Several unscheduled calling points existed on the section between Slaggyford and Lambley, including Whitwham, Softley, and Burnstones.[2] Trains regularly stopped to allow passengers to board and alight, despite the lack of platforms or facilities at these locations.
After being closed for 42 years, the station reopened in June 2018, as part of the South Tynedale Railway.[3]
History
The Newcastle and Carlisle Railway was formed in 1829, opening to passengers in stages from March 1835.[4] Plans for a branch line from Haltwhistle to Alston and Nenthead were first proposed in 1841, and the line was officially authorised by an Act of Parliament in August 1846.[5] It was later decided that extending the line only to Alston would be sufficient, and the revised route was approved by a second Act of Parliament in July 1849.
In March 1851, the 4½-mile section from Haltwhistle to Shaft Hill (later renamed Coanwood) opened to goods traffic. Passenger services on this section began in July 1851. In January 1852, the 8¼-mile section between Alston and Lambley, along with a short branch to Lambley Fell, opened for goods traffic. Passenger services on this section began in May 1852.
In 1954, Slaggyford and Featherstone Park were reduced to unstaffed halt status, with Coanwood following in 1955.
The line was originally slated for closure in the 1960s under the Beeching plan. However, the lack of an all-weather road in the area allowed it to remain operational. Following improvements to the road network, including a temporary level crossing over the branch at Lambley, the line was closed on 3 May 1976 by the British Railways Board, with the last train working two days earlier.[8] The line was replaced in part by a bus service, which was operated by Ribble Motor Services.
South Tynedale Railway
For more information about the preserved narrow-gauge railway, see South Tynedale Railway.
^Quick, Michael (2009). Railway Passenger Stations in Great Britain: A Chronology. Railway and Canal Historical Society. p. 368. ISBN978-0901461575.
^Quick, Michael (2009). Railway Passenger Stations in Great Britain: A Chronology. Railway and Canal Historical Society. pp. 99, 370 and 428. ISBN978-0901461575.
^James, Leslie (November 1983). A Chronology of the Construction of Britain's Railways 1778-1855. Shepperton: Ian Allan. p. 22. ISBN0-7110-1277-6. BE/1183.