It was on its cut-off line from Melton Mowbray to Nottingham, which had opened the previous year to allow the railway company's expresses between London and the North to avoid reversal at Nottingham. It also improved access to and from the iron-ore fields in Leicestershire and Rutland. Local traffic was minimal and Plumtree closed to passengers as early as 1949.[6]
In 1910, nine trains each way stopped at Plumtree Station. The earliest train to Nottingham was 7.02, and to Melton Mowbray 6.55. A passenger catching this latter service could expect to be in London St Pancras by 10.55 a.m. Sunday services were virtually non-existent, with only the morning milk train (7.49) to Nottingham (and no way of getting back that day!)
Stationmasters
George Thomas Bursnell 1879 - 1883
James C. Chidgey 1883 - 1886 (afterwards station master at Spondon)[8]
William George Nutall 1886 - 1888 (afterwards station master at Kirkby Stephen)
John Walters 1888 - 1890 (formerly station master at Hykeham)
Edwin Charles Harvey 1890 - 1919
Walter Frank Gardner 1921 - 1932
Albert Henry Hemmings 1937[9] - 1939 (formerly station master at Dudbridge)
Herbert F. Wilson 1943 - 1951 (formerly station master at East Langton)
Following the closure of the line as a through-route in 1968, the track between Melton Mowbray and Nottingham was reused as far as Edwalton and became the Old Dalby Test Track. This was used initially for the Advanced Passenger Train project and, more recently, Class 390 Pendolino units.[10] It was also used for testing London Underground trains 'S Stock' units.
The main station buildings have survived and have been converted into 'Perkins Restaurant'.[11] A conservatory extension has been built on the platform and the former goods shed has been restored as a function room.[12]
^Clinker, C.R., (1978) Clinker’s Register of Closed Station, Avon Anglia ISBN0-905466-19-5
^ abAldworth, Colin (2012). The Nottingham and Melton Railway 1872 - 2012.
^"Notes by the Way". Derbyshire Times and Chesterfield Herald. British Newspaper Archive. 1 November 1884. Retrieved 12 July 2016 – via British Newspaper Archive.
^Shannon, Paul (2007). Nottinghamshire (British Railways Past and Present). Kettering, Northants: Past & Present Publishing. p. 23. ISBN978-1-85895-253-6.
^Official Handbook of Stations,British Transport Commission, 1956.
^"Plumtree". Nottinghamshire Guardian. England. 18 February 1887. Retrieved 6 February 2021 – via British Newspaper Archive.
^"Plumtree Stationmaster". Nottingham Journal. England. 11 June 1936. Retrieved 6 February 2021 – via British Newspaper Archive.