Halwill Junction Railway Station
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Halwill Junction Railway Station was a railway station in
Halwill Junction Halwill is a village in Devon, England just off the A3079 road, A3079 Okehampton to Holsworthy, Devon, Holsworthy road. About a mile away on the main road is another settlement called Halwill Junction. This name brings to mind the former signif ...
, near the villages of
Halwill Halwill is a village in Devon, England just off the A3079 Okehampton to Holsworthy road. About a mile away on the main road is another settlement called Halwill Junction. This name brings to mind the former significance of the two villages, a ...
and Beaworthy in
Devon Devon ( , historically known as Devonshire , ) is a ceremonial and non-metropolitan county in South West England. The most populous settlement in Devon is the city of Plymouth, followed by Devon's county town, the city of Exeter. Devo ...
, England. It opened in 1879 and formed an important junction between the now-closed Bude Branch and North Cornwall line. It closed in 1966 along with the lines which it served, a casualty of the
Beeching Report Beeching is an English surname. Either a derivative of the old English ''bece'', ''bæce'' "stream", hence "dweller by the stream" or of the old English ''bece'' "beech-tree" hence "dweller by the beech tree".''Oxford Dictionary of English Surnames' ...
.


History

The station was opened in January 1879 by the
London and South Western Railway The London and South Western Railway (LSWR, sometimes written L&SWR) was a railway company in England from 1838 to 1922. Originating as the London and Southampton Railway, its network extended to Dorchester and Weymouth, to Salisbury, Exeter ...
(LSWR) following the extension of its line from Meldon Junction on the Okehampton to Plymouth line to
Holsworthy Holsworthy is a market town and Civil parishes in England, civil parish in the Torridge District, Torridge district of Devon, England, some west of Exeter. The River Deer, a tributary of the River Tamar, forms the western boundary of the paris ...
on the new Bude Branch. Five years later, it became a junction station with the construction by the
North Cornwall Railway The North Cornwall Railway was a railway line running from Halwill in Devon to Padstow in Cornwall via Launceston, Camelford and Wadebridge, a distance of . Opened in the last decade of the nineteenth century, it was part of a drive by the Lon ...
of a line south to Launceston which gave the latter company a direct through route over LSWR metals to
London Waterloo Waterloo station (), also known as London Waterloo, is a central London terminus on the National Rail network in the United Kingdom, in the Waterloo area of the London Borough of Lambeth. It is connected to a London Underground station of ...
. The opening of the route south led to the renaming of the station - to ''Halwill Junction'' - in March 1887. By the close of the century both lines had been extended - the Bude Branch reaching
Bude Bude (; kw, Porthbud) is a seaside town in north east Cornwall, England, in the civil parish of Bude-Stratton and at the mouth of the River Neet (also known locally as the River Strat). It was sometimes formerly known as Bude Haven.''Corn ...
by 10 August 1898 and the North Cornwall Line to
Padstow Padstow (; kw, Lannwedhenek) is a town, civil parish and fishing port on the north coast of Cornwall, England. The town is situated on the west bank of the River Camel estuary approximately northwest of Wadebridge, northwest of Bodmin and ...
by 23 March 1899."Halwill" on SEMG online
/ref> A third route stretching out to the north towards Torrington was opened on 27 July 1925 by the
North Devon and Cornwall Junction Light Railway The North Devon and Cornwall Junction Light Railway was a railway built to serve numerous ball clay pits that lay in the space between the London and South Western Railway's Torrington branch, an extension of the North Devon Railway group, an ...
. This was served by a separate uncovered platform outside the main station building, situated to the north. The station now became officially known as ''Halwill'', although its running-in board provided a fuller description of the routes available, proudly announcing ''Halwill for Beaworthy, junction for the Bude, North Cornwall & Torrington Lines''. Always a slightly odd station in the sense that it served no particular large urban conurbation and acted largely as a useful interchange between three different lines, Halwill was at its busiest in the period up to the
Second World War World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great powers—forming two opposi ...
when eight sidings were laid to deal with the military traffic in the lead-up to D-Day. It also relied, as did the lines which it served, to a large extent on summer holiday traffic and when this began to dry-up in the late 1950s and early 1960s with the increased use of the motorcar, it became unprofitable and a candidate for closure in the
Beeching Report Beeching is an English surname. Either a derivative of the old English ''bece'', ''bæce'' "stream", hence "dweller by the stream" or of the old English ''bece'' "beech-tree" hence "dweller by the beech tree".''Oxford Dictionary of English Surnames' ...
. First proposed for closure in April 1964, Halwill saw its connecting lines close one by one over the next few years - the line north to Torrington closed to passengers on 1 March 1965 and those to Bude and Padstow on 3 October 1966, heralding the end for the formerly important railway junction. The line north did, however, remain open between Torrington and Barnstaple for freight until 1982.


Stationmasters

*W.H. Newcombe 1878 - 1887 *Alfred Capel 1887 - 1892 (formerly station master at Ashwater, afterwards station master at Yeoford) *Frank Russell 1892 - 1898 (afterwards station master at Okehampton) *Wallace Scettrino 1898 - 1904 (formerly station master at Lydford, afterwards station master at Yeoford) *Percy Lodder 1904 - 1911 (afterwards station master at Teddington) *J.A. Balch 1911 - 1914 (formerly station master at Whimple, afterwards station master at Holsworthy) *Alfred Edwin Lock 1914 - 1917 (formerly station master at Colyton, afterwards station master at Bere Ferrers) *A.J. Brown 1917 - 1920 *N.W. Tancock 1920 - 1924 (afterwards station master at Addlestone) *F. Bone 1924 - 1932 (afterwards station master at Sidmouth Junction) *John Ellicott Murch 1932 - 1940 (formerly station master at Lynton) *Mr. Oliver ca. 1943


The station today

The area around the former Halwill station site has undergone residential development and is named "Halwill Junction" after the former station. A housing estate stands near the site of the station, on a road somewhat ironically named "Beeching Close" after the
British Transport Commission The British Transport Commission (BTC) was created by Clement Attlee's post-war Labour government as a part of its nationalisation programme, to oversee railways, canals and road freight transport in Great Britain (Northern Ireland had the se ...
Chairman,
Richard Beeching Richard Beeching, Baron Beeching (21 April 1913 – 23 March 1985), commonly known as Dr Beeching, was a physicist and engineer who for a short but very notable time was chairman of British Railways. He became a household name in Britain in the e ...
, who recommended the station's closure. The Junction Inn remains, close to where the level crossing used to be. A gradient marker stands outside, and there are several photographs within of the former station. In 1990 the
Devon Wildlife Trust The Devon Wildlife Trust is a member of The Wildlife Trusts partnership covering the county of Devon, England. It is a registered charity, established in 1962 as the Devon Naturalists Trust, and its aim is to safeguard the future of the county's ...
purchased from British Rail and a private landowner a section of trackbed around Halwill to create a nature reserve covering an area of 2¾ hectares divided into five compartments. In 1998 Devon County Council began works to enable a cycleway to cross the site; this was realised in April 2005 when a 2½ mile (4 kilometres) cycleway, forming part of the
National Cycle Network The National Cycle Network (NCN) is the national cycling route network of the United Kingdom, which was established to encourage cycling and walking throughout Britain, as well as for the purposes of bicycle touring. It was created by the cha ...
, was opened which runs from the village centre via Beeching Close through the nature reserve and the woods on an elevated boardbank to the Forest Centre at Cookworthy where the South West Forest and the Ruby Country Initiative are based. The section was opened as part of a plan by the County Council to extend the
Tarka Trail The Tarka Trail is a series of footpaths and cyclepaths (rail trails) around north Devon, England that follow the route taken by the fictional Tarka the Otter in the book of that name. It covers a total of in a figure-of-eight route, centred o ...
to Hatherleigh, from where the Ruby Way will continue to Halwill Junction and then on to Holsworthy and Bude. There are plans to further increase the cycle network by reopening the section east towards Meldon Junction. In 2005 Devon County Council agreed in principle to the creation of a bridleway on an intact disused section of the Bude Branch from Thorndon Cross (near the former Meldon Junction) and Halwill, a distance of approximately 7 miles (13 kilometres). The proposal has made slow progress in the face of objections from local residents and the prohibitive prices demanded for the sale of their land by trackbed owners. In 2007 the Council again reiterated its intention to convert the disused railway to public amenity, reaffirming its intention to create cycleways on the sections from Bude to Halwill and Torrington to Halwill.North Devon Journal, "Council looks at turning old railway lines into cycle track", 20 September 2007


See also

* List of closed railway stations in Britain


References


External links


The Colonel Stephens Society


* ttp://www.northcornwallrailway.co.uk/ North Cornwall Railway {{coord, 50.7791, -4.2083, region:GB_type:railwaystation, format=dms, display=title Disused railway stations in Devon Former London and South Western Railway stations Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1879 Railway stations in Great Britain closed in 1966 Beeching closures in England Torridge District