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Quorn and Woodhouse railway station

Former Great Central Railway stationsGrade II listed buildings in LeicestershireGrade II listed railway stationsGreat Central Railway (preserved)Heritage railway stations in Leicestershire
Pages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain closed in 1963Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1899Use British English from January 2018
Quorn station 2019
Quorn station 2019

Quorn and Woodhouse railway station is a heritage station on the Great Central Railway (preserved) serving the villages of Quorn and Woodhouse in Leicestershire, England. Travelling south from Loughborough, it is the first station that is reached. Here there is a large station yard which is suitable for parking. There is also disabled access through the yard (Loughborough now has a lift for disabled as well as access via stairs). Quorn is laid out to appear as it would in the 1940s, as a typical rural LNER station. The signal box is not original but was taken from Market Rasen. The station is grade II listed and has a number of attractions, including the 1940s era NAAFI Tea Room situated underneath the station road bridge, a period Station Master's office, as well as wartime films showing in one of the waiting rooms. In 2011, a new café called Butler-Henderson Tea Rooms was opened; the building, whilst not in keeping with the station itself, complements its surroundings and provides another reason to stop off at the station. A turntable (60-foot balance model) was delivered to the station in January 2010 from Preston Docks. It had previously seen use in the ex-York Roundhouse in the days of steam. The turntable was built in 1909 by Cowans Sheldon Ltd of Carlisle. Work began on digging the foundations in June 2011 with work being completed during the late summer of that year in time for the annual Steam Railway Magazine gala in early October 2011.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Quorn and Woodhouse railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Quorn and Woodhouse railway station
Forest Road, Charnwood Quorndon

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Wikipedia: Quorn and Woodhouse railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 52.7403 ° E -1.1878 °
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Address

Forest Road
LE12 8AW Charnwood, Quorndon
England, United Kingdom
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Quorn station 2019
Quorn station 2019
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Nearby Places

Woodhouse, Leicestershire
Woodhouse, Leicestershire

Woodhouse, often known to locals as Old Woodhouse, is a small village and civil parish in the heart of Charnwood, England. The population of the civil parish at the 2011 census was 2,319, including around 300 term-time boarders at the Defence College. The parish includes the larger village of Woodhouse Eaves. The parish of Woodhouse was formed in 1844. The village is located between the larger Woodhouse Eaves and Quorn villages, the village contains a mixture of small cottages and large modern houses. It is a commuter village for both Leicester and Loughborough, as well as further afield. Beaumanor Hall, ancestral home of the Herrick family, was used as a listening station during the war, and intercepted signals intelligence for Bletchley Park. The Hall is now owned by Leicestershire County Council and is used as an educational base with outdoor activities.In 2005 Welbeck College moved to the village, on the edge of the grounds of Beaumanor Hall.The village has 130 homes and around 400 people living in it.The oldest part of the village is the church, St Mary-in-the-Elms, which dates back to the 15th century with 17th and 19th century renovations. On the side of the church near to where the Herrick family are buried are a number of old indentations showing where arrows were sharpened for hunting. The village was originally linear; however, the army barracks created a more nucleated village with more modern housing than the typical Georgian architecture seen throughout. The village has no services and relies on surrounding villages and towns for shops etc. The village is low on the settlement hierarchy.