Great Bridge North
General information
LocationGreat Bridge, Sandwell
England
Coordinates52°31′59″N 2°02′08″W / 52.5331°N 2.0356°W / 52.5331; -2.0356
Grid referenceSO976927
Platforms2 (3)
Other information
StatusDisused
History
Original companySouth Staffordshire Railway
Pre-groupingLondon and North Western Railway
Post-groupingLondon, Midland and Scottish Railway
Key dates
1850Opened as Great Bridge[1]
1950Renamed Great Bridge North'[1]
1964Closed to passengers
1972Closed outright

Great Bridge North railway station was a station on the South Staffordshire Line that served the village of Great Bridge and town of Tipton in Staffordshire, England.

History

The station was built in 1850 and was initially served by the South Staffordshire Railway. The South Staffordshire Railway was later absorbed by the London and North Western Railway, which amalgamated with several other railways in 1923 to create the London, Midland and Scottish Railway. The station shared the name Great Bridge with its Great Western Railway counterpart built in 1866. North was appended to the name of the station just after nationalisation.

Passenger usage declined in the early 1880s, and the line became mainly freight in 1887. It remained open for goods traffic as the district became highly industrialised in the heyday of the Black Country's industrial past. Local industry declined after World War II and road transport became more common. British Rail closed the station to passengers through the Beeching Axe in 1964, but it continued as a freight station for local factories until 1972. Goods trains continued to pass through the site of the station until 1993. By that date no sign of the station or the goods yard remained. It is now derelict and mostly fenced off.

Midland Metro

A £1,100,000/15-year-long regeneration project is expected to re-open the closed section of railway through Dudley[2] as a combined Midland Metro tramway with a separate heavy rail line for goods trains. The old station site is earmarked as the location of a Midland Metro stop on the local tram network's second line between Walsall, Dudley Port railway station, Dudley railway station and the Merry Hill Shopping Centre scheduled for opening upon completion in 2011.[3] The freighters would continue on past Brettell Lane railway station and on to the mainline at Stourbridge junction.[3]

See also

Preceding station   Disused railways   Following station
Wednesbury Town   South Staffordshire Railway
Later LNWR, then LMS, finally BR
South Staffs Line (1850-1964)
  Dudley Port
Walsall
or
Terminus
  BR, then Freightliner
South Staffs Line (inc. Dudley-Stourbridge Junction to 1962) (1852-1964)
  Dudley Freightliner Terminal

References

  1. 1 2 Doherty, Andrew. "Great Bridge North Station". Rail Around Birmingham and the West Midlands. Retrieved 31 March 2017.
  2. "Timetable, Funding and Support". Midland Metro. Archived from the original on 17 May 2008.
  3. 1 2 Chadwick, Edward (25 November 2010). "Plans for £1.1 bn West Midlands Metro system unveiled". Birmingham Post. Archived from the original on 28 September 2012. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
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