place

Port Elphinstone railway station

Aberdeenshire railway station stubsDisused railway stations in AberdeenshirePages with no open date in Infobox stationUse British English from March 2017

Port Elphinstone railway station was a freight depot in Port Elphinstone, Aberdeenshire.

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

Port Elphinstone railway station
Crichie Circle,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Port Elphinstone railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 57.268 ° E -2.364 °
placeShow on map

Address

Crichie Circle
AB51 3XG
Scotland, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

Share experience

Nearby Places

Aberdeenshire Canal
Aberdeenshire Canal

The Aberdeenshire Canal was a waterway in Aberdeenshire, Scotland, designed by John Rennie, which ran from the port of Aberdeen to Port Elphinstone, Inverurie. It was originally planned to reach Monymusk, but had been truncated by the time an Act of Parliament was obtained in 1796. Construction was hampered by a lack of finance, and some local opposition, but it opened in 1805. Some of the workmanship was sub-standard, and several of the locks failed soon afterwards, but they were reconstructed, and reopened in late 1806. It was used for the carriage of a wide variety of cargo, and passenger services were also introduced. These proved popular, and two boats a day made the journey during the summer months, with one in the winter. They gradually faced competition from the adjacent turnpike road, which was quicker but more expensive. A connecting lock was built in 1834, to enable boats to enter Aberdeen harbour, which eased the problem of transhipping goods to larger vessels. The canal normally closed between December and March each year, due to icing. It was never a financial success, and the shareholders did not receive any dividends during its life. Negotiations began in 1845 with the Great North of Scotland Railway, who eventually bought it. Contractors working for the railway company drained much of the canal before any money had changed hands, and the breach had to be repaired. The canal was finally closed in early 1854, so that the railway could lay tracks along its course. The line from Kittybrewster to Huntly was completed by September 1854. As the railway runs straighter than the canal, in some places, clear evidence can be seen for the canal. A scenic walk has been created at Port Elphinstone, part of which follows a channel labelled Old Canal on Ordnance Survey maps, this part thought to be a later lade that served a mill.