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Barnstaple Town railway station

Beeching closures in EnglandBuildings and structures in BarnstapleDisused railway stations in DevonFormer London and South Western Railway stationsFormer Lynton and Barnstaple Railway stations
Grade II listed buildings in DevonPages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain closed in 1970Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1898South West England railway station stubsUse British English from April 2017
Barnstaple Town railway station1972077 23032779(flopped)
Barnstaple Town railway station1972077 23032779(flopped)

Barnstaple Town railway station was an intermediate station on the L&SWR line to Ilfracombe, England.

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

Barnstaple Town railway station
Commercial Road, North Devon Pilton

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Wikipedia: Barnstaple Town railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.07997 ° E -4.06383 °
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Address

Commercial Road
EX31 1DG North Devon, Pilton
England, United Kingdom
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Barnstaple Town railway station1972077 23032779(flopped)
Barnstaple Town railway station1972077 23032779(flopped)
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Pilton railway station

Pilton Yard, in Barnstaple was, between 1898 and 1935, the main depot and operating centre of the Lynton and Barnstaple Railway ('L&B'), a narrow gauge line that ran through Exmoor from Barnstaple to Lynton and Lynmouth in north Devon, England. Pilton station was served by regular passenger services advertised between 1898 and 1904 after which only goods facilities were provided. Passengers were catered for at the nearby LSWR station, Barnstaple Town, which provided connections with trains on the standard gauge branch line to Ilfracombe. The L&B's main offices were also based at Pilton, in a building formerly belonging to the Tannery which had earlier occupied the site, and which took over the site after the railway closed. Pilton was the site of the L&B's only turntable. Locomotives always travelled with their boilers facing "down" the line, i.e. towards Lynton (down as it was away from London by rail, although geologically, Lynton was higher, and geographically nearer to London). The turntable was used to turn rolling stock periodically to even-out bearing wear. After closure, the turntable was installed at the Romney, Hythe & Dymchurch Railway in Kent, but is now owned by the Lynton and Barnstaple Railway Trust and in storage for eventual restoration and reuse on the new L&B. The carriage sheds, locomotive shed and other remnants of the railway were destroyed in a fire in 1992. Much of the site is now a car park, although there are still signs of its former railway use.