Cirencester Branch Line

Cirencester
Branch Line

Legend
Golden Valley Line
Kemble
Park Leaze Halt
Chesterton Lane Halt
Cirencester Town

The Cirencester Branch Line was a five mile long single track branch railway line that ran from Kemble railway station on the Great Western Railway Golden Valley Line to Cirencester Town via two intermediate stations, Park Leaze Halt, and Chesterton Lane Halt and contained the highest rail crossing point on the River Thames.

History

Opening

In 1841 the branch was opened to provide a link via Kemble to the Great Western Railway network at Swindon.

Stations

Cirencester got a second station when the Midland and South Western Junction Railway opened a station at Watermoor in 1883. The line's terminal, Cirencester station was renamed Cirencester Town in July 1924. A new halt was opened at Chesterton Lane in 1959 and a second, Park Leaze Halt, was opened on 4 January 1960.

Closure

The line was closed in April 1964 (along with the neighbouring branch to Tetbury) as a result of the Beeching Axe.

Future

As of 2016, discussions have taken place regarding the potential of relaying 5km of track from Kemble railway station to Cirencester.[1]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.