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Tilmanstone Colliery Halt railway station

Disused railway stations in KentFormer East Kent Light Railway stationsPages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain closed in 1948Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1916
Use British English from August 2015
Elvington geograph 4372049 by John Baker
Elvington geograph 4372049 by John Baker

Tilmanstone Colliery Halt was a station on the East Kent Light Railway. It opened on 16 October 1916 and was renamed Elvington in 1925. It closed to passenger traffic after the last train on 30 October 1948. The station served the pit village of Elvington. Part of the platform is still in situ hidden in undergrowth.

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

Tilmanstone Colliery Halt railway station
Burgess Hill,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.2081 ° E 1.2682 °
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Address

Tilmanstone Colliery Halt (Elvington)

Burgess Hill
CT15 4EH
England, United Kingdom
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Elvington geograph 4372049 by John Baker
Elvington geograph 4372049 by John Baker
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East Kent Railway (heritage)
East Kent Railway (heritage)

The East Kent Railway (EKR) is a heritage railway in Kent, England. It is located at Shepherdswell station on the London and Chatham to Dover mainline. The line was constructed between 1911 and 1917 to serve the Kent Coalfields. See East Kent Light Railway for details of the original lines. The Kent Collieries were mostly a failure with only Tilmanstone on the line producing any viable commercial coal and commercial traffic over the line. The line is operated by heritage diesel locomotives. It is home to a collection of heritage diesel locomotives including a British Rail Class 08, DEMU and electric multiple units including an in service British Rail Class 404 built in the 1930s and a more modern British Rail Class 365, which is to be used as a restaurant and a major events venue. At Shepherdswell, there is a large cafe, a large 15-acre (6.1 ha) woodland area with walking routes, a 5 in (127 mm) gauge miniature railway, a 7+1⁄4 in (184 mm) gauge woodland miniature railway, a model railway and a small museum. Shepherdswell is where the railway undertakes it maintenance and overhaul works and is very much a working railway yard. At Eythorne, there is a Class 365 EMU that has been converted to a restaurant and bar. There is a General Utility Van built by BR that used to carry elephants which is in the process of being converted to a small holiday let. The old Selling Signal Box is also here with a history of the East Kent Railway both past and present inside along with the original Faversham signalling panel. Eythorne Station plays host to a variety of features on special event days. Eythorne is the picture of a pretty countryside station. The railway holds special events throughout the year, ranging from railway enthusiast events to beer festivals along with family fun weekends. On the line there is Golgotha Tunnel (situated between Shepherdswell and Eythorne), 477 yards (436 m) long, making it the eighth longest tunnel on a UK Heritage Railway in Preservation. The tunnel was built in typical Colonel Stephens style by building double track portals but only excavating a single track internally to save money.