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Deighton railway station

1871 establishments in EnglandDfT Category F2 stationsDisused railway stations in KirkleesFormer London and North Western Railway stationsNorthern franchise railway stations
Pages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain closed in 1930Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1871Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1982Railway stations in HuddersfieldRailway stations opened by British RailRailway stations served by TransPennine ExpressUse British English from December 2017Yorkshire and the Humber railway station stubs
Deighton railway station 2018
Deighton railway station 2018

Deighton railway station serves the Deighton area of Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, England. Deighton station is the first station 2 miles (3.2 km) northeast of Huddersfield railway station on the Huddersfield Line towards Leeds.

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

Deighton railway station
Birkby Bradley Greenway, Kirklees Deighton

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Wikipedia: Deighton railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.66834 ° E -1.7524 °
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Address

Deighton

Birkby Bradley Greenway
HD2 1DP Kirklees, Deighton
England, United Kingdom
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Deighton railway station 2018
Deighton railway station 2018
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Nearby Places

Deighton, Huddersfield
Deighton, Huddersfield

Deighton pronounced as Dee-ton is a district of Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, England. It is situated 2 miles (3.2 km) north east of the town centre and lies off the A62 Leeds Road. Deighton was formerly known as East Bradley, and Bradley was called West Bradley. The name changed when the Deighton family bought the area stretching from Screamer Woods (near the Deighton Fields) to Sheepridge and Brackenhall. Deighton has a railway station on the Huddersfield Line for services to Huddersfield, Leeds and Wakefield. The typical journey time to Huddersfield is usually 7 minutes, to Wakefield Westgate 31 minutes and to Leeds 34 minutes. The Deighton Centre was a place for educational, training and leisure activities. It was formerly a high school for Deighton, Bradley and Brackenhall students. Deighton High School closed on 31 August 1992, and most students and some staff were relocated to Fartown High School. The centre was refurbished as a sports/music venue, and utilised by the Local Authority, Kirklees Council, for staff training. Next door to the centre, the Deighton Sports Arena was developed which houses a gym, squash court and basketball court and is a venue for dancehall music. In March 2016 the Deighton Centre was demolished.The chemical company, Syngenta has a large plant off the A62 Leeds Road. Leeds Road Playing Fields has football, cricket and all-weather pitches, a sports hall and an athletics track. Home to Kirklees Ladies FC.

Bradley, Huddersfield
Bradley, Huddersfield

Bradley is a district of Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, England, 3 miles north-east of the town centre. It is generally just off the A62 Leeds Road and west of the River Colne and the Huddersfield Broad Canal. Located north of Deighton and east of Brackenhall (via Bradley bar), the area has two primary schools, a secondary school and three churches, (one Catholic, one Protestant and another converted to a gymnasium). All Saints' Catholic College, previously All Saints' Catholic High School (which serves the towns of Brighouse and the Huddersfield) is situated in the district. Built in 1960 and formerly two schools, (St Gregory's R.C. Grammar and St. Augustine's R.C. Secondary Modern) the two were combined in 1973 to form the currently large high school. Bradley has a council estate with the Keldregate thoroughfare running parallel to Leeds Road (A62), as well as two private developments which effectively constitute villages in themselves. It has many Robin Hood references in the area, including 'Sherwood Avenue', 'Huntingdon Avenue' and a former pub site called the 'Little John'. The area used to be part of a larger Bradley estate known as 'West Bradley' in comparison to 'East Bradley' which included most of Deighton and a part of Leeds Road. Has the Campaign for Real Ale (CAMRA) award-winning White Cross Inn public house on Bradley Road. Bradley Park is a 17-acre sports and recreation ground adjacent to Wilton Avenue. In December 2017 ownership of Bradley Park transferred from Kirklees Council to Friends of Bradley Park as part of a community asset transfer. Friends of Bradley Park is a registered charity that was set up for the purpose of owning, running and developing Bradley Park for the benefit of the local community. In the area there is also the 18-hole Bradley Park municipal golf course. There are 2 pubs in the area, the High Park (on Bradley Road) and the White Cross (at the intersection of Bradley Road and Leeds Road). The Woodman Inn (on Leeds Road) has been demolished as has the Badger (on Bradley Road) and the Little John (on Keldregate). Bradley was served by Bradley railway station which was closed in 1952, it was situated on Station Road which joined Leeds Road near the Woodman Inn. Bradley Viaduct is a 15 arch rail bridge crossing the Huddersfield Broad Canal and River Colne now converted to a cycleway.The school TV series How We Used To Live used Bradley as the name for a whole town, clearly located in West Yorkshire.