Blaenau Festiniog Junction railway station

Blaenau Festiniog Junction
Location
Place Blaenau Ffestiniog
Area Gwynedd
Coordinates 52°59′44″N 3°56′40″W / 52.9956°N 3.9445°W / 52.9956; -3.9445Coordinates: 52°59′44″N 3°56′40″W / 52.9956°N 3.9445°W / 52.9956; -3.9445
Grid reference SH 695 460
Operations
Original company Festiniog Railway
Platforms 1[1][2]
History
1 April 1881 Opened
18 September 1939 Closed[3][4]
Disused railway stations in the United Kingdom
Closed railway stations in Britain
A B C D–F G H–J K–L M–O P–R S T–V W–Z
UK Railways portal

Blaenau Festiniog Junction ("Stesion Fain") was the Festiniog Railway (FR)'s third of eventually five passenger stations in Blaenau Ffestiniog, then in Merionethshire, now in Gwynedd,Wales.

Context

The complex and confusing evolution of Blaenau's passenger stations is expanded here.

History

Stesion Fain opened on 1 April 1881 between Tanygrisiau and the line's northern terminus at Duffws (FR). It was aimed primarily at exchange traffic with the LNWR's Conwy Valley Line station which opened a few yards away on the opposite side of North Western Road[5][6][7] on the same day. Target customers could be travelling from (say) Porthmadog to Llandudno or from Betws-y-Coed to Tan-y-Bwlch. A few could be travelling from (say) Rhyl via Llandudno Junction to Duffws (FR), using the FR for the last leg.

Naming

The station's nameboards declared the station to be Blaenau Festiniog Junction,[8] with the anglicised single "F", but

Interchange traffic

The FR sought to tap custom not only from Blaenau Ffestiniog itself, but also its wider connections. It co-operated with the LNWR whose permanent northern terminus was an underarm stone's throw away on the opposite side of North Western Road. Timetabling was sympathetic; in 1910, for example, three of the FR's four non-workmen's trains from Porthmadog Harbour arrived between 27 and 42 minutes before an LNWR train headed north, giving a traveller from (say) Tan-y-Bwlch a good chance of getting to Dolgarrog even if his first train was 15 minutes late.[14] Bradshaw may have been mealy-mouthed about the proximity of the FR station, but the LNW station boasted a very large station nameboard proclaiming "BLAENAU FESTINIOG CHANGE HERE FOR NARROW GAUGE LINE TO MINFFORD AND PORTMADOC".[15][16]

Station buildings

The station had one very low platform, similar to that at Duffws (FR), a metal waiting shelter with a slate roof and small buildings at both ends, with that at the Tan-y-Grisiau end containing a refreshment room,[17] opposite and a few yards west of which stood a slate water tower topped with a metal tank.[18][13][19][20][21]

The wilderness years

The station stood derelict for some years after closure in 1939, being progressively demolished by the elements, vandals and eventually officialdom. The water tower lived a charmed life, outliving the station buildings.[22][23] The site seemed doomed when road alterations buried a stretch of the track in 1963.[24][25][26] In 1956 the waiting shelter was dismantled and re-erected for use by spectators at Manod Football Club,[27][28] though it was replaced in turn in the 2000s by a more modern structure.

For a period in the 1970s the FR locomotive "Princess" was mounted on a plinth at the station site as a symbol of remembrance and intention to return.[29][30][31]

Modern times

The station site was a serious contender for the location of the Ffestiniog Railway's return to Blaenau, the location remained as first built, back-to-back with the ex-LNWR Blaenau Ffestiniog North which was the town's sole surviving station from 1960. In the event, in 1982 both British Railways (BR) and the FR opened wholly new stations on the site of Blaenau Ffestiniog Central, meaning that the line through Blaenau Festiniog Junction was reinstated, but the station was not. The site is commemorated with a raised flowerbed.[32]

Preceding station Disused railways Following station
Tanygrisiau
Line closed, station open
  Festiniog Railway
Narrow gauge
  Duffws (FR)
1881-1883
    Blaenau Festiniog (GWR/FR)
1883-1939

Gallery

References

Sources

Other material

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/28/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.