Penkridge railway station

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Penkridge
National Rail
Station building at Penkridge.jpg
Penkridge station building, 2021
LocationPenkridge, South Staffordshire
England
Grid referenceSJ920139
Managed byLondon Northwestern Railway
Platforms2
Other information
Station codePKG
ClassificationDfT category F1
Passengers
2016/17Increase 0.237 million
2017/18Increase 0.257 million
2018/19Increase 0.276 million
2019/20Decrease 0.274 million
2020/21Decrease 54,416
Location
Notes
Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road

Penkridge railway station is a station serving the village of Penkridge in Staffordshire, England.

It is situated on the Birmingham branch of the West Coast Main Line. To the north, the line continues towards Stafford. To the south, the line continues towards the city of Wolverhampton. The station is operated by London Northwestern Railway, who run all of its train services.

History[]

The original station was built by the Grand Junction Railway and opened in 1837.[1]: 31  Baron Hatherton allowed to trains run across his land on the condition that two trains a day stopped at Penkridge. When closure of the station was proposed in 1962, the incumbent Baron Hatherton threatened to withdraw the right to cross his land if the station was closed. Nearby to Penkridge is a former mineral branch line to the nearby village of Huntington. It served a Colliery until the 1980s. The trackbed is a footpath from the Wolverhampton Road to Micklewood Lane near Huntington. The rest of the trackbed is now both agricultural and built on at Huntingdon end by a school.

Services[]

Since the timetable change on 19 May 2019, Penkridge station is served by two trains per hour northbound to Crewe and Liverpool Lime Street and two southbound trains per hour to Birmingham New Street and London Euston on weekdays. On Sundays there is an hourly service in each direction, however southbound trains mostly terminate at Birmingham New Street. A number of additional services call during the morning and evening weekday peak periods. One weekday morning southbound service goes to Rugeley Trent Valley via Birmingham, Walsall and Cannock.

The station previously had a slightly unusual weekday service pattern, in that there were two trains per hour southbound to Birmingham New Street but only one per hour northbound to Crewe and Liverpool Lime Street.[2] [3]

Notes[]

  1. ^ Drake, James (1838). Drake’s Road Book of the Grand Junction Railway (1838). Moorland Reprints. ISBN 0903485257.
  2. ^ GB eNRT May 2019 Edition, Tables 65 & 68
  3. ^ GB eNRT December 2015 Edition, Table 68

References[]

Lewis, Roy (1996). Staffordshire Railway Stations on old picture postcards (reprinted 2002). Nottingham: Reflections of a Bygone Age. ISBN 1-900138-05-0

External links[]

Preceding station National Rail National Rail Following station
Wolverhampton   London Northwestern Railway
Rugby-Birmingham-Stafford Line
  Stafford
Disused railways
Gailey   London and North Western Railway
former Grand Junction Railway
  Stafford

Coordinates: 52°43′26″N 2°07′08″W / 52.724°N 2.119°W / 52.724; -2.119


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