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Stocksmoor railway station

Former Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway stationsKirkburtonNorthern franchise railway stationsRailway stations in Great Britain opened in 1850Railway stations in Kirklees
Use British English from November 2017Yorkshire and the Humber railway station stubs
Stocksmoor station
Stocksmoor station

Stocksmoor railway station serves the village of Stocksmoor near Huddersfield in West Yorkshire, England. The station is 6.25 miles (10 km) from Huddersfield on the Penistone Line operated by Northern. Most of the Penistone Line is single track between Huddersfield and Barnsley (and has been since 1989). However, Stocksmoor marks the first point (for Sheffield-bound trains) or last point (for Huddersfield-bound trains) where there is dual running track (the passing loop extends as far south as the next station at Shepley and most trains are scheduled to pass each other on this section).

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

Stocksmoor railway station
Station Road, Kirklees

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.59419 ° E -1.72355 °
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Address

Stocksmoor

Station Road
HD4 6XN Kirklees
England, United Kingdom
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Stocksmoor station
Stocksmoor station
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Stocksmoor
Stocksmoor

Stocksmoor is a hamlet, near Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, England. It is situated between the villages of Shepley and Brockholes. The total population of Thurstonland, Stocksmoor and Thunder Bridge together was 953 in the 2001 census.[1] It has a railway station on the Penistone railway line which connects Huddersfield and Sheffield and is the traditional terminus of the 341 (First Huddersfield) bus service from Huddersfield town centre. Stocksmoor is the birthplace of Ben Swift Chambers, the church minister who, in Liverpool, founded St Domingo's parish football team, which became Everton Football Club. In 1838, upwards of 1,000 small Roman coins of copper and brass were found at Whistones, Stocks Moor. The Times of London describes how they were found by a labouring man who was digging in a field not far from Thurstonland and found them near the foundation of a wall. Yet, 'as is often the case in such discoveries, being a stranger to their value, he was induced to part with them to different individuals for a trifling consideration.' It then goes on to describe how they 'understand that among the coins discovered at Thurstonland there are many of the lower empire, several of Carausius, who, it will be remembered, possessed himself of Britain, as emperor, under Dioclesian, and who repaired the Roman wall in Scotland. In the collection purchased by one individual there are the coins of Constantine, Constantius, Lucilius, and others.'