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Chasewater Heaths railway station

BurntwoodHeritage railway stations in StaffordshirePages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations built for UK heritage railwaysStaffordshire building and structure stubs
Use British English from March 2017West Midlands (region) railway station stubs
Chasewater Heaths
Chasewater Heaths

Chasewater Heaths is a heritage railway station on the Chasewater Railway in Burntwood, Staffordshire. It has station building facilities, including a cafe; and a recently rebuilt signal box. To the west is Norton Lakeside Halt and to the east is the terminus, Chasetown (Church Street). The station was constructed in 2000 as part of the extension of the line, that was undertaken following the construction of the M6 Toll Motorway.

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

Chasewater Heaths railway station
The Sportsway, Lichfield Chase Terrace

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 52.676111111111 ° E -1.9469444444444 °
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Address

Chasewater Heaths

The Sportsway
WS7 3PG Lichfield, Chase Terrace
England, United Kingdom
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Chasewater Heaths
Chasewater Heaths
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Nearby Places

Norton Canes
Norton Canes

Norton Canes is an industrial village, civil parish and ward of Cannock Chase District, in Staffordshire, England. It is situated 3 miles (4.8 km) out of the centre of Cannock. At the 2001 census it had a population of 6,394, and an area of 3,746 acres (15.16 km2) of which 86% is green open space. The population had increased to 7,470 at the 2011 Census. Areas of the village include Little Norton, Little Wyrley, and North Lanes (Lime Lane). The Cannock Chase Coalfield once had 45 collieries within 2 miles (3.2 km) of Norton Canes, employing over 5,800 men, as well as 2 large surface mines; the last pit in the area closed in 1993. Grove Pit was one of these pits, and on 1 October 1930 was the scene of a major tragedy when 14 miners were killed in an explosion there.Another local colliery was owned by the Jerome family, hence Jerome Road now on the site of the pit. This was the family of the author Jerome K. Jerome. Norton Canes borders Chasewater - a collection of man-made lakes formed through old mining pits and a reservoir that feeds the canal system of West Midlands. Chasewater is a popular leisure destination offering facilities for water-skiing and yachting, mountain biking, jogging, walking and bird watching. Norton Canes straddles the UK's first and only Toll Motorway, the M6 Toll which has its northern Toll Plaza and Norton Canes Services is the only services for that motorway. Norton Canes was home to Europe's first drive-through chemist. This is now closed as the chemist has moved into the local health centre located in Brownhills Road.