Bottesford railway station


Bottesford railway station serves the village of Bottesford in Leicestershire, England. The station is on the line from Nottingham to Grantham and Skegness, east of Nottingham railway station.

History

The line through Bottesford was first opened by the Ambergate, Nottingham, Boston and Eastern Junction Railway on 15 July 1850, then taken over by the Great Northern Railway.
The station buildings were designed by Thomas Chambers Hine.
There was also a link to the old GNR Newark to Leicester cross-country route a short distance to the east; this remained in use for freight until 1988 but has since been lifted.
The station is now owned by Network Rail and managed by East Midlands Railway, which provides all rail services.

Facilities

The station is unstaffed and offers limited facilities other than two shelters, bicycle storage, timetables and modern Help Points. The station does not have any ticket purchasing facilities, which means that all tickets must be purchased from the conductor on the train at no extra cost.
Plans to open a community garden on a derelict piece of land at the station started in early 2018 and in June 2019, a community garden was opened by the Duchess of Rutland.

Services

There is generally a service every two hours daily westbound to Nottingham and eastbound to Skegness via Grantham. Several Grantham trains have connections to London, King's Cross or to York.
An extra service to Liverpool stops every day, and on Sundays there is an extra service to Norwich.
Bottesford is the least used station in the county of Leicestershire and is one stop down the line from Nottinghamshire's least used station, Elton and Orston.

Former services

The Great Northern and London and North Western Joint Railway opened in 1879, providing a Leicester to Grantham service from 1882 to 1953.
Former Services