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  2. Shillingstone railway station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shillingstone_railway_station

    The station was fully staffed until closure. Track-lifting commenced in 1967, Shillingstone being tackled between March and May. The signal box and platform shelters were demolished at this time, and the last train through the station was the demolition train, hauled by a small diesel shunter. [1]

  3. North Dorset Railway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Dorset_Railway

    After the closure of Shillingstone railway station on 7 March 1966, and a few years post closure, the Dorset County Council purchased the trackbed for a proposed Shillingstone by-pass. Various furniture manufacturing companies were sited in the former station yard, and over 1970s, industrial buildings were constructed, some of them making ...

  4. List of preserved BR Standard Class 9F locomotives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_preserved_BR...

    92207 under restoration at Shillingstone since 2005. Formerly at the East Lancs Railway, £100,000 has already been spent on the bottom end and a plethora of parts of all sizes since rescue from Barry in 1986. Built by BR (W) in Swindon "A" Shop during May 1959, 92207 was the 13th-from-last steam locomotive to be built for British Railways. It ...

  5. Shillingstone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shillingstone

    The station is one of the best-preserved on the Somerset and Dorset line since the railway's closure in 1966. It opened on Monday 31 August 1863 and closed just over a century later on Sunday 6 March 1966. The station is undergoing extensive restoration by the Shillingstone Station Project, supported by the North Dorset Railway Trust. [12]

  6. Signalling control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Signalling_control

    The signal box provided a dry, climate-controlled space for the complex interlocking mechanics and also the signalman. The raised design of most signal boxes (which gave rise to the term "tower" in North America) also provided the signalman with a good view of the railway under his control. The first use of a signal box was by the London ...

  7. Lever frame - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lever_frame

    A mechanical lever frame inside the signal box at Knockcroghery in Ireland Waterloo station A signalbox, LSWR (Howden, Boys' Book of Locomotives, 1907). Mechanical railway signalling installations rely on lever frames for their operation to interlock the signals, track locks [1] and points to allow the safe operation of trains in the area the signals control.

  8. Block post - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Block_post

    Today there are only a few of these classic, railway staff-operated block posts. Their function has been largely superseded by equipment that forms part of an automatic block signalling (Selbsttätiger Streckenblock or Sbk) system or by a central block post in a station signal box at one end of the section between two stations.

  9. Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somerset_and_Dorset_Joint...

    The Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway (S&DJR, also known as the S&D, S&DR or SDJR), was an English railway line jointly owned by the Midland Railway (MR) and the London and South Western Railway (LSWR) that grew to connect Bath (in north-east Somerset) and Bournemouth (then in Hampshire; now in south-east Dorset), with a branch in Somerset from Evercreech Junction to Burnham-on-Sea and Bridgwater.