The station opened as Melton on 1 September 1846, with two sections of the Syston and Peterborough line, from Leicester to Melton and Stamford to Peterborough. The opening of the former had been delayed by opposition from a landowner, Lord Harborough.[1]
The station was badly damaged by a snowstorm on Tuesday 11 April 1876. The weight of snow on the corrugated iron roof that spanned the two platforms and lines, about 60 yards (55 m) long and 28 yards (26 m) wide, caused the roof to collapse shortly after a goods train had passed through. Fortunately there were no passengers on the platforms and no fatalities. A small section of remaining roof in poor condition was yanked down with a long chain, using a locomotive.[3] The line was cleared in about three hours.
The station has had several names during its existence. After opening as Melton in 1846 it was renamed Melton Mowbray on 1 November 1876 and then Melton Mowbray South in 1923. In 1957 it was renamed Melton Mowbray Town to distinguish it from Melton Mowbray North (though this had closed to regular traffic in 1953). It was given its current name on 14 June 1965.
It was refurbished in 2011 with re-glazed platform canopies, resurfaced platforms, passenger information screens, improved disabled access to the barrow crossing, a full repaint and a new footbridge. The refurbishment of the platforms retained their original length – previous plans to extend them by up to 14 yards (13 m) were omitted.[4] Following this, Melton Mowbray won a "highly commended" award at the National Rail Awards 2014 as Small station of the year.[5]
Stationmasters
J. Withers, c. 1849–1850,[6] former station master at Syston, afterwards at Grantham
A handful of local services operate at either end of the day, mainly for train-crew route-knowledge retention purposes. A morning service runs from Nottingham to Norwich and an evening service from Spalding to Nottingham via Peterborough.
Part of the former Nottingham direct line of the Midland Railway is now used as the Old Dalby Test Track. This leaves the Leicester line a short distance to the west of Melton Mowbray station and runs towards Nottingham via Old Dalby, continuing as far as the Nottingham suburb of Edwalton.
References
^"Syston and Peterborough Line". Nottinghamshire Guardian. England. 4 September 1846. Retrieved 7 February 2021 – via British Newspaper Archive.
^"Retiring Stationmaster Dead". Market Harborough Advertiser and Midland Mail. England. 5 January 1940. Retrieved 7 February 2021 – via British Newspaper Archive.