When did Windsor station close?

When did Windsor station close?

30 September 1885
The trains were not popular, possibly because of the unsuitability of using four-wheel coaches for the non-stop section between Ealing Broadway and Slough and possibly also because Windsor was both too affluent and too far from the city to make commuting attractive. The service was discontinued on 30 September 1885.

What train line is Windsor on?

Richmond line
Windsor railway station is a heritage-listed railway station located on the Richmond line, serving the Sydney suburb of Windsor, in New South Wales, Australia. It is served by Sydney Trains T1 Western and T5 Cumberland line services….Windsor railway station, Sydney.

Windsor
Line(s) Richmond
Distance 54.98 kilometres from Central
Platforms 1
Tracks 1

Does Windsor have a train station?

Travel to Windsor Windsor is served by two train stations, Windsor and Eton Central and Windsor and Eton Riverside. Both are situated within a few minutes’ walk of Windsor Castle and the town’s other attractions.

Is there a railway station in Ilkeston Derbyshire?

Ilkeston Town railway station was a railway station which served the town of Ilkeston in Derbyshire, England. it was opened in 1847 by the Midland Railway on a short branch from the Erewash Valley Line.

When did Ilkeston Junction and Cossall station close?

Ilkeston Junction station, also known as “Ilkeston Junction & Cossall” was on the former Midland Railway and later LMS Erewash Valley Main Line: this station closed in January 1967. A short branch led from this station to Ilkeston Town station, at the north end of Bath Street, which closed to passengers in June 1947.

When did the Erewash Valley Railway start in Ilkeston?

Mr Miller Mundy and his associates had to wait another ten years before a main line through the valley was constructed by the Erewash Valley Railway Company, which was taken over by the Midland Railway as the new line opened in 1847. By carrying valuable coal traffic, the line soon made a profit. Two stations were constructed to serve Ilkeston.

Who was the station master at Ilkeston in 1851?

On the 1851 census Thomas was still station master at the Ilkeston town station house, with his family, but ten years later he appears as a brewer’s clerk in Burton on Trent. It was a long slog from this station up to the top of the town as Venerable Whitehead recognised in 1854.