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Melton Mowbray North railway station was a railway station in Melton Mowbray, Leicestershire, England on the Great Northern and London and North Western Joint Railway.. The station was built of red brick but with lavish ornamentation in the classical style.
Market Harborough is a market town in the Harborough district of Leicestershire, England, close to the border with Northamptonshire. The population was 24,779 at the 2021 census . [ 1 ] It is the administrative headquarters of the Harborough district.
The Woodgrange Estate Conservation Area is a residential area with predominantly double-fronted Victorian three and four bedroomed houses built between 1887 and 1892 by developer Thomas Corbett and sons who went on to oversee the construction of more than 1,100 houses to exploit the transport links provided by one of the first Essex lines, opened by Eastern Counties Railway in 1839, running ...
The line allowed for Northampton to access further locations in the Midlands and further north by trains changing at Market Harborough station. This allowed for a direct train from Northampton to Skegness on Saturdays during the summer. [1] Stations on the former line within Northamptonshire include: [1] Clipston and Oxendon railway station
Medbourne, Harborough: Gate: C13-C15: 7 December 1966 1294816 ... Market Harborough: Church: 1844: 25 July 1952 1287658: United Reformed Church. More images ...
The signal box was next to these on the down side. Southbound LNWR trains also used the line on their way to a junction at Market Harborough and would signal their presence to the box by means of three whistles. [4] It was renamed East Langton in 1891 though it also served West Langton, Church Langton, Thorpe Langton and Tur Langton. [5]
Wanstead Park is a railway station in Forest Gate, London.It is on the Suffragette line of the London Overground in Zone 3, 11 miles 11 chains (17.9 km) down the line from Gospel Oak and situated between Leytonstone High Road and Woodgrange Park.
The section from Rugby to Market Harborough, which included Lubenham, opened in 1850. Originally single track, it was doubled at the end of 1878. [3] At grouping in 1923 it became part of the London Midland and Scottish Railway. The line and station closed in 1966.