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Bangor railway station serves the city of Bangor, Gwynedd; it is operated by Transport for Wales. The station, which is 24 + 3 ⁄ 4 miles (40 km) east of Holyhead , is the last mainland station on the North Wales Coast line between Crewe and Holyhead .
The Bangor Line originated with the incorporation of the Belfast, Holywood, and Bangor Railway (BHBR) on June 26, 1846. The first section of the line, running from Belfast to Holywood, opened on August 2, 1848. The line was extended to Bangor on May 1, 1865, and subsequently acquired by the Belfast and County Down Railway (BCDR) in 1884. [3]
Bangor Bus and Rail Centre is a combined rail and bus interchange which serves the city of Bangor in County Down, Northern Ireland. The station in its current form was built in the year 2000 to celebrate the new millennium .
Bangor West railway station is located in the townland of Ballyvarnet in Bangor, County Down, Northern Ireland. History. It was opened on 1 June 1928 [3] by the ...
The Bangor Railway & Electric Company, founded as the Bangor Street Railway and renamed in 1924 as Bangor Hydro-Electric, operated trolleys on an electric railway between Bangor and Charleston, Maine, from 1889 to 1930. It began operation the year after the world's first widely successful electric trolley system debuted in Richmond, Virginia. [1]
Bangor railway station may refer to: Bangor railway station (Northern Ireland), the terminus of the Belfast–Bangor line in Bangor, Co. Down; Bangor railway station (Wales), a station in Bangor, Gwynedd; Bangor station (Wisconsin), a former station in Wisconsin; Bangor station (Michigan), an Amtrak station in Bangor, Michigan
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The Bangor and Carnarvon Railway was authorised by the Bangor and Caernarvon Railway Act 1851 (14 & 15 Vict. c. xxi) on 20 May 1851. [2] The Bangor and Caernarvon Railway Act 1851 permitted the Chester and Holyhead Railway to work the line. It was to make a junction with the C&HR main line at a junction a little east of Britannia Bridge. [3] [4]