Barnetby railway station

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Barnetby
National Rail
Barnetby Railway Station.jpg
Pedestrian bridge over platforms
LocationBarnetby-le-Wold, North Lincolnshire
England
Coordinates53°34′30″N 0°24′36″W / 53.57503°N 0.40990°W / 53.57503; -0.40990Coordinates: 53°34′30″N 0°24′36″W / 53.57503°N 0.40990°W / 53.57503; -0.40990
Grid referenceTA053098
Managed byTransPennine Express
Platforms4
Other information
Station codeBTB
ClassificationDfT category F1
History
Opened1848
Passengers
2016/17Decrease 63,100
 Interchange Decrease 3,984
2017/18Increase 71,268
 Interchange Decrease 3,982
2018/19Increase 73,998
 Interchange Increase 4,029
2019/20Decrease 66,360
 Interchange Decrease 3,668
2020/21Decrease 9,760
 Interchange Decrease 1,057
Notes
Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road
View in 1961 towards Lincoln/Retford/Doncaster
View in 1962 towards Immingham and Grimsby

Barnetby railway station serves the village of Barnetby-le-Wold in North Lincolnshire, England. It is operated by TransPennine Express, with East Midlands Railway and Northern Trains also serving the station.

Barnetby railway station is unstaffed, and is popular with railway enthusiasts for the freight which passes through. It is also the closest station to Humberside Airport, located 2.5 miles (4.0 km) to the east.

History[]

The railway first came to Barnetby in 1848 when the Great Grimsby and Sheffield Junction Railway was constructed. This line ran from Sheffield, through Retford, Torksey, Lincoln and Market Rasen before reaching Barnetby – then on to Grimsby. A year later, the section of route between Gainsborough and Barnetby was opened, establishing the village's future as a railway centre. The most important connection – and still is to this day - was the building of the Trent, Ancholme and Grimsby Railway in 1866 – through the steel town of Scunthorpe. Over the following years, these railways – and several others became part of the Great Central Railway (GCR).

The Great Central Railway recognised the importance of the Humber ports. As well as developing Grimsby, the company invested heavily in Immingham Docks was unique among the Humber ports in that a deep water channel made easy access for ships at all states of the tide. This suited the GCR as one of its chief flows of traffic was coal from the South Yorkshire and East Midlands coal-fields.

With the increased traffic through Barnetby, the track infrastructure needed more investment. At the time, Barnetby had a fairly simple layout based on a standard double track. It even had a level crossing near to where the Kings Road bridge is today. To make passage easier, the GCR invested in the quadrupling of the track between Wrawby Junction and Brocklesby Junction – together with much improved signalling. The level crossing was removed and the Kings Road underbridge was built. To handle the traffic, new signal boxes were built at Wrawby Junction, Barnetby West, Barnetby East, Melton Ross and Brocklesby Junction.

In 1923, the Great Central Railway became part of the London and North Eastern Railway in 1948 part of British Railways. In 1994 the infrastructure came under the ownership part of Railtrack and in 2002, Network Rail.

Whilst most railway freight traffic passes through the village, in years past the village generated a small amount of its own business. The nearby malt kiln was opened in 1875, and the village cattle market used rail transport. The cattle market is long gone and the malt kiln is crumbling away. The station's platform buildings (waiting rooms, toilets etc.) were demolished in the late 1980s and replaced by shelters, but the main building next to the footbridge still stands (it is used as office accommodation by Network Rail).

During World War II, Barnetby served as the railhead used for nearby RAF Elsham Wolds, a bomber base. Arriving and departing personnel could be picked up or dropped off by RAF vans. Australian Don Charlwood, in his memoir, "No Moon Tonight," writes movingly of standing on the platform with 20 other young men, part of four newly arrived crews for RAF bombers flying night raids on Germany from Elsham Wolds. While they waited for the van, ". . . we stood on the platform looking up at the hills that rose gently from every side." Casualties in Bomber Command were heavy: ". . . of our twenty only eight were destined to depart Barnetby station a few months later."[1]

A serious accident occurred near the station in 1983, when one passenger died after a freight and passenger train collided. In 2001 a new footbridge complete with ramps was built.[2]

The lines through the station were re-signalled over the Christmas and New Year of 2015/16, with the new colour light signals installed and the old manual signal boxes at Wrawby Junction and Barnetby East closed during a 17-day blockade.[3] The area is now under the control of the York IECC.[4]

Facilities[]

The station is unmanned as noted, but has a self-service ticket machine, accepting card payments only, to allow passengers to buy tickets prior to departure or for the collection of pre-paid tickets. Passengers paying by other methods (e.g. cash) must buy their ticket from the conductor on the train. There are waiting shelters on each island platform (but no other permanent buildings), along with customer help points, digital information screens and timetable poster boards. Step-free access is available to all platforms via the fully accessible footbridge from the car park and station entrance.[5]

Services[]

Services at the station are operated by East Midlands Railway, Northern Trains and TransPennine Express.

On weekdays, the station is served by an hourly TransPennine Express service between Cleethorpes and Manchester Airport as well as by a two-hourly East Midlands Railway service between Grimsby Town and Leicester via Lincoln and Nottingham. There is also one East Midlands Railway train that continues beyond Grimsby to Cleethorpes. On Saturdays, there are three East Midlands Railway services to Cleethorpes as well as three trains per day between Cleethorpes and Sheffield via Brigg which are operated by Northern Trains.[6][7]

On Sundays, the TransPennine Express service is two-hourly in the morning but increases to hourly in the afternoon. There are three East Midlands Railway services between Nottingham and Cleethorpes during the summer months only with no service during the winter.

Preceding station National Rail National Rail Following station
Market Rasen
East Midlands Railway
Habrough
Brigg
Northern Trains
Brigg Branch Line
Saturday only
Scunthorpe
TransPennine Express
South Humberside Main Line
South TransPennine
  Historical railways  
Elsham
Line open, station closed
Great Central RailwayTerminus
TerminusGreat Central Railway
Howsham
Line open, station closed
Brigg
Line and station open
Great Central Railway
Brocklesby
Line open, station closed

Gallery[]

References[]

  1. ^ Charlwood, Don, "No Moon Tonight," Goodall Publications, 1984, p. 44.
  2. ^ "Regional News" Rail issue 409 16 May 2001 page 22
  3. ^ Network Rail. "Renewing the signalling in North Lincolnshire" (Press release). Retrieved 22 January 2016.
  4. ^ "A barren landscape as North Lincs semaphore signals are taken down" The Railway Magazine issue 1379 February 2016 page 6
  5. ^ Barnetby station facilities National Rail Enquiries
  6. ^ Table 27, 29, 30 National Rail timetable, May 2020
  7. ^ "May 2021 Timetable Changes - Barnetby". East Midlands Railway. Retrieved 24 May 2021.

External links[]

Media related to Barnetby railway station at Wikimedia Commons

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