Dover Priory railway station

Dover Priory railway station
Dover Priory National Rail
Dover Priory
Dover Priory railway station, looking north
Location
Place Dover
Local authority Dover
Operations
Station code DVP
Managed by Southeastern
Number of platforms 3
Live arrivals/departures and station information
from National Rail Enquiries
Annual rail passenger usage
2004/05 *   0.902 million
2005/06 * decrease 0.861 million
2006/07 * increase 0.923 million
2007/08 * increase 0.960 million
2008/09 * increase 0.975 million
History
Opened 22 July 1861 (22 July 1861)
National Rail - UK railway stations
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
* Annual passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Dover Priory from Office of Rail Regulation statistics. Please note: methodology may vary year on year.
Portal icon UK Railways portal
Main station building.
SR electric locomotive in 1959
A 1945 Ordnance Survey of Dover showing the location of Dover Priory and Dover Marine
A 1908 Railway Clearing House map of lines around Dover

Dover Priory railway station is the main station in Dover in Kent, with the other station being Kearsney situated on the outskirts of Dover. (see this list for the others). All train services are provided by Southeastern. It is located in the south-east corner of the UK rail network.

Contents

Services

As of May 2011 the typical off-peak service from the station is:

Preceding station National Rail National Rail Following station
Folkestone Central   Southeastern
South Eastern Main Line
  Terminus
Folkestone Central   Southeastern
Kent Coast Line
  Martin Mill
Kearsney   Southeastern
Chatham Main Line - Dover Branch
  Terminus
Folkestone Central   Southeastern
High Speed 1
London-Sandwich
  Terminus or
Deal (Peak only)
Disused railways
Kearsney   British Rail
Southern Region

Chatham Main Line - Dover Branch
  Dover Marine
  British Rail
Southern Region

Chatham Main Line - Dover Branch
  Dover Harbour

History

Dover Priory opened on 22 July 1861.[3] as the temporary terminus of the London, Chatham and Dover Railway (LCDR). It became a through station on 1 November 1861 with the completion of a tunnel though the Western Heights to gain access to the Western Docks area, where LCDR created Dover Harbour station[3] Initially the station was known as Dover Town but was renamed in July 1863 (leading to rival SER to adopt the name for one of its Dover stations).[3] Southern consolidated passenger services at Priory in 1927 and modernised the station in 1932.[4] The Chatham Main Line into Priory was electrified in 1959 as part of Stage 1 of Kent Coast Electrification, under the BR 1955 Modernisation Plan.[5] The line up to Ramsgate, via Deal was subsequently electrified under stage two of Kent Coast electrification in January 1961.[5] The line from Folkestone into Priory was electrified in June 1961.[5] The high-speed service to London St Pancras started in 2009. Special dispensation had to be sought to allow the service reach Dover as tunnels to the south are too narrow for emergency exits for rolling stock without end doors.[6]

Murder

In 1868 stationmaster Edward Walsh(e) was murdered by 18-year old Thomas Wells, a porter for the LCDR,[7] after having rebuked him for poor work. Wells was convicted and hanged.[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Network Rail Timetable May 2011: Table 207
  2. ^ Network Rail Timetable May 2011: Table 212
  3. ^ a b c "Dover Priory Station". Dover - Lock and Key of the Kingdom. 2007. http://www.dover-kent.co.uk/transport/priory_station.htm. Retrieved 2007-02-10. 
  4. ^ David Glasspool (2007). "Dover Priory". Kent Rail. http://www.kentrail.org.uk/Dover%20Priory.htm. Retrieved 2007-03-29. 
  5. ^ a b c "Electric Railways". 'Stendec Systems'. 2007. http://www.electric-railways.co.uk/L2_DC_750_CR/1_general/g3_proj/prj-0d75-sr.html. Retrieved 2007-02-01. 
  6. ^ "Dover gets high-speed CTRL trains". BBC News. 14 July 2006. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/kent/5179096.stm. Retrieved 14 July 2006. 
  7. ^ Charles Hindley (1871). Curiosities of street literature, comprising "cocks," or "catch pennies": a large and curious assortment of street-drolleries, squibs, histories, comic tales in prose and verse, broadsides on the royal family, political litanies, dialogues, catechisms, acts of Parliament, street political papers .... Reeves and Turner. p. 239. 
  8. ^ Steve Fielding (1994). Hangman's Record 1868-1899. 1. Chancery House. p. 2. ISBN 0900246650. 

External links

Coordinates: 51°7′34.16″N 1°18′18.43″E / 51.1261556°N 1.3051194°E / 51.1261556; 1.3051194


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