翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Kings & Queens (Eddie Kirkland album)
・ Kings & Queens (Jamie T album)
・ Kings & Queens (Sham 69 album)
・ Kings & Queens (The Gits album)
・ Kings & Queens of the Underground
・ Kings & Thieves
・ Kings (album)
・ Kings (Australian TV series)
・ Kingfisher Xpress
・ Kingfisher, Oklahoma
・ Kingfisher-class sloop
・ Kingguru
・ Kingham
・ Kingham (disambiguation)
・ Kingham Hill School
Kingham railway station
・ Kinghamia
・ Kingharia
・ Kinghaven Farms
・ Kinghorn
・ Kinghorn (disambiguation)
・ Kinghorn (Parliament of Scotland constituency)
・ Kinghorn Castle
・ Kinghorn Methodist Episcopal Cemetery
・ Kinghorn railway station
・ Kinghurst Township, Itasca County, Minnesota
・ Kingi Areta Keiha
・ Kingi Matutaera Ihaka
・ Kingi Te Ahoaho Tahiwi
・ Kingia


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Kingham railway station : ウィキペディア英語版
Kingham railway station

Kingham railway station in Oxfordshire, England is between the Oxfordshire village of Kingham and the Gloucestershire village of Bledington, to which it is closer. It is also the closest station to the town of Chipping Norton.
The station is on the Cotswold Line and is served by Great Western Railway trains.
==History==
When the Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway was extended from to Wolvercot Junction (north of ) on 4 June 1853,〔MacDermot, Vol. I Part II, Chapter X The West Midland Railway, pp. 498, 867〕 there was no station between and .〔Jenkins & Quayle, pp. 34-36〕 On 10 August 1855 a branch line to was opened by the Chipping Norton Railway, and a station, known as ''Chipping Norton Junction'', was opened at the junction of the branch with the OW&W; this branch was purchased by the OW&W in 1859.〔MacDermot, Vol. I Part II, p. 524〕〔Jenkins & Quayle, p. 60〕 The OW&W amalgamated with other railways on 1 July 1860 to form the West Midland Railway;〔MacDermot, Vol. I Part II, p. 525〕〔Jenkins & Quayle, p. 63〕 this in turn amalgamated with the Great Western Railway on 1 August 1863.〔MacDermot, Vol. I Part II, p. 553〕〔Jenkins & Quayle, p. 66〕 In the meantime, a second branch line from Chipping Norton Junction, the Bourton-on-the-Water railway, had opened on 1 March 1862;〔〔MacDermot, Vol. I Part II, pp. 551, 866〕 that railway was absorbed by the GWR on 1 February 1874.〔Hemmings, Chapter Three The Bourton-on-the-Water Railway, p. 37〕
On 1 June 1881 the first section of the Banbury and Cheltenham Direct Railway was opened; this connected the branch to the Cheltenham & Great Western Union line at Lansdown Junction, Cheltenham;〔MacDermot, Vol. II, Chapter IX Prosperity and Repose, pp. 338, 603〕 and on 6 April 1887 a second section was opened, connecting the Chipping Norton branch to the Oxford and Rugby Railway at .〔MacDermot, Vol. II, pp. 365, 605〕 The Great Western Railway took over the B&CDR on 1 July 1897,〔Hemmings, Chapter Five The Era of the Banbury and Cheltenham Direct Railway, p. 99〕〔MacDermot, Vol. II, p. 338〕 but for nearly twenty years, through trains running between and needed to reverse at Chipping Norton Junction.
The reversal was inconvenient for trains which did not need to call at Chipping Norton Junction, so for their benefit the GWR built a bridge to carry through trains between Banbury and Cheltenham over the Oxford and Worcester line; it opened to goods trains on 8 January 1906 and to passenger trains on 1 May 1906.〔MacDermot, Vol. II, Chapter XI The Great Awakening, pp. 432, 610〕 The station was renamed Kingham on 1 May 1909.〔〔Hemmings, Chapter Six Under the Great Western, p. 163〕〔Marks, Disused Railways website
Upon the opening of this new link, a new express train service began to use the line, including the new flyover, once a day in each direction. This train, unofficially known as the Ports to Ports Express, was a collaboration between the North Eastern Railway, the Great Central Railway and the GWR, which from 1 May 1906 ran between and ''via'' , , , , and ;〔Hemmings, Chapter Six, pp. 138, 163〕 in August 1906 it was extended to serve , via the Barry Railway; in July 1909 a through coach to and from Hull was introduced.〔Harris, Chapter Eight Cross Country Inter-Railway Services to 1922, pp. 106–107〕 It ran non-stop between Banbury and , but even so, took 82 minutes for this stretch. It was suspended during World War I, reinstated on 12 July 1919 and extended to in 1920;〔Harris, Chapter One Great Western Railway and South Wales Railways to 1922, pp. 12–13〕 on the outbreak of war in September 1939, the service was again suspended, but when reintroduced in October 1946, it used a different route between Banbury and Newport.〔Allen, p. 101〕〔Harris, Chapter Fourteen Cross Country Inter-Railway Services 1923–47, p. 173〕
In 1953, rationalisation was carried out which resulted in the closure of the East and West signal boxes and the singling of the line between them for working purposes. The remaining track between the boxes formed the base of a self-contained triangle for turning engines.〔 By this time, the line to King's Sutton was only open for freight and a token passenger service operated to Chipping Norton.〔
British Railways withdrew passenger services from Kingham to Cheltenham and Chipping Norton in 1962 and freight services in 1964. British Rail designated the Oxford and Worcester line "The Cotswold Line". Passenger traffic has increased in the 1990s and 2000s.
In 2015, a car park extension has been added with 100 car spaces, and a new footbridge is being added, with provision for passenger lifts.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Kingham railway station」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.