Bawdrip Railway Station
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Bawdrip Railway Station
Bawdrip Halt was a railway station at Bawdrip on the Bridgwater branch of the Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway The Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway, also known as the S&D, SDJR or S&DJR, was an English railway line connecting Bath (in north-east Somerset) and Bournemouth (now in south-east Dorset but then in Hampshire), with a branch from Evercreec .... Although the line had opened in 1890, station facilities at Bawdrip were not provided until 7 July 1923, after petitioning by local people. The new halt was surprisingly popular, with 2,185 passengers using it between 7 July and 29 September 1923. It consisted of a single concrete platform 140 feet long; a waiting shelter was provided during 1924. The station closed when the branch service was withdrawn on 1 December 1952. References Further reading * * External links *https://web.archive.org/web/20070521173745/http://www.sdjr.net/locations/bawdrip.html Station on navigable O.S. map {{S&DJR RDT Disused ...
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Bawdrip
Bawdrip is a village and civil parish in the Sedgemoor district of Somerset, England. The village is on the south side of the Polden Hills about north-east of Bridgwater. At the 2011 census the parish had a population of 506. The parish includes the hamlets of Bradney, Horsey and Knowle. History In 1086, Domesday Book recorded a settlement at ''Bagetrepe'' with 27 households and one mill, and another at ''Hursi'' with 19 households, both in North Petherton (hundred), North Petherton hundred. There may have been quarrying on the hillside in the 15th century and lias was dug in the early 19th. Lime was being extracted and processed in the extreme western tip of the parish under Puriton Hill by 1886 and until 1973 in association with the cement works at Dunball. Salt was extracted in the early 20th century. The small building on Church Road, sometimes known as "The Dwarf's House" dates from the early 19th century. It is by and high. King's Sedgemoor Drain crosses the parish fr ...
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