In 1905, the Great Western Railway inaugurated a motor bus service between Stroud and Painswick, similar to systems in operation at other places such as Penzance and Slough. The services were operated by Mills Daimler vehicles with 22hp petrol engines, capable of carrying 22 passengers. The journey time was around 30 minutes.[3]
Richard Roberts, 1897[9]–1909 (formerly station master at Ledbury)
George Libby, 1909[10]–1915 (formerly station master at Warwick)
W.P. Roberts, 1915[11]–1916 (formerly station master at Ross on Wye, afterwards station master at Gloucester)
T. Cobourne, 1916–1919[12] (afterwards station master at Cheltenham)
W.H. Reed, 1919–1925
A.M. Taylor, 1925[13]–1926 (formerly station master at Melksham)
Mr. Mason, ca. 1926
C.W. Wilson, ca. 1930–1936
George Edwin Howell, 1936–1942[14] (formerly station master at Abergavenny)
W.J. Hough, 1943[15]–ca. 1950 (formerly station master at Kington)
Description
Stroud station has two platforms and is served by Great Western Railway. The station has a ticket office, located on the Swindon-bound platform, whose opening times are in theory 7am to mid-afternoon Monday - Saturday, though in reality somewhat erratic due to staff shortages (November 2021), and it is not currently open on Sundays. There is a ticket machine on the same platform as the ticket office.
Services
Great Western Railway operates services from London Paddington to Gloucester and Cheltenham using Class 800 trains, and limited local services from Swindon to Gloucester and Cheltenham using the former Class 165 two-carriage sets. Trains call hourly each way Monday to Saturday, with some additional weekday business peak services. On Sundays, there is an hourly service between Swindon and Cheltenham Spa, with 3 services a day onwards to Paddington.[16]
^"Notes". Stroud News and Gloucestershire Advertiser. England. 24 September 1897. Retrieved 15 August 2021 – via British Newspaper Archive.
^"Strood. The new G.W.R. Stationmaster". Wilts and Gloucestershire Standard. England. 24 April 1909. Retrieved 15 August 2021 – via British Newspaper Archive.