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Sandsfoot Castle Halt railway station

Disused railway stations in DorsetFormer Weymouth and Portland Railway stationsRailway stations in Great Britain closed in 1952Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1932South West England railway station stubs
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Sandsfoot Castle railway station in 2008
Sandsfoot Castle railway station in 2008

Sandsfoot Castle Halt was a small railway station on the Portland Branch Railway between Weymouth and Portland in Dorset.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Sandsfoot Castle Halt railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Sandsfoot Castle Halt railway station
Rodwell Trail,

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Wikipedia: Sandsfoot Castle Halt railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 50.5967 ° E -2.4615 °
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Address

Sandsfoot Castle

Rodwell Trail
DT4 8QE , Rodwell
England, United Kingdom
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Sandsfoot Castle railway station in 2008
Sandsfoot Castle railway station in 2008
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Sandsfoot Castle
Sandsfoot Castle

Sandsfoot Castle, also known historically as Weymouth Castle, is an artillery fort constructed by Henry VIII near Weymouth, Dorset. It formed part of the King's Device programme to protect against invasion from France and the Holy Roman Empire, and defended the Weymouth Bay anchorage. The stone castle had an octagonal gun platform, linked to a residential blockhouse, and was completed by 1542 at a cost of £3,887. Earthwork defences were built around the landward side of the castle, probably in 1623. Sandsfoot saw service during the English Civil War, when it was held by Parliament and Royalists in turn during the conflict. It survived the interregnum but, following Charles II's restoration to the throne, the fortress was withdrawn from military use in 1665. By the early 18th century, Sandsfoot was in ruins, its stonework taken for use in local building projects. The clay cliffs on which the castle had been built had always been unstable and subject to erosion. The castle's gun platform began to collapse into the sea and, by the 1950s, had been entirely destroyed. The ruins were closed to visitors on safety grounds, although civic gardens were planted alongside it in 1951. Repairs were undertaken between 2009 and 2012 at a total cost of £217,800, enabling the site to be reopened to the public. Historic England considers Sandsfoot to be "one of the most substantial examples" of the 16th-century blockhouses to survive in England. The ruins were once again closed to visitors on safety grounds in January 2021. It remains closed to the public as of August 2022.