Bridlington railway station
Bridlington railway station serves the town of Bridlington in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England. It is located on the Yorkshire Coast Line and is operated by Northern who provide all passenger train services.
The station buffet at Bridlington is one of only three original station buffets left in the UK, and provides the prizewinning flower display in the station.
History
The station was opened on 6 October 1846 by the York and North Midland Railway as the terminus of their line running from Hull railway station. An extension northwards to Filey railway station leading to a junction at Seamer railway station connecting with the York to Scarborough Line was opened just over a year later.The original station buildings and platforms were located a few yards to the west of the current station. These consisted of a train shed designed by George Townsend Andrews and similar to his work at Filey and. Platform 3 was an extension to the original scheme and was a bay platform used for many years by the 'Malton Dodger' until the 1950s. Bridlington expanded as a resort at the start of the 20th century largely as a result of the railway. Direct trains ran from the industrial heartlands via Selby and in the summer. The new holiday market led to a huge expansion of the resort and the need for a larger station to take the long excursion trains.
The present concourse and the main platforms date from the 1912 expansion of the station which included Bell's wrought iron canopies over the lengthy platforms 5 and 6. A new roofed concourse was built and the new station entrance included the original canopy from the old entrance. After the First World War, excursion platforms were added to cope with the many special trains. On summer Saturdays the timetable would include through trains to Leeds, London, the Midlands and Derbyshire. The inter-war period saw the greatest extent of the station complete with engine shed and two turntables with extensive sidings. The fine compact Station Buffet was built at this time.
After the Second World War, the excursion market continued to thrive until the early 1960s particularly with the opening of Butlin's at Filey which had its own station. After the Beeching closures of the Wolds' lines excursions continued but the demand weakened. By the 1980s, rationalisation was overdue as many lines in the station were rarely used except on summer weekends. The timetable was changed to create a regular 30-minute clockface service south of Bridlington with fewer trains to Scarborough. A winter Sunday service was introduced south of Bridlington in the late 1980s.
Today's station is much changed from the extensive original and is a fragment. The original train sheds were removed and replaced by concrete canopies as at and during the late 1950s. These original platforms were taken out of use in March 1983 and subsequently demolished.
The excursion platforms on the opposite side were taken out of regular use before signalling changes in 2000 that put the line northwards towards Filey & Scarborough under the control of the signal boxes at Bridlington South and Seamer, leaving only three platforms in operation. Platform 8 was reinstated as a siding for a time, but then abandoned once again. The buffers and most of the track in the platforms were removed on 1 September 2014 to make way for a Council project for a car park; however the major part of the platform itself, some track in the platform, signalling and all connecting track and point work remain in situ, with the exception of the connection from the Up Excursion to the main line, which was removed on 30 November 2015.
Today's station has preserved the wide concourse and the sweeping curved platforms of the 1912 extension, and it has many floral displays.
The station was designated a Grade II listed building in 2003 and is now recorded in the National Heritage List for England, maintained by Historic England.
Station Masters
- Mr. Burstall 1846 - 1848
- Henry Darby 1848 - 1853
- William Appleby ca. 1857 - 1885
- Thomas H. Shipman 1895 - 1912
- Edwin Lumbard 1913 - 1922
- John Martin 1922 - 1936
- T.E. Allen 1936 - 1939
- Albert Ernest Purnell 1940 - 1941
- M. Johnson 1941 - ????
- E. Woods 1942 - 1944
- J.C. Handley 1944 - 1946
- Reginald Redpath 1946 - 1950
- G. Brown BEM 1950 - 1954
- S. Richardson 1954 - 1958
- D.E. Coleman ???? - 1963
- E.N. Pearson 1963 - ????
Accidents and incidents
- In July 1958, locomotive No. 62703 Hertfordshire ran into the turntable pit and rolled into its side.
Facilities
A ticket-vending machine was installed on 26 January 2011, near to the Council Information Point inside the concourse.
The station buffet, now privately managed and licensed serves refreshments, including teas and real ales, and is fitted out in 'steam era' style. Other parts of the building unused by the railway are now used for local interest groups – the parcel office is now an arts centre run by MIND mental health charity, and other parts of the building are used by Bridlington Model Railway Society.
A Selecta Vending Machine is also available on platform 5.
Services
There is a half-hourly service from the station to Hull on weekdays, with alternate departures continuing to and or – some of these are limited stop either side of Hull whilst others serve most intermediate stations en route. In general the stopping pattern of the hourly Sheffield service is Bridlington, Driffield, Beverley, Cottingham, Hull, Brough, Goole, Doncaster, Meadowhall and Sheffield. There is also one service each way to/from Sheffield that runs via rather than the usual route via.Northbound, there is now a basic hourly service to Scarborough all day since the May 2019 timetable change. This is an improvement on the nine per day each way frequency that formerly operated.
On Sundays trains operate hourly to Hull and Scarborough from mid-morning throughout the year, with most of the Hull trains continuing to Sheffield via Doncaster. The new Sunday service is the first all year, all line, Sunday train service since at least 1958.
The local Community Rail Partnership is hoping that service improvements, such as the year-round Sunday service and a weekday hourly service to Scarborough, can be implemented once Northern Rail receives additional rolling stock from the Department for Transport as part of a central government investment plan for the local rail network.
Northern Rail confirmed its intentions to institute an improved weekday and all-year Sunday service from December 2009. These changes were implemented with the start of the new timetable on 13 December 2009.
Northern are further upgrading services to/from the station, which come into effect with the May 2019 timetable change. This will see an hourly daytime service operating to and from Scarborough throughout the week. The December 2019 timetable change saw the introduction of a direct service to York via Hull.
Platforms
Bridlington station has currently 3 platforms.- Platform 4 is for trains to Scarborough from Hull, Doncaster or Sheffield.
- Platform 5 is for trains from Scarborough going to and from Hull or Doncaster/Sheffield.
- Platform 6 is a bay platform for services terminating from Hull, Doncaster or Sheffield.
Locomotive hauled and heritage trains
On 25 July 2009 the first loco-hauled excursion for some years "The Bridlington Seaside Special" arrived from London King's Cross with Class 66 haulage. Western loco D1015 "Western Champion" visited on 5 December 2009 and a charter to Edinburgh ran on 18 December 2009. In 2010 a railtour to Carlisle began in Bridlington hauled by 2 Class 47 diesel locomotives. On 24 July the line was visited by a charter hauled by Class 67 locomotives.