- Wells (Tucker Street) railway station
Infobox UK disused station
name = Wells Tucker Street
gridref = ST545452
caption =
manager = Cheddar Valley and Yatton Railway
GWR
owner = GWR
Western Region of British Railways
locale =Wells
borough =Mendip
platforms = ?
years =5 April 1870
events = Opened (Wells)
years1 =12 July 1920
events1 = Renamed (Wells Tucker Street)
years2 =6 May 1950
events2 = Renamed (Wells)
years3 =9 September 1963
events3 = ClosedWells (Tucker Street) railway station was the second terminus station on the
Bristol and Exeter Railway 'sCheddar Valley line inSomerset after the extension from the first terminus at Cheddar was opened. It was the third station on the third railway to reach the city of Wells and proved to be the longest surviving.The station was opened with the extension of the
broad gauge line from Cheddar in April 1870. It was converted to standard gauge in the mid-1870s and then became Wells' main station when the Cheddar Valley line was linked up to theEast Somerset Railway to provide through services from Yatton to Witham in 1878.To achieve this through-running, the
Great Western Railway , which had by this time taken over both the Bristol and Exeter and the East Somerset lines, had to run trains over rails owned by the separateSomerset and Dorset Joint Railway and through the S&DJR terminus station at Priory Road to the East Somerset station which was across the street. The East Somerset station at this stage closed, but GWR trains ran through Priory Road without stopping for a further 56 years, until in 1934 they started to call at the S&D station. Priory Road closed in 1951 with the closure of the S&D branch line from Glastonbury and Street, leaving Tucker Street as the only station in Wells.In fact, as the "main" station on the most direct line from other centres of population, Tucker Street station was known simply as "Wells" for the first 50 years of its life, being renamed only in 1920. It resumed the Wells name when Priory Road shut.
But Tucker Street station lasted only a dozen years longer. The Yatton to Witham line closed to passengers in 1963, though goods traffic mostly carrying stone passed through from Cheddar until 1969. The station was demolished soon after closure and few traces of any of the railways now remain in Wells.
ervices
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References
* Somerset Railway Stations by Mike Oakley, Dovecote Press, Wimborne, 2002, page 126.
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