- Snettisham railway station
Infobox UK disused station
name = Snettisham
gridref = TF677334
caption =
manager = Lynn & Hunstanton Railway
Great Eastern Railway
owner =London and North Eastern Railway
Eastern Region of British Railways
locale =Snettisham
borough =King's Lynn and West Norfolk ,Norfolk
platforms = 2
years =3 October 1862
events = Opened
years1 =5 May 1969
events1 = Closed [Butt, R.V.J. (1995). "The Directory of Railway Stations", Patrick Stephens Ltd, Sparkford, ISBN 1-85260-508-1, p. 116.]Snettisham was a railway station on the King's Lynn to Hunstanton line which served the village of
Snettisham , a few miles north ofKing's Lynn inNorth Norfolk ,England . Opened in 1862, the station closed along with the line in 1969.History
Although essentially a minor passing place on the King's Lynn to Hunstanton line, when the proposal for a railway line between King's Lynn and Hunstanton had been first mooted, the possibility of building a new harbour at Snettisham had been discussed. This, it was said, would provide a safe haven for trading and fishing vessels on the eastern side of
The Wash , enabling the localmussel s to be brought in there rather thanKing's Lynn or Boston. However, the coming of the railway actually put pay to these ideas by eroding the local coasting trade which was hit by severe gales in the 1870s. [Cite book | author=Jenkins, S.C. | authorlink= | coauthors= | title=The Lynn & Hunstanton Railway and the West Norfolk Branch | date=1987 | publisher=Oakwood Press | location=Headington, Oxford | isbn=0-85361-330-3 | pages=p. 26]Snettisham station was equipped with up and down platforms and its platform buildings were constructed out of the local Carstone. Four sidings diverged from the main line to the north of the main station, serving respectively a small goods yard, a goods shed, the local coal merchants and Messrs Vynne & Everitt's granary. Goods traffic consisted of mainly coal and agricultural produce such as grain, bagged manure and vegetables. [Jenkins, S.C., op. cit. p. 93] On the up side of the line was an 18-lever standard Great Eastern
signal box . Snettisham was initially considered important enough to boast its own stationmaster, but this post was later abolished leaving the station with a staff of 4/5; in the station's later years one of the signalmen, Gerry Kendall, created atopiary on the up platform which marked out the station's name. [Jenkins, S.C., op. cit. p. 96.]Present day
Following closure in 1969, the main station building became a private residence, while the adjacent goods shed and granary are used by a furniture dealer. In the garden of nearby "Granary Cottage" stands the buffer stop which was originally at the end of Vynne & Everitt's siding. [Jenkins, S.C., op. cit. p. 96.] In 2004, the signal box was moved to Hardingham on the
Mid-Norfolk Railway . [ [http://www.norfolkrailwaysociety.org.uk/news_oct04.html#Heritage_Narrow-Gauge_and_Miniature Norfolk Railway Society, "News", October 2004.] ]References
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