Wootton railway station

Wootton railway station is former railway station, and now a recreated heritage station, at Wootton on the Isle of Wight, off the south coast of England.

Wootton
Station on heritage railway
The modern-era heritage station (July 2002)
General information
LocationWootton Common, Isle of Wight
England
Coordinates50°43′05″N 1°14′26″W / 50.718127°N 1.240613°W / 50.718127; -1.240613 (modern heritage station)
Grid referenceSZ536913
Managed byRyde and Newport Railway (1875 to 1887)
Isle of Wight Central Railway (1887 to 1923)
Southern Railway (1923 to 1948)
Southern Region of British Railways (1948 to 1966)
Isle of Wight Steam Railway (since 1971 )
Platforms1
Key dates
1875Opened
21 September 1953Closed
1971Line partially reopened as heritage railway
1986New station on different site

History

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The original station, on the Newport-to-Ryde line, opened in 1875,[1] and was an intermediate stop on (successively) the Ryde and Newport Railway, Isle of Wight Central Railway, Southern Railway and British Railways. The station was expanded in 1898 when a new siding was opened for goods, mineral and livestock traffic.[2]

The original station closed on 21 September 1953,[3] and the line itself closed in 1966. Part of the line was re-opened as the heritage Isle of Wight Steam Railway in 1971. A new station at Wootton, about two hundred yards to the south east of the original, was opened in August 1986, and is now recreated in the style of an Isle of Wight Central Railway-era station.[4]

The Railway received a grant from the LEADER project in November 2011 for a rebuild of Wootton station, which involved extending the platform, extending the headshunt to accommodate the Ivatt tank locomotives, build a replica of the original wooden station building that was at Havenstreet, install new toilets and construct the base for the signal box, which will be relocated to the platform.

Over the Winter period 2019/2020 the Signal box lever frame (formally located in Shanklin Signal Box) was partially installed, and connected to the lineside infrastructure, as of September 2020, it controls 2 shunt signals, 1 set of points and a facing point lock, a further lever acts as a 'king' lever (which prevents the facing point lock from being withdrawn unless the single line token is present in the box)1 further lever is currently spare, both shunt signals are provided with electric repeaters due to poor sighting, and the Facing point lock retains its fowling bar, a treadle has been provided to assist pointsman in determining when a locomotive has moved clear of the points, the commissioning was completed immediately prior to the first operating days of the 2020 season (which had been delayed due to the COVID-19 travel restrictions).

Stationmasters

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  • Robert James ca. 1878[5]
  • Leonard Fenn ca. 1899
  • George Henry Edwards 1910 - ca. 1920 (afterwards station master at Whippingham)
  • Mr. Spinks ca. 1920
  • Mr. Dibley ca. 1937


Preceding station    Heritage railways Following station
Terminus   Isle of Wight Steam Railway   Haven Street
Disused railways
Whippingham   British Rail
Southern Region

IoW CR : Newport to Smallbrook Junction line
  Haven Street
 
The location of the original station, seen here in 2018. Much of the cutting in which the station was sited has been filled in, and nothing visible remains of the station itself. The old railway track at this location is now a public footpath and cycle track.
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References

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  1. ^ "Isle Of Wight Railways, then and now" Pomeroy, C,A: Oxford,Past & Present Publishing, 1993, ISBN 0-947971-62-9
  2. ^ "Opening of a New Siding at Wootton Station". Isle of Wight County Press and South of England Reporter. England. 12 November 1898. Retrieved 29 July 2021 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  3. ^ "Steaming Through the Isle Of Wight" Hay,P : Midhurst,Middleton, 1988, ISBN 0-906520-56-8
  4. ^ "Subterranea Britannica". Archived from the original on 19 October 2007. Retrieved 22 September 2007.
  5. ^ "County Petty Sessions". Isle of Wight Observer. England. 7 December 1878. Retrieved 29 July 2021 – via British Newspaper Archive.