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Long Sutton and Pitney railway station

Disused railway stations in SomersetFormer Great Western Railway stationsPages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain closed in 1962Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1907
Somerset building and structure stubsSouth West England railway station stubsUse British English from April 2017
Railway Line geograph.org.uk 494697
Railway Line geograph.org.uk 494697

Long Sutton and Pitney railway station was a minor railway station situated in the hamlet of Upton, Somerset, about one mile equidistant from the two larger villages the station was named after. The station was on the Langport and Castle Cary Railway of the Great Western Railway, and was situated around a mile west from Somerton Tunnel. While it closed in 1962, the line itself is still in use as part of the Reading to Taunton line.The site is one option being considered in 2021 for a new station to serve the nearby towns of Langport and Somerton.

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

Long Sutton and Pitney railway station
Hermitage Road,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.0398 ° E -2.7758 °
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Address

Hermitage Road

Hermitage Road
TA10 9NL
England, United Kingdom
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Railway Line geograph.org.uk 494697
Railway Line geograph.org.uk 494697
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Nearby Places

Church of the Holy Trinity, Long Sutton
Church of the Holy Trinity, Long Sutton

The Church of the Holy Trinity in Long Sutton, Somerset, England dates from the 15th century and has been designated as a Grade I listed building.An earlier church would have stood on this site from the 9th century or earlier. The current church, which was consecrated in 1493, was built of local lias stone cut and squared, with hamstone dressings. It has stone slate roofs between stepped coped gabled with finials to the chancel and north porch. The tower, which dates from around 1462, has a ring of six bells, the tenor weighing 136 stone (864 kg). On the corner plates of the tower are hunky punks in the shape of daemonic animals.Internally, the chancel has a ceiled wagon-roof, with moulded ribs and plaster panels. The tower exhibits the tracery typical of Somerset churches. The under-tower space has a lierne vault, and a 15th-century octagonal font with quatrefoil panels. The coloured timber pulpit, with a fly approach stair, dates from 1455 to 1458 and is older than the church itself. It has 20th-century wood figures in the statue niches. It bears the initials identified as those of Abbot John Petherton of Althelney and vicar William Singleton.The wood screen is also ornately carved and dates from the late 15th century. Memorials in the church include a tablet to Elizabeth Banbury, died 1716, with Corinthian columns and entablature, side and bottom swags, as well as a number of 16th- and 17th-century Keinton stone slabs in the floor.