place

Middlesbrough railway station

DfT Category C1 stationsFormer North Eastern Railway (UK) stationsGrade II listed railway stationsJohn Middleton railway stationsNorthern franchise railway stations
Pages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain opened in 1877Railway stations in MiddlesbroughRailway stations served by London North Eastern RailwayRailway stations served by TransPennine ExpressUse British English from October 2017William Peachey railway stations
Middlesbrough station buildings (2) geograph.org.uk 3553074
Middlesbrough station buildings (2) geograph.org.uk 3553074

Middlesbrough is a railway station on the Durham Coast Line, Esk Valley Line and Tees Valley Line. The station serves the town of Middlesbrough in North Yorkshire, England. It is owned by Network Rail and managed by TransPennine Express. Direct destinations include Darlington, Saltburn, Sunderland, Newcastle, York, and Manchester Airport. There is a direct service to London Kings Cross once per weekday. According to the Office of Rail and Road statistics, Middlesbrough railway station is the fourth busiest in the North East region, with 1,210,906 total entries and exits (2021–22 period).

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

Middlesbrough railway station
Bridge Street West,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Middlesbrough railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 54.5791464 ° E -1.2345092 °
placeShow on map

Address

Middlesbrough

Bridge Street West
TS2 1BF , Middlehaven
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

linkWikiData (Q2102917)
linkOpenStreetMap (6661361840)

Middlesbrough station buildings (2) geograph.org.uk 3553074
Middlesbrough station buildings (2) geograph.org.uk 3553074
Share experience

Nearby Places

Middlesbrough
Middlesbrough

Middlesbrough ( MID-əlz-brə) is a town in the Middlesbrough unitary authority borough of North Yorkshire, England. The town lies near the mouth of the River Tees and north of the North York Moors National Park. The built-up area had a population of 148,215 at the 2021 UK census. It is the largest town of the wider Teesside area, which had a population of 376,633 in 2011.Until the early 1800s, the area was rural farmland in the historic county of Yorkshire. The town was a planned development which started in 1830, based around a new port with coal and later ironworks added. Steel production and ship building began in the late 1800s, remaining associated with the town until the post-industrial decline of the late twentieth century. Trade (notably through ports) and digital enterprise sectors contemporarily contribute to the local economy, Teesside University and Middlesbrough College to local education. Middlesbrough was made a municipal borough in 1853. When elected county councils were created in 1889, Middlesbrough was considered large enough to provide its own county-level services and so it became a county borough, independent from North Riding County Council. The borough of Middlesbrough was abolished in 1968 when the area was absorbed into the larger County Borough of Teesside. Six years later in 1974 Middlesbrough was re-established as a borough within the new county of Cleveland. Cleveland was abolished in 1996, since when Middlesbrough has been a unitary authority within the ceremonial county of North Yorkshire.