Construction of the station had begun in May 1944 when a siding was laid on the Down side which, three months later, was adapted as a passing loop opened on 10 August, 18 chains (360 m) in length and fully signalled for passenger services.[8][9] The station had platforms on the Up and Down lines; an austere War Department-type structure resembling an RAF hut, stood on the Up side.[10] The front of the building was sheltered by a makeshift asbestos canopy and a traditional timber signal box stood just beyond the end of the Up platform.[11] A very basic corrugated iron shelter was provided on the Down platform.[12] No goods facilities were provided as Brize Norton and Bampton station lay within close proximity 1 mile 32 chains (2.3 km) to the east,[10][13] although agricultural produce from smallholdings in Carterton were often dispatched by passenger train.[14][15]
The position of the line in relation to the airfield meant that when its facilities were extended southwards, two essential taxiways crossed the railway line necessitating wide level crossing gates to span the entire width.[16] After the war, the airfields continued to generate significant traffic until the early 1950s when Brize Norton became a USAF base and traffic suddenly fell away.[17] By June 1958 there was only one daily freight service on the line: a morning working from Carterton to Oxford.[18]
The station closed along with the East Gloucestershire Railway from Witney to Fairford on 18 June 1962.[2][3][19][20]
The line between Carterton and Brize Norton and Bampton has been severed as a result of the southward expansion of RAF Brize Norton.[21] The station building has survived, the only one to do so on the East Gloucestershire Railway, and was used for some time as a pig farm, then storage of farm machinery.[21][22] It was reclad in timber in 1980 and is now used as stabling.[22]
The station site may be identified by reference to the roadbridge which carries the Black Bourton road over the disused railway.[23] The trackbed towards Fairford has become a rural track used by the local farmer.[24]
Future
The station has been proposed for reopening on a site more centrally located to the north of the town, although a number of other options have also been suggested. This is part of a wider project to restore the railway to Carterton via Witney and Eynsham.[25][26]
Clinker, C. R. (1988) [1978]. Clinker's Register of Closed Passenger Stations and Goods Depots in England, Scotland and Wales 1830–1980 (2nd ed.). Bristol: Avon-Anglia Publications & Services. ISBN978-0-905466-91-0. OCLC655703233.
Conolly, W. Philip (January 1976). British Railways Pre-Grouping Atlas and Gazetteer (5th ed.). Shepperton: Ian Allan. ISBN0-7110-0320-3. EX/0176.
Jenkins, Stanley C. (1985) [1975]. The Fairford Branch. Headington: Oakwood Press. ISBN0-853613-16-8. LP86.
Mitchell, Victor E.; Smith, Keith; Lingard, Richard (April 1988). Branch Line to Fairford. Midhurst: Middleton Press. ISBN0-906520-52-5.
Simpson, Bill (1997). A History of the Railways of Oxfordshire; Part 1: The North. Witney: Lamplight Publications. ISBN978-1-89924-602-1.
Stretton, John (2006). British Railways Past and Present: Oxfordshire; A Second Selection. Kettering: Past & Present Publishing. ISBN978-1-85895-203-1. No. 55.
Waters, Laurence; Doyle, Tony (1992). British Railways Past and Present: Oxfordshire. Wadenhoe: Silver Link Publishing. ISBN978-0-94797-187-8. No. 15.
Waters, Laurence (1986). Rail Centres: Oxford. London: Ian Allan. ISBN978-0-7110-1590-6.