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Stutton railway station

1847 establishments in EnglandDisused railway stations in North YorkshireFormer York and North Midland Railway stationsPages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain closed in 1905
Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1847Use British English from August 2017Yorkshire and the Humber railway station stubs
Station House, Stutton
Station House, Stutton

Stutton railway station was a railway station in Stutton, North Yorkshire, on the Harrogate to Church Fenton Line. The station opened on 10 August 1847 and closed to passenger traffic on 30 June 1905. It remained open to goods traffic until it closed completely on 6 July 1964.The two-storey brick and sandstone station building was designed by George Townsend Andrews in the form of two side-by-side railway cottages. It was built on the up platform and is now used as a private residence. The roof of its single-storey northern extension was extended as a narrow canopy over the platform. The goods yard consisted only of one siding and a headshunt and had a cattle dock. A wooden signal box stood at the northern end of the station next to the level crossing with Weedling Gate. It was pulled down towards the end of the 1960s. Since the village that was served by the station was rather small, and Tadcaster station very close, passenger numbers remained low, causing the early closure to regular passenger services. Only chartered holiday trains occasionally called at Stutton afterwards.

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

Stutton railway station
Weedling Gate,

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Wikipedia: Stutton railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.869 ° E -1.2729 °
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Address

Stutton

Weedling Gate
LS24 9BQ , Stutton with Hazlewood
England, United Kingdom
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linkWikiData (Q7629239)
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Station House, Stutton
Station House, Stutton
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Nearby Places

The Ark (Tadcaster)
The Ark (Tadcaster)

The Ark is a historic building on Kirkgate in Tadcaster, a town in North Yorkshire, England. The building was constructed in the late 15th century, and was altered in the 17th century. A tradition claims that the Pilgrim Fathers met at the building, to plan their voyage to the Americas. In 1672, it was known as "Morley Hall", and was owned by Robert Morley. He registered it that year as an independent meeting hall for Congregationalists, one of the first to be legally registered. The building was later converted into a pub, the Old Falcon Inn. In 1959, John Smiths Brewery purchased the building, and converted it into a museum covering local history, in particular the local brewing industry. They rebuilt part of the structure, using original timbers, and added a small extension on its left-hand side. In 1985, the building was upgraded to be Grade II* listed. The museum closed in 1988, and the building became the headquarters of Tadcaster Town Council.The building is two storeys high, and consists of a two-bay hall, and a single-bay crosswing. The building is timber-framed over a Magnesian Limestone and brick base, and the roof is covered in pantiles. The upper floor is slightly jettied, and it has an oriel window with wooden mullions. The gable is supported by two brackets, depicting the heads of a man and woman, reputed to be Noah and Noah's wife, which had led the building to be named after Noah's Ark.There is a replica of the building in Berlin Center, Ohio, which serves as an animal sanctuary.