- Newmarket and Chesterford Railway
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Newmarket and Chesterford Railway LegendIpswich to Ely Line Newmarket Warren Hill (1885-c. 1945) A142 Warren Hill Tunnel Warren Hill / Newmarket (High Level) 1879-c1945 / 1848-1967 Newmarket (opened 1902) B1061 level crossing Dullingham (opened 1848) Brinkley Road level crossing Six Mile Bottom (1848-1967) A1304 level crossing A11 Ipswich to Ely Line to Cambridge Balsham Road (1848-51) Abington (1848-51) Bourne Bridge (1848-51) West Anglia Main Line to Cambridge Great Chesterford West Anglia Main Line to London Liverpool Street The Newmarket and Chesterford Railway Company was an early railway company that built the first rail connection to Newmarket.
The line
The line was opened in 1848 and was commonly known as the "Newmarket Railway". It branched off the London–Cambridge line at Great Chesterford and ran about 15 miles (24 km) north east to a terminus in Newmarket, with intermediate stations at Bourne Bridge (about 800 yards (730 m) west of Little Abington), Balsham Road (about 2 miles (3 km) south east of Fulbourn) and Six Mile Bottom. Having completed this section, the Company planned a branch to Cambridge, but ran into serious financial difficulties and significant opposition from the Eastern Counties Railway. In 1850 all traffic ceased and the company went into administration.[1]
The Bankruptcy Commissioner, Mr Cecil Fane, saw that the company could be revived with imaginative leadership and took control; he suggested that one track of the double track line from Six Mile Bottom to Chesterford should be lifted and used to create the intended link to Cambridge. By the time this was done it was realised that the Chesterford link would never be profitable, so the line was closed forever in 1851.[1] This was one of the first railway closures in British history.
The Newmarket and Chesterford Railway Company was bought by the Eastern Counties Railway in the mid 1850s.[2]
Although only around 15 miles (24 km) long the line ran through three counties, the termini being in Essex (Great Chesterford) and Suffolk (Newmarket) and all intermediate stations being in Cambridgeshire.
Stations
The former Bourne Bridge station is believed to have been partly incorporated into a public house close to Pampisford station.
The Newmarket terminus was replaced several times as new lines developed, its latest site being built in 1902. The "Old Station" was used for goods until 1967 and demolished in 1980.[2]
Photos of Balsham Road station while it was in use exist in the Rokeby collection at the National Monument Record, Swindon.
References
- ^ a b Jeffery, Peter. "Dullingham Yesterdays". http://www.dullingham.com/history/history_station_bdy.htm. Retrieved 5 April 2011.
- ^ a b Farrant, David; Catford, Nick (23 June 2005). "Newmarket (1st Station)". Subterannea Britannica. http://www.subbrit.org.uk/sb-sites/stations/n/newmarket/index.shtml. Retrieved 4 April 2009.
Categories:- Closed railway lines in the East of England
- Pre-grouping British railway companies
- Railway lines opened in 1848
- Railway lines closed in 1851
- Newmarket, Suffolk
- Standard gauge railways in England
- Rail transport in Essex
- Rail transport in Suffolk
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