rail/ringwood-christchurch.htm Ringwood - Christchurch] ] This paved the way to the eventually closing of the station in 1935. When the Egmonts disposed of their estate in 1938, it was acquired by a developer who converted Avon Castle first into offices and then to multiple residences, as they remain today. [ [http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/ArticleNews/TPStory/LAC/20030606/REHOTT Canadian Globe and Mail, "Avon Castle: Hampshire", 6 June, 2003.] ]

The site today

The site of the station has been redeveloped into the Avon Castle Drive road serving the private estate of the same name which has been constructed in the area.

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References

Further reading


*cite book|author=R.V.J.Butt, |title= The Directory of Railway Stations |publisher=Patrick Stephens Ltd |year=1995 ISBN 1 85260 508 1


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