Marland Works railway station
Marlands Works was a busy industrial site for just over a century,[2] firstly on the Torrington and Marland Railway,[3] built to carry bricks and clay on a three-feet gauge, which in turn was subsumed in 1925 by the North Devon and Cornwall Junction Light Railway[4] before finally becoming part of the Southern Region of British Railways in 1948.[5] The line closed to passenger traffic in 1965[6] as part of the Beeching [7] reforms but the line remained open for freight between Barnstaple railway station and Torrington until 1982.[8] Today it forms part of the popular Tarka trail, although an important site for industrial railway historians[9] too. Marland Works station was used by workmen only and was not in public passenger use.
Marland Works | |
---|---|
Trackbed of the old line. | |
Location | Peters Marland Ball clay works, Torridge England |
Grid reference | SS507118 |
Platforms | One |
Other information | |
Status | Disused |
History | |
Pre-grouping | Torrington and Marland Railway(1881 -1925) North Devon and Cornwall Junction Light Railway (1925 to 1948)[1] |
Key dates | |
? | Opened |
? | Closed |
References
- Private, not grouped in 1923
- History of Clay web-site Photographer’s research
- North Devon Clay Messenger,M: Truro, Twelveheads Press, 1982 ISBN 0-906294-06-1
- "Collation of sources, Devon railways". Archived from the original on 17 May 2011. Retrieved 26 October 2007.
- Branch Lines to Torrington Mitchell,V/Smith,K: Midhurst, Middleton Press,1994 ISBN 1-873793-37-5
- "Discovering Britain's lost railways" Atterbury,P: Basingstoke, AA Publishing ISBN 978-0-7495-6370-7
- Detailed closure schedules
- Freight details
- IR archives Archived 2006-10-14 at the Wayback Machine
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