Bluejuice
Lazy as a rug on Valium
Cor this thread is GREAT
So who wants to tell me what Freshfield Halt is/was all about?
So who wants to tell me what Freshfield Halt is/was all about?
Newhaven Marine was officially renamed Platform 3 of Newhaven Harbour some years ago. I don't think it's used any more, but this trick avoided the need to go through any formal closure procedures.
Cor this thread is GREAT
So who wants to tell me what Freshfield Halt is/was all about?
Cor this thread is GREAT
So who wants to tell me what Freshfield Halt is/was all about?
The tracks are still used as sidings for stock and I am aware of the odd service running from the station to Lewes up to 2006 though the station itself isn't advertised or exists in timetables. Full services ended sometime in the 1970s.
I Know Nothing About Trains But Just Watching The Anoraks Come Out Of The Closet Here Has Been Brilliant - Keep It Up
There's nothing wrong with a bit of knowledge and nostalgia, It's all part of our history.
That's another project I was involved in.While we're on the theme, I've often (well, sometimes. OK, it occured to me once) why Polegate's station was moved a couple of hundred yards up the road? You can still see the old platforms just before you arrive into Polgate (coming from Eastbourne).
That's another project I was involved in.
The move was done simply to get Polegate Station closer to the town centre (and back to where the first Polegate station had been built in the 1840s). It followed a long campaign by a variety of local people - including the Town Council, the Ratepayers' Association and the local Labour Party.
I remember being sent to represent the County Council at a public meeting on the subject in the early 1980s. The speakers included Jimmy Knapp, then a regional officer for the National Union of Railwaymen.
The reason the station was moved down the line (in 1881) was the opening of the Cuckoo line to Hailsham and Heathfield, which required a bend at Polegate that couldn't be fitted into the original track layout without moving the station eastwards. Once the Cuckoo line closed, the station could safely be moved back to where it was most convenient (and next to where it was possible to build a new car park for commuters).
Moulsecoomb station didn't open until 1980.
I think it is extremely unlikely that anyone would think of putting another station between it and Falmer. Apart from anything else, what would they call it? It would, after all, be in ... Moulsecoomb (unlike the existing station, which would have been more accurately called Hollingdean).
What was extraordinary about Moulsecoomb station was the fact that Brighton Borough Council weren't at all keen on the idea - they were worried about the effect it would have on the fares revenue of the council's bus company if all those students at the (then) Polytechnic started using the train instead of the bus to get to and from college. The Southdown bus company didn't support the idea, either.
Hey British Bulldog, is the Lancing signal box still in use? Didn't they centralise all the signalling a few years ago?
Isn't this church one of the original Norman churches, I have only visited it as have been passing along the SDW, but as a cooling refuge on a hot summers day its an excellent community building.Nah. It's got the two essential ingredients to be called a village ...
A church
And a website:-
http://southeasevillage.info/index.htm