Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Hatfield railway station serves the town of Hatfield in Hertfordshire, England. The station is managed by Great Northern . It is 17 miles 54 chains (28.4 km) measured from London King's Cross on the East Coast Main Line .
Hatfield and Stainforth railway station serves the towns of Hatfield and Stainforth in South Yorkshire, England. It is located 6 + 3 ⁄ 4 miles (10.9 km) north east of the main Doncaster station. The original station, known until the 1990s as "Stainforth and Hatfield" and was built in 1866 as a replacement for the South Yorkshire Railway 's ...
The above- and underground station area is located east of the centre of Pretoria between Grosvenor Street and Jan Shoba Street ().The Hatfield station forms the northern terminus on the north–south route of the Gautrain and allows passengers to pass to the PRASA rail network.
The Hatfield & St Albans Railway was a branch of the Great Northern Railway which connected St Albans to Hatfield in Hertfordshire, England.It opened in 1865 with the principal aim of allowing St Albans traffic to access the Great Northern's main line to London at Hatfield, but soon came into difficulties when the Midland Railway inaugurated a direct route to London through St Albans.
A new railway station and car park opened in late 2015. The frequent train service runs direct from Hatfield Station to London King's Cross (21 minutes) via Finsbury Park (16 minutes, Victoria Underground Line) on fast trains running two or three times an hour. An additional train service calls at all stations to Moorgate in the City of London.
The path runs from St Albans, close to St Albans Abbey railway station and the site of Roman Verulamium, through Fleetville and Smallford to Hatfield; it ends close to Hatfield railway station. Part of National Cycle Network Route 61, which runs from the River Thames at Maidenhead to the River Lea in Ware , the Alban Way is fully tarmacked ...
The Hatfield rail crash was a railway accident on 17 October 2000, at Hatfield, Hertfordshire. It was caused by a metal fatigue -induced derailment , killing four people and injuring more than 70. The accident exposed major stewardship shortcomings of the privatised national railway infrastructure company Railtrack .
Fare zones 10–15 (or A–F by their hexadecimal number) are for stations accepting Oyster card with fares set by National Rail train operating companies and the zones themselves are not publicised. The fare zones are outside Greater London , typically more than 16 miles (26 km) from Piccadilly Circus .