Beeston railway station

Beeston National Rail

Beeston Station in 2012
Location
Place Beeston
Local authority Borough of Broxtowe
Grid reference SK533362
Operations
Station code BEE
Managed by East Midlands Trains
Number of platforms 2
DfT category D
Live arrivals/departures, station information and onward connections
from National Rail Enquiries
Annual rail passenger usage*
2010/11 Increase 0.484 million
– Interchange  Increase 46,452
2011/12 Increase 0.540 million
– Interchange  Increase 73,307
2012/13 Increase 0.546 million
– Interchange  Increase 77,129
2013/14 Increase 0.573 million
– Interchange  Increase 83,960
2014/15 Increase 0.610 million
– Interchange  Increase 85,292
History
Key dates Opened 1839 (1839)
National Rail – UK railway stations
* Annual estimated passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Beeston from Office of Rail and Road statistics. Methodology may vary year on year.
UK Railways portal

Beeston railway station is a railway station on the Midland Main Line which serves the town of Beeston in Nottinghamshire, England. It lies 3.2 miles (5.1 km) south-west of Nottingham railway station, and 750 metres (0.5 mi) south-east of Beeston transport interchange for local buses and Nottingham Express Transit trams. The station is managed by East Midlands Trains.

Description

Beeston station is on the Midland Main Line, 123 miles 22 chains (198.4 km) from London, on the spur towards Nottingham.[1] There are two platforms: platform 1 to the north for trains towards Nottingham and Lincoln and platform 2 to the south for trains towards London, Leicester, Birmingham and Derby. The platforms may be accessed either by steps from the Station Road bridge or by short ramps from Station Road for Platform 1 or Technology Drive for Platform 2.

Services

East Midlands Trains Meridian 222019 calls at Beeston with a London-Nottingham service.
British Royal Train with 67026 Diamond Jubilee following Elizabeth II's visit to Nottingham on 13 June 2012.

Services at Beeston are provided by East Midlands Trains and CrossCountry, with the former providing most services and managing the station. There are usually 4 trains per hour from each direction. The East Midlands Trains stopping service between London and Nottingham (via Loughborough, Leicester, Market Harborough, Kettering, Wellingborough, Bedford and Luton Airport Parkway) calls in each direction, as do the Leicester-Lincoln Central via Newark Castle and the Newark Castle/Nottingham-Matlock via Derby services. The hourly CrossCountry Nottingham-Birmingham New Street via Derby service also stops here, along with a few through trains to/from Cardiff Central. There is also a single daily direct CrossCountry southbound only service to Bournemouth via Derby, Birmingham New Street and Reading.[2]

Preceding station National Rail Following station
Long Eaton   CrossCountry
Birmingham - Nottingham
  Nottingham
Derby   CrossCountry
Nottingham to Bournemouth
(Limited service, southbound only)
 
Attenborough   East Midlands Trains
Derwent Valley Line
 
East Midlands Parkway   East Midlands Trains
Leicester - Lincoln
 
Loughborough   East Midlands Trains
Midland Main Line
 

Facilities

Passenger numbers using the station have risen substantially in recent years, facilities include: a ticket office and ticket vending machines, a café, bicycle racks, car parking and taxi rank.[3]

The Derby-Nottingham section of Route 6 of the National Cycle Network passes by the station and provides a traffic free cycle route to the University of Nottingham.

Network Rail have a long term aspiration to extend both platforms by up to 69 metres.[4]

East Midlands Trains have a long term aspiration to provide lifts at Beeston railway station.[5]

History

The station in 1840

The station was built in 1839 for the Midland Counties Railway.[6] Services began on 4 June 1839. In 1844 the Midland Counties Railway joined with the North Midland Railway and the Birmingham and Derby Junction Railway to form the Midland Railway.

The first station from Nottingham, at the time it was very popular with people from the city who wished to spend a day in the countryside, desiring "fresh air and recreation".

The original station building, which was little more than a cottage, was replaced in 1847 with the substantially larger white brick building with ashlar trimmings which still exists. This is notable for its carved bargeboards, some remaining diagonal paned windows and the pseudo-heraldic shields with 'MR' and '1847'.[7] The wooden platform canopies and adjacent wrought-iron and glass canopy were installed in 1871. The wooden platform canopies were originally located at Southwell railway station, and were relocated to Beeston when Southwell was rebuilt.[8]

The growth of Beeston led to substantial expansion of the station facilities in the Edwardian period. An extension containing a large booking hall, ladies' waiting room and parcels office was added to the rear of the station building, doubling its floorspace.

The station in 1967
Beeston station front in 2006

In 1937 the Midland Railway drew up plans for an additional waiting room on platform 2 but the plan was never put into action.

Post-WWII

Dedication plaque on the Station Road bridge.

The level crossing, lattice footbridge and signal box survived until 1969 when Beeston and Stapleford Urban District Council built a road bridge ("Station Bridge") across the railway to ease traffic delays caused by the frequent closure of the level crossing. This effectively replaced the footbridge between the two platforms.

With the decline in passenger numbers in the 1980s, the entire station suffered from vandalism and neglect, and British Rail proposed complete demolition. A spirited campaign by the local civic society and rail historians led to the listing of the station building in 1987. A separate listing application was made in the early 1990s and the platform shelters were also listed. This was followed by restoration of what remained of the 1847 building and the platform shelters. The (architecturally undistinguished) extension was demolished, revealing the original gables on the north side of the building.

The original platform masonry survived until 2004 when the platforms were completely rebuilt.

Nottingham remodelling scheme

Between 20 July and 25 August 2013, the services from the station were reduced because of the Nottingham remodelling and resignalling scheme.[9] It acted as a terminus for trains from London via East Midlands Parkway and from Derby, with a frequent rail-replacement shuttle bus running to and from Nottingham while the western end of the station and approach lines were remodelled.

Beeston station staff

Station Masters

Date Name Notes
ca 1839Mr. Campbell[10]
ca 1844Jonathan Raven[11]Described in the Nottinghamshire Directory as Station Keeper
ca 1848Joseph Tipper
ca 1853John Swain
ca 1864Frederick Musson
Dec 1869 - 1881 - ???? Samuel Theodore BunningHis salary was 24 shillings per week. Here he remained for over 13 years and received advances for 9 years until his salary nearly doubled to £120 per annum.
ca 1885William Foster[12]
???? - 1900 - 1922 - ????John Williams
Harold Smith[13]
1942 - ???? William Jinks[14]

1881 census

The railway employed a large number of local people. The 1881 census for Beeston[15] shows 141 men with railway employment although there is no evidence that they all worked in Beeston.

Miscellaneous

In 1864, John Ashe is listed as the booking clerk.

Leslie Blood worked in the booking office from 1926 to 1939 when he was promoted to the position of Stationmaster at Stoke Golding.

Sir Neil Cossons, now Chairman of English Heritage, worked as a junior porter in his youth.

Station Master's House

Old Station Masters House in 2006

Other information

References

  1. Yonge, John (March 2005) [1990]. Jacobs, Gerald, ed. Railway Track Diagrams 4: Midlands & North West (2nd ed.). Bradford on Avon: Trackmaps. map 6A. ISBN 0-9549866-0-1.
  2. GB eNRT May 2016 Edition, Tables 53, 56 & 57 (National Rail)
  3. "125MPH TRAINS TO CUT JOURNEY TIMES". Nottingham Evening Post. April 12, 2008.
  4. "Network Rail CP4 Delivery Plan 2009 Enhancements programme: statement of scope, outputs and milestones" (PDF). Network Rail. Retrieved 2010-03-18.
  5. "Making Rail Accessible, Policies and Procedures" (PDF). London: East Midlands Trains. January 2011. p. 9. Retrieved 13 October 2011.
  6. The Nottingham and Derby Railway Companion, (1839) Republished 1979 with Foreword by J.B.Radford, Derbyshire Record Society
  7. Higginson, M, (1989) The Midland Counties Railway: A Pictorial Survey, Derby: Midland Railway Trust.
  8. A Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain. Volume 9 The East Midlands, Robin Leleux. ISBN 0-7153-7165-7
  9. Network Rail - Rebuilding Nottingham’s railway Network Rail Press Release;Retrieved 2013-07-26
  10. 1839 Nottingham Directory
  11. 1844 Nottingham Directory
  12. Kelly's Directory for Nottinghamshire, 1885
  13. Nottingham Evening Post. Friday 29 November 1946. p.1.
  14. Derbyshire Times and Chesterfield Herald - Friday 18 September 1942. p.5.
  15. Public Records Office, 1881 Census of England and Wales

External links

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Coordinates: 52°55′14″N 1°12′29″W / 52.92056°N 1.20806°W / 52.92056; -1.20806

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