Bourne railway station


Bourne was a railway station serving the town of Bourne in Lincolnshire which opened in 1860 and closed to passengers in 1959.

History

The station was on the Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway main line between the Midlands and the Norfolk Coast. It was finally closed in 1959 when the M&GN was closed. The line from Spalding and also the Sleaford branch as far as Billingborough remained in use for goods until 1964. The remaining station buildings were demolished in 2005 to make way for new residential development.
The original station opened in 1860 as the terminus of the Bourn and Essendine Railway, which provided connecting services to the Great Northern main line, and the local Stamford and Essendine Railway. It was this company which took over the Red Hall rather than demolishing it. The line was operated by the GNR, and later owned by them. The line closed and was lifted in June 1951.
The next development was the opening of the Bourne and Spalding Railway in 1866, converting the site into a through station.
In 1870 the Great Northern exercised its powers to build the Bourne and Sleaford Railway, opening in 1872. Although operated by the same company, this line was run separately from the Essendine line, and had its own goods yard. This line closed to passengers in 1930 although a 'special' for the Festival of Britain ran in 1950.
The last line to open was the Saxby to Bourne line, which was part of the Midland & Great Northern project, which subsumed the Bourne & Spalding route. This connection opened in 1894 and was closed to passengers, along with the Spalding line, in 1959.
The original down platform remained outside the Red Hall, after conversion to a through layout, but was no longer used. A hedge was planted along the running line edge to prevent passengers approaching the line. From the Bourne & Spalding period, a single island platform was used by passengers, later reached by an iron lattice footbridge from the disused platform next to the Red Hall. The footbridge was a characteristic Midland Railway design, and is likely to have been provided when the M&GN arrived. All passenger trains used the two faces of the island platform.
With the site redeveloped in the 1970s as a light industrial estate, owned by Lincolnshire County Council, in 2014 Linden Homes started redevelopment of the site, into a residential development which retains the original station building.

Summary of former services

Sample train timetable for July 1922

The table below shows the train departures from Bourne on weekdays in July 1922.
DepartureGoing toCalling atArrivalOperator
07.45King's LynnTwenty, Counter Drain, North Drove, Spalding, Weston, Moulton, Whaplode, Holbeach, Fleet, Gedney, Long Sutton, Sutton Bridge, Walpole, Terrington, Clenchwarton, South Lynn09.32M&GN
07.45EssendineThurlby, Braceborough Spa07.59GNR
08.55LeicesterCastle Bytham, South Witham, Edmondthorpe & Wymondham, Saxby, Melton Mowbray, Asfordby, Frisby, Brooksby, Rearsby, Syston10.38M&GN
09.05SleafordMorton Road, Rippingale, Billingborough & Horbling, Aswarby & Scredington09.40GNR
09.20EssendineThurlby, Braceborough Spa09.35GNR
10.48SleafordMorton Road, Rippingale, Billingborough & Horbling, Aswarby & Scredington11.23GNR
10.53King's LynnTwenty, Counter Drain, North Drove, Spalding, Weston, Moulton, Whaplode, Holbeach, Fleet, Gedney, Long Sutton, Sutton Bridge, Walpole, Terrington, Clenchwarton, South Lynn12.50M&GN
12.10Lowestoft CentralSutton Bridge, South Lynn, Melton Constable, Aylsham, North Walsham, Yarmouth Beach, Gorleston-on-Sea, Corton, Lowestoft North. Also through coaches to Norwich and Cromer.16.16M&GN
12.15LeicesterSaxby, Melton Mowbray13.28M&GN
12.37SaxbyCastle Bytham, South Witham, Edmondthorpe & Wymondham13.19M&GN
13.00EssendineThurlby, Braceborough Spa13.15GNR
14.30King's LynnTwenty, Counter Drain, North Drove, Spalding, Weston, Moulton, Whaplode, Holbeach, Fleet, Gedney, Long Sutton, Sutton Bridge, Walpole, Terrington, Clenchwarton, South Lynn16.45M&GN
15.25SleafordMorton Road, Rippingale, Billingborough & Horbling, Aswarby & Scredington16.00GNR
15.28EssendineThurlby, Braceborough Spa15,43GNR
16.28NottinghamCastle Bytham, Saxby, Melton Mowbray17.41M&GN
16.40Lowestoft CentralSouth Lynn, Fakenham, Melton Constable, Aylsham, North Walsham, Stalham, Potter Heigham, Yarmouth Beach, Gorleston-on-Sea, Lowestoft North. Also through coaches to Norwich and Cromer.20.24M&GN
16.50SpaldingTwenty, Counter Drain, North Drove17.11M&GN
16.50EssendineThurlby, Braceborough Spa17.04GNR
17.55SleafordMorton Road, Rippingale, Billingborough & Horbling, Aswarby & Scredington18.30GNR
18.05King's LynnTwenty, Counter Drain, North Drove, Spalding, Weston, Moulton, Whaplode, Holbeach, Fleet, Gedney, Long Sutton, Sutton Bridge, Walpole, Terrington, Clenchwarton, South Lynn20.05M&GN
18.13EssendineThurlby, Braceborough Spa18.33GNR
18.15LeicesterSouth Witham, Saxby, Syston13.28M&GN
18.27NottinghamCastle Bytham, South Witham, Edmondthorpe & Wymondham, Saxby, Melton Mowbray19.30M&GN
21.07SpaldingTwenty21.27M&GN

1873 accident

From the Grantham Journal
That would have the accident occurring on Sunday, 30 March 1873.

Mails

An interesting extract from the Stamford Mercury in 1860:
The day delivery of letters in Bourne, which previously took place shortly after 3 o’clock in the afternoon, now commences about 11.30 a m. The train, which heretofore was due at Bourne at 10.58 a m, is now timed so as to reach Bourne at 11.20. By this alteration, a letter posted in London early in the morning may be delivered at Bourne the same day about noon.