Everything about Belper Railway Station totally explained
Belper railway station is a
railway station serving the town of
Belper in
Derbyshire. The station is located on the
Midland Main Line from
Derby to
Leeds.
History
After leaving the
Milford Tunnel the train crosses the river before entering Belper. The line was surveyed by
George Stephenson for the
North Midland Railway Company, and opened in
1840. The original intention was to proceed along the western bank of the
River Derwent opposite the town, but
Jedediah Strutt, who by then had become the primary landowner, wished it to be out of sight. Moreover, he feared that it would interfere with the supply of water to the mills. The railway, therefore, was built through a long cutting, at enormous (and unexpected) expense, with twelve bridges in the space of a mile. The cutting, lined with gritstone, is now a
grade 2 listed building.
The original station was built on the south side of Belper, just before the cutting, designed by
Francis Thompson in an Italianate design. A coach, or omnibus, ran regularly to it from the Lion Hotel in Bridge Street. However this proved so unpopular that the
Midland Railway built a new station in
1878 within the cutting, at the town centre, next to King Street.
This had platforms with access ramps for each of the two lines, both provided with waiting rooms, in the standard Midland Railway design. The booking office and other facilities were at street level.
North of Belper, the engineers paid the penalty of following a river valley, with two long bridges over Belper Pool, plus two more, before reaching
Ambergate.
Present day
In
1973 the station buildings were demolished. The bridge carrying King Street over the line was widened for a supermarket to be built by Fine Fare (now
Somerfield).
The station is unmanned and operated by
East Midlands Trains. Access is either through a narrow alleyway from King Street, or from the Field Lane car park and across the rear of the supermarket. For journeys beginning at Belper, tickets may be bought on the train for any destination in the country. (From
Derby, tickets must be bought at the ticket office) Journey time to Derby is approximately 11 mniutes. During service disruption, buses will either pick up and set down outside Wilkinson's store in King Street, or in the vicinity of the Lion Hotel in Bridge Street (Check notices for details).
It is served by one operator.
In
2005 the station has been refurbished with new shelters, seats, train indicators - and rubbish bins - by a consortium of local volunteers, work experience trainees and the local councils, with the active support of Network Rail and
Central Trains (who managed the station at that time).
Further Information
Get more info on 'Belper Railway Station'.
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