Shalford railway station


Shalford railway station serves the village of Shalford, Surrey, England. The station, and all trains serving it, are operated by Great Western Railway. It is on the North Downs Line. The station is from, and has two platforms, which can each accommodate a six-coach train. To the west is Shalford Junction, from Charing Cross, where the North Downs Line meets the Portsmouth Direct Line from Waterloo.

History

In 1940, Shalford was a sub-control centre coordinating the evacuation trains dispersing the soldiers brought back from Dunkirk.
On 11 April 1944 two goods trains collided at Shalford Station. One of them consisted of tankers of aviation fuel en route to airfields in Kent. Leaks from the damaged wagons caused a major fire which was eventually brought under control by the Fire Brigade, with assistance of members of the local police and Home Guard volunteers, who used sandbags to contain the spread of the burning fuel. Nearby properties, including a potato and vegetable store, were badly damaged as was the steel road bridge over the railway that was buckled by the heat. Fortunately the local pub, the Queen Victoria, escaped unharmed.

Services

, the typical off-peak service is one train per hour to and one to. Additional services from Reading terminate at Shalford in peak hours.
Between Guildford and Redhill the stopping service pattern alternates every two hours off-peak:
Hour 1Shalford
Hour 2Shalford

In peak hours the stopping service serves all stations in both directions.
On Sundays, all services are extended to, but the service is two-hourly in each direction.