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High Halstow Halt railway station

Disused railway stations in KentFormer South Eastern Railway (UK) stationsPages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain closed in 1961Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1906
Transport in MedwayUse British English from August 2015
The site of High Halstow Halt (geograph 5822442)
The site of High Halstow Halt (geograph 5822442)

High Halstow Halt was a halt between Cliffe and Sharnal Street stations on the Hundred of Hoo Railway. It was opened in July 1906 and closed to passengers on 4 December 1961. The halt was 1¾ miles from Cliffe station.

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

High Halstow Halt railway station
Wybournes Lane,

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Wikipedia: High Halstow Halt railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.447005 ° E 0.553917 °
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Address

Wybournes Lane

Wybournes Lane
ME3 8SD , High Halstow
England, United Kingdom
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The site of High Halstow Halt (geograph 5822442)
The site of High Halstow Halt (geograph 5822442)
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Nearby Places

High Halstow NNR
High Halstow NNR

High Halstow National Nature Reserve is on the Hoo Peninsula north of Chatham. It is also part of the Northwood Hill Royal Society for the Protection of Birds Reserve (which is 270 hectares of grazing marsh, woodland and farmland). It was declared a National Nature Reserve in 1951.The reserve and the woodland lies on the hill to the north of the village of High Halstow. The woodland, is situated on London Clay, comprises large oak trees and hawthorn scrub, with several sycamore trees. English elm was formerly abundant but has largely been killed by Dutch elm disease. The woodland has a diverse flora with over 200 plants recorded, including trees and shrubs. It is also noted for its diversity of butterflies. A number of rare moths have been recorded at the site. The sloe carpet (Aleucis distinctata), least carpet (Idaea vulpinaria) and a colony of the white-letter hairstreak butterfly have been noted on the reserve. Also nine species of dragonfly have also been recorded in the reserve. The reserve is also home to a flock of nightingales. Also the UK's largest and most famous colonies of little egrets, they have been nesting at the site since 2000, reaching approximately 93 pairs by 2007. The reserve may be visited either from (grid ref TR220606) the carpark off Northwood Avenue, to the South-of the woodland. Or from Buckland Farm (the RSPCA Farm and carpark), to west of the woodland. The reserve has a nature trail with attractive sea views and long distance views of the River Medway. The Saxon Shore Way long distance path passes through the reserve between Cooling and High Halstow.