Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Ringwood is a closed railway station in the county of Hampshire, England which served the town of Ringwood. It lay on the former Southampton and Dorchester Railway , the original main line from a connection with the London and South Western Railway at Southampton, through Brockenhurst to Dorchester .
Ringwood station opened on 1 December 1882, when the railway line from Camberwell was extended to Lilydale. [5] Like the suburb itself, the station was named after Ringwood in Hampshire, England. [8] In 1926, a signal box was provided at the station, and was located on Platforms 1 and 2. [5] It has since been relocated to the bus interchange.
The private station at Avon Lodge was the result of a clause inserted into the company's authorising act; Williams says that the Ringwood, Christchurch and Bournemouth Railway Act 1859 (22 & 23 Vict. c. xcv) had required the company to keep a "lodge" where the line crossed the road at the entrance to Avon Cottage, and the owner or occupier had ...
Ringwood East railway station is a commuter railway station on the Lilydale line, part of the Melbourne railway network. It serves the eastern Melbourne suburb of Ringwood East in Victoria, Australia. Ringwood East is a below ground unstaffed station, featuring two side platforms, connected by a ground level concourse.
Ringwood railway station opened in 1847. It lay on the Southampton and Dorchester Railway. In 1862 the Ringwood, Christchurch and Bournemouth Railway created a new link with Christchurch. The line to Christchurch was closed in 1935, and the station ceased operating when the Southampton and Dorchester Railway line was closed in 1964.
The station's name was changed to Holmsley on 13 November 1862. The station fell under the control of the London and South Western Railway before becoming part of the Southern Railway in the 1923 railway grouping. The station closed in 1964, a casualty of the programme of closures advocated by the Beeching Report.
Hurn was a railway station in the county of Hampshire (now Dorset), opened on 13 November 1862 by the Ringwood, Christchurch and Bournemouth Railway.Becoming part of the London and South Western Railway, it was taken into the Southern Railway in the grouping of 1923 and closed on 30 September 1935.
1880s: East Ringwood Recreation Reserve used for picnics, gymkhanas, and sports. 1874: Edward Feehan Cass founded the first school in the area. 1924: East Ringwood State School opened on Everard Road. 1925: Ringwood East Railway Station opened. 1950s: Former brickworks site turned into an Army Reserve Depot.