When the Newcastle & Berwick Railway received authorisation to build a railway between Gateshead and Berwick on 31st July, 1845, it also gained powers to build certain branches. One such branch was the Alnmouth to Alnwick line.
The company naturally
concentrated on the main line and it was only after this was finished that
consideration was given to the branch.The contract for construction was let
in August 1884. Progress was rapid and the line was ready to be formally
opened on the 5th August, 1850. The original station construction at the edge
of the town, adjacent to Shilbottle Coal Company depot, which
was served by a wagonway from Shilbottle Colliery (the route of
this followed the present day Wagonway Road in Alnwick). The station
was quite a modest affair, occupying the area now used as hard
standing in front of the present day Tyre Services depot, and
consisted of a stone built single storey building about 60 feet
long, containing offices and waiting rooms. A single platform
was provided, and it is quite possible that the short section
of platform that survives behind the Station Masters' house dates
from this time. Other buildings provided at this time included
a large stone built goods warehouse and assorted stables/stores.
A signal box was built at the south end of the station yard. Services and traffic
developed steadily and in 1885 Alnwick town council approached the North
Eastern Railway asking for improved facilities as the existing station seemed
inadequate. After initial reluctance to consider their request,
the N.E.R. suddenly reversed their decision, possibly as a result
of direct intervention by the Duke of Northumberland and authorised
construction of the present magnificent building. The contract
for construction was let to Messers Meakin and Dean of London
for £11,500 with an additional £3,931 for engineering
works, a new signal box was included in the price.Opening of the new station
on 5th September, 1887 coincided with the opening of the Cornhill branch which
had also been constructed by the same contractor but at a cost of
£272,266 15s 3d (£272,266.76p). The first train to leave the new station
was a train to Cornhill headed by a Fletcher B.T.P. tank locomotive
No. 199.
After the opening of the new station the original
building was converted into a warehouse and an extension was built
onto one end to provide stables and a mash house. This building
survived until 1930 when it was demolished to provide room for
a garage for the new motor parcels delivery van. Two pre-fabricated
animal feed warehouses were also built on the site at this time,
one of these still survives.
remaining
1850s buildings survived until 1975. At this time the goods shed
was removed and re-built at Beamish Museum, County Durham. The
Station Master's house still stands and is the home of Society member,
Stuart Manley. The 1887 station building remains largely intact
and in exceptionally good condition - ready to receive Aln Valley
Railway Society trains in a few years time! Reasons for closure were given at
the time as being purely financial, with 'creative' accounting producing
a loss, but it appears that one of the deciding factors was that
the Ministry of Transport realised they could substantially reduce
the cost of the Alnwick by-pass, then under construction, by eliminating
the need for an expensive bridge to carry the line over the deep
cutting to the east of Alnwick. This is the bridge we will need
to build.
It was only the timely intervention by the owners of Barter Books that prevented the development from going ahead. Owing to this threat, plans to protect the station from any future speculative development were made. This led to the formation of our Society.
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