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Aylesham railway station is on the Dover branch of the Chatham Main Line; it serves the village of Aylesham, in Kent, England. It is 68 miles 66 chains (110.8 km) down the line from London Victoria , situated between Adisham and Snowdown .
The fine period station buildings stood after closure until 1990, when the Bure Valley Railway opened. Upon taking over the site, the original buildings were deemed unsuitable for the new project and were demolished. [2] The new Aylsham railway station was constructed on the site and opened on 10 July 1990.
Aylesham / ˈ eɪ l ʃ əm / is a village and civil parish in the Dover district of Kent, England.The village is 6.5 miles (10.5 km) south-east of the cathedral city of Canterbury, and 8.5 miles (13.7 km) north-west of the town and port of Dover.
Aylsham South railway station served the town of Aylsham in Norfolk from 1880 to 1981. The period station buildings were subsequently demolished in 1990 to allow for the construction of Aylsham railway station , the northern terminus of the Bure Valley Railway , a narrow gauge operation which reuses some of the trackbed of the old railway line.
The sign of the former Aylsham North railway station is now affixed to the fence of the house opposite the road. Aylsham North railway station (originally Aylsham Town and later known as Aylsham) was a station in Aylsham, Norfolk, on the Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway line from the Midlands to the Norfolk coast. It was closed in 1959 ...
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Aylsham station's large train shed, with visiting RHDR No. 1 'Green Goddess'. This girder bridge takes the Bure Valley Railway over the River Bure. The bridge is 105 feet long and by far the largest bridge on the line. Bure Valley Railway track approaching Aylsham, showing how the formation is split between the railway and permissive footpath.
The separate parish of Aylesham was created from the parish of Nonington in 1951. [7] Prior to the split, an area of 3,808 acres (1,541 ha) is shown for Nonington parish in Volume III of the Victoria County History of Kent, published in 1936.