Bedford St Johns railway station

Bedford St Johns National Rail

The station, looking south
Location
Place Bedford
Local authority Bedford
Coordinates 52°07′46″N 0°28′04″W / 52.1294°N 0.4677°W / 52.1294; -0.4677Coordinates: 52°07′46″N 0°28′04″W / 52.1294°N 0.4677°W / 52.1294; -0.4677
Grid reference TL049490
Operations
Station code BSJ
Managed by London Midland
Number of platforms 1
DfT category F2
Live arrivals/departures, station information and onward connections
from National Rail Enquiries
Annual rail passenger usage*
2002/03 Increase 710
2004/05 Decrease 470
2005/06 Decrease 361
2006/07 Increase 942
2007/08 Increase 12,106
2008/09 Increase 14,076
2009/10 Decrease 11,908
2010/11 Increase 12,168
2011/12 Decrease 10,124
2012/13 Increase 154,976 [Note]
2013/14 Increase 162,880
2014/15

Increase 173,191

^ (increase due to changes in data collection methods)[1]
History
18 November 1846 Opened as "Bedford"
2 June 1924 Renamed "Bedford St Johns"
1 January 1968 Closure of Oxford to Cambridge line
15 July 1968 Closed to freight and became unstaffed halt
14 May 1984 Resited
National Rail – UK railway stations
* Annual estimated passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Bedford St Johns from Office of Rail and Road statistics. Methodology may vary year on year.
UK Railways portal

Bedford St Johns is the smaller of two railway stations in Bedford in Bedfordshire, England, on the Marston Vale Line linking Bletchley and Bedford. It is unstaffed and is operated by London Midland.

St Johns was Bedford's first station, on the Oxford to Cambridge line. Its role diminished following the closure of that line, leaving it with a truncated route to Bletchley. British Rail closed the original station on 14 May 1984 and diverted services from Bletchley along a new chord line to Bedford Midland station when a new single platform halt was opened on this new chord line.

Services

The station is served by London Midland local services from Bletchley to Bedford using Class 150/1 diesel multiple units.

Monday to Saturdays, there is generally an hourly service to Bletchley (westbound) and to Bedford Midland (eastbound) with no Sunday service.[2]

Preceding station   National Rail   Following station
London Midland
Mondays-Saturdays only

Community Rail Partnership

In common with others on the Marston Vale Line, the station is covered by the Marston Vale Community Rail Partnership,[3] which aims to increase use of the line by involving local people.

History

Opening

The station was opened in November 1846 by the Bedford Railway as the eastern terminus of its line from Bletchley, the first line to reach the town.[4] The station was on the west side of the A600 London Road (grid reference TL 052 489), with the main station buildings on the south side of the line facing the public house. The goods yard was further west nearer the River Great Ouse to receive river traffic. A second connecting line to the goods yard created a triangle which diverted drainage to produce a pond which supplied the station and small two-road locomotive shed.[5]

1875 Accident

A second station was opened in Bedford in 1857 on the Midland Railway's Leicester to Hitchin line. The route chosen by the Midland took it across the earlier line at a point near the Bletchley end of the triangle, and a level crossing was built. In March 1875, a Midland passenger train collided with the rear coaches of a Bedford service, killing one passenger and injuring four others. The subsequent enquiry identified a badly-positioned Bedford starter signal as a major cause of the accident. To remedy the problem a 29-lever signal box was opened in 1877 to control new interlocked signals, and block signalling was introduced throughout the Bedford line, which had been extended to Cambridge.[6]

Decline and relocation

Original station in June 1962
An Oxford-bound train in October 1967, shortly before withdrawal of this service

Although the Second World War saw the Oxford-Cambridge line handle unprecedented levels of traffic, it suffered from a lack of investment in the post-war years. The 1955 Modernisation Plan proposed improvements to the line, believing it could be a strategic cross-country route for freight across three British Railways regions without having to pass through London. The policy was however to change within a few years, leaving the Bletchley Flyover as a testament of the change of course. The first attempt to close the line came in 1959, but was unsuccessful in the face of local opposition. Hopes for the line thereafter rose when it did not figure in the Beeching Report, but it was nevertheless proposed for closure in 1964, with the Oxford — Bletchley and Bedford — Cambridge routes closing after the last day of service on 30 December 1967.[4]

The Bletchley - Bedford route, now known as the Marston Vale Line, survived in a downgraded form as freight facilities were withdrawn and the stations became unstaffed halts. The station, now a terminus, came under the authority of then area manager at Bedford Midland. By March 1971 the main station buildings and water tower had been demolished, leaving it as a terminus halt.[7] A third attempt to close the line in 1972 was resisted by the Bedford Rail Users' Association.

In 1984, a replacement station was opened in the former freight yard, at the north end of the triangle, which enabled services to continue to Bedford Midland. The new connection runs over the route of the Midland's Hitchin line, which closed in 1964.[8] The old station site was abandoned, although some of the furniture, such as the lampposts, was not removed. The site has now been reclaimed by nature.[9]

Preceding station Disused railways Following station
Kempston and Elstow Halt   British Railways
Varsity Line
  Willington

Future

The East West Rail Consortium is seeking to reinstate the entire Oxford — Cambridge route, which might include rebuilding the station on its original site.[10] The old station site, now covered by weeds and bushes, remains undeveloped.

References

  1. "Record passenger numbers and record rail receipts - our trains just get busier and busier". Rail.co.uk. 21 December 2014. Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  2. Table 64 National Rail timetable, May 2016
  3. Marston Vale Community Rail Partnership
  4. 1 2 Subterranea Britannica: Bedford Railway, 3 April 2005
  5. Simpson 1981, p. 74.
  6. Simpson 1981, p. 78.
  7. Simpson 1981, p. 148.
  8. Crane, R. (13 May 2002). "The Oxford to Cambridge Line - Then and Now". The Friends of the National Railway Museum.
  9. Catford, Nick (29 June 2012). "Disused Stations site record". Station Name: Bedford St. Johns.
  10. "Bedford St Johns". Subterranea Britannica. 23 April 2007.

Sources

External links

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