Llangammarch railway station


Llangammarch railway station serves the village of Llangammarch Wells in Powys, Wales. Situated near the centre of the village, the station is on the Heart of Wales Line 56¾ miles north east of Swansea.

History

The station was opened in May 1867, as part of the second stage of the Central Wales Extension Railway's line from the to. This had been given parliamentary approval in 1860, but took until 1867 to reach and was not finally completed throughout until 1 June 1868. A single platform station was provided here, with booking office, waiting room and toilets located in the main building, a separate house for the station master and a simple goods shed served by a single siding.
Further south, the Neath and Brecon Railway obtained an act of parliament for a line from Sennybridge to Llangammarch; that railway's promoter, John Dickson, also made a start on constructing the interconnecting route, but work was suspended on his bankruptcy in 1867 and never resumed. The partially completed earthworks can still be seen in the countryside north of Sennybridge.
In 1870 the London and North Western Railway took over and the line subsequently became a well used through route between Shrewsbury and Swansea, with passenger trains from the station conveying through coaches to destinations as varied as Liverpool, Manchester,, Birmingham New Street and London Euston. Llangammarch and the other towns in the area were also promoted by the LNWR for the healing properties of their mineral waters, leading to the addition of 'Wells' to the station name here in the 1880s and the construction of a company-owned hotel nearby.
The station passed into the ownership of the London, Midland and Scottish Railway at the 1923 Grouping, then to the Western Region of British Railways upon nationalisation in January 1948. The station was host to a LMS caravan from 1934 to 1939. It was threatened with closure in 1962 and again in 1967, but survived on each occasion. It did however lose both its goods handling facilities and station staff in the summer of 1964, when through freight traffic ended and passenger services were converted to diesel operation. The main building remained intact until 1980, when it was finally demolished and replaced by a basic wooden shelter. This in turn was replaced by the current structure in 1998.

Facilities

The station has only basic amenities though it has been fitted with a digital CIS display and customer help point. Though listed at the National Rail Enquiries site as Llangammarch, the station name boards now include the "Wells" suffix.

Services

All trains serving the station are operated by Transport for Wales. On Mondays to Saturdays there are four trains a day in each direction, northbound to Shrewsbury and southbound to Swansea, while on Sundays there are two services each way. Llangammarch is a request stop: passengers wishing to board a train here must signal to the driver; those wishing to alight must inform the train conductor.