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Coalyard Miniature Railway

7¼ in gauge railways in EnglandMiniature railways in the United KingdomRailway lines opened in 1988Severn Valley RailwayUse British English from March 2018
Worcestershire outline map with UK
Worcestershire outline map with UK

The Coalyard Miniature Railway, opened in 1988, and relaid in 1990 as a 7+1⁄4 in (184 mm) gauge railway, operates in the grounds of the Severn Valley Railway’s Kidderminster Town Station.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Coalyard Miniature Railway (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Coalyard Miniature Railway
Stewart Court, Wyre Forest Aggborough

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Coalyard Miniature RailwayContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 52.381276 ° E -2.240814 °
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Address

Kidderminster Station Signalbox

Stewart Court
DY10 1UR Wyre Forest, Aggborough
England, United Kingdom
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Nearby Places

Caldwall Castle
Caldwall Castle

Caldwall Castle, also spelt Caldwell Castle and now known as Caldwall Tower, is a former manor house in the town of Kidderminster in Worcestershire, England and only a single tower remains today. It is a Grade II* listed building. The layout of Caldwall Castle, a courtyard with four surrounding towers, was likely similar to that of Stokesay Castle in Shropshire.The first structure was built during the fourteenth century, between c. 1335 and 1347, by Sir Hugh de Cokesay and Caldwall Castle was owned by the Cokesay family until it was passed to the Wyntour family in 1498. Under the Wyntours, the manor house was rebuilt sometime during the early fifteenth or sixteenth century and the present structure, known as Caldwall Tower, also dates to this time. The Wyntour family eventually sold Caldwall Castle in 1589 to the de Clare family. Around 1690, a three-storey brick built structure was built to connect the surviving tower to the north-west side and the entire building was renovated during the seventeenth century.The manor house was passed to the Jeffrey family in 1777 and it was acquired by George Turton in 1864; when he died in 1897, the Corporation of Kidderminster took control of the estate and used it for many different purposes, such as a school of domestic science, government offices, the municipal fire station and an air raid protection headquarters, before Caldwall Castle was left derelict until it was demolished in 1961, leaving only the surviving tower standing. In 1990, the tower was sold to Richard and Nely Davies and it is now used as a private residence. Richard Davies has also since extensively restored the tower.