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Wilburton railway station

Disused railway stations in CambridgeshireFormer Great Eastern Railway stationsPages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain closed in 1931Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1866
Use British English from January 2017
The Old Station, Grunty Fen, Wilburton, Cambs geograph.org.uk 195500
The Old Station, Grunty Fen, Wilburton, Cambs geograph.org.uk 195500

Wilburton railway station was a station in Wilburton, Cambridgeshire on the Ely and St Ives Railway. It was closed to regular passenger trains in 1931, excursion trains in 1958, and completely in 1964 along with the rest of the route. The station featured a single platform, a signal box and a goods shed/granary on a loop.

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

Wilburton railway station
Station Road, East Cambridgeshire

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address External links Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Wilburton railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 52.3662 ° E 0.1774 °
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Address

Wilburton

Station Road
CB6 3PY East Cambridgeshire
England, United Kingdom
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linkWikiData (Q8000275)
linkOpenStreetMap (9981535409)

The Old Station, Grunty Fen, Wilburton, Cambs geograph.org.uk 195500
The Old Station, Grunty Fen, Wilburton, Cambs geograph.org.uk 195500
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Nearby Places

Witcham
Witcham

Witcham is a small village near Ely in Cambridgeshire, England. The village is surrounded by fenland farms and has a village hall and a 13th-century church dedicated to St Martin. It has a pub called the White Horse, which was the winner of the Ely and District CAMRA Rural Pub of the Year Award 2006, 2010, 2011 and Overall Pub of the Year Award 2011. It also has a fine village green. The village hosts the World Pea Shooting Championships on the second Saturday in July every year and has staged the competition annually since 1971. Witcham is built around a cross-roads in the centre of the village with each of the four roads having housing on each side for 50-200m. The north-bound street is called "Martins Lane", the east-bound street is "High Street", south-bound is "The Slade", and west-bound is "Silver Street", which leads to the more recent housing developments of "Westway Place" and "The Orchards". The name of the village derives from "Wycham", meaning "place of the wych elms", after the trees that used to grow there in significant numbers. A Roman cavalry helmet dating from the first century AD, known as the Witcham Gravel helmet, was found in the village gravel pit, and now resides in the British Museum. The village school was sited on the South side of High Street, opposite and a little East of St.Martin's church, and was open as an infants and junior school from 1873 until 1982. When the school closed the pupils instead went to Mepal or Sutton. A local archive has further images of the school.