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On 2 May 1859, the LSWR opened a station on the south side of the 1856 GWR station, west of Fisherton Street, to coincide with the opening of the first section of the Salisbury and Yeovil Railway. [1] At the same time, the terminus of the Andover line moved to the new station, having been brought across the city, partly through a tunnel.
The oldest active station to be listed on NRHP was Hackensack's 1869-built Anderson Street station, until it was destroyed in a fire and explosion in 2009, and thus was delisted. Proposals to revive service on the West Trenton Line and Lackawanna Cut-Off include the re-use of some listed stations in both New Jersey and northeastern Pennsylvania.
The Plusbus scheme was launched in October 2002 across an initial 35 railway stations. [1] The scheme is administered by Journey Solutions, a not for profit partnership of bus operators Arriva, FirstGroup, Go-Ahead, National Express and Stagecoach, the Confederation of Passenger Transport and the Rail Delivery Group.
Salisbury station or Salisbury railway station may refer to: Salisbury railway station, in Salisbury, Wiltshire, England; Salisbury railway station, Adelaide, in ...
The station opened to traffic in 1847, when the London and South Western Railway's branch from Southampton and Bishopstoke was built into the east side of Salisbury. [1] Goods traffic started between Bishopstoke ( Eastleigh ) and Salisbury in January 1847, with passenger trains starting in March of the same year. [ 2 ]
Crewkerne railway station, about 1905. The Salisbury & Yeovil company extended its line to Sherborne on 7 May 1860, and from there to Yeovil on 1 June 1860 (to passengers; goods on 1 September). The Yeovil station was the Bristol and Exeter Railway station at Hendford, up until then the terminus of their line from Durston.
Salisbury railway station is the crossing point of the West of England Main Line, from London Waterloo to Exeter St Davids, and the Wessex Main Line from Bristol Temple Meads to Southampton Central. The station is operated by South Western Railway .
Salisbury GWR station building. The GWR station at Salisbury was opened at Fisherton Street on 30 June 1856. Isambard Kingdom Brunel designed a brick-built terminal with a train shed to cover the tracks. After opening of the LSWR station alongside, a footbridge was opened in 1860 for passengers to change between the two stations.
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