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Chilcompton railway station

Beeching closures in EnglandDisused railway stations in SomersetFormer Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway stationsMendip DistrictPages with no open date in Infobox station
Railway stations in Great Britain closed in 1966Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1874Use British English from April 2017
Chilcompton S and D railway 2121992 9ea2e7a0
Chilcompton S and D railway 2121992 9ea2e7a0

Chilcompton railway station was a station on the Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway at Chilcompton in the county of Somerset in England and opened on 20 July 1874. Originally the station consisted of a single platform on the Down side with a station building and possibly also a siding. In 1876 a loop and second platform were opened on the Up side, controlled from a 16-lever signal-box on the Down platform, which also controlled access to the goods yard. The line to Binegar was doubled in 1885. In 1886 the line to Midsomer Norton and Radstock was doubled and a replacement 13 lever signal box provided just beyond the Binegar end of the Up platform. The station closed to goods in 1964 and the signal-box closed in 1965; passenger services were withdrawn when the SDJR closed on 7 March 1966.

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

Chilcompton railway station
Station Mead, Mendip Chilcompton

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Wikipedia: Chilcompton railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.26065 ° E -2.51014 °
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Address

Station Mead

Station Mead
BA3 4FD Mendip, Chilcompton
England, United Kingdom
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Chilcompton S and D railway 2121992 9ea2e7a0
Chilcompton S and D railway 2121992 9ea2e7a0
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Nearby Places

Emborough Quarries

Emborough Quarries (grid reference ST623505) is a 1 hectare (2.5 acre) geological Site of Special Scientific Interest at Emborough in the Mendip Hills, Somerset, notified in 1971. The disused quarry has yielded a wide variety of remains of vertebrate fossils, amongst which the early reptiles are particularly well represented. Of special note is Kuehneosaurus latus which is one of the earliest-known flying vertebrates. During the Triassic period of geological time, some 230 million years ago, the limestones now exposed on Mendip formed upland areas upon which a number of large rivers rose. Solution cavities were soon created in the land surface and material from the surrounding area was swept into the newly formed cave systems. Remains of the creatures living in the upland areas during this time were swept into these deposits and have now been exhumed by recent quarrying activities. Fresh material is brought to the surface with every rock fall and Emborough Quarries are a nationally important source of fossil vertebrate remains for research and study.This former Mendip quarry site, probably owned by Emborough Stone Co., a branch of Roads Reconstruction, Ltd., where iron ore was once mined is now home to an assembly of contractor's plant (possibly of Richard Wood (Engineering) Ltd), cranes and machine tools. It is the location of Nettlebridge Viaduct, a seven-arch bridge that once carried the Somerset and Dorset Railway.The site was owned by Emborough Stone Co which was later bought by Roads Reconstruction Ltd. The rock quarried was carboniferous mountain limestone which was used for construction and railway ballast. There are 2 main quarries and several trial quarries. The site was previously used by the Emborough Brick Co for making clay bricks.