| Darlington | |
|---|---|
| Location | |
| Place | Darlington |
| Local authority | Darlington |
| Coordinates | 54°31′15″N 1°32′47″W / 54.5209°N 1.5464°WCoordinates: 54°31′15″N 1°32′47″W / 54.5209°N 1.5464°W |
| Operations | |
| Station code | DAR |
| Managed by | East Coast |
| Platforms in use | 5 |
| Live arrivals/departures and station information from National Rail |
|
| Annual rail passenger usage | |
| 2004/05 * | 1.796 million |
| 2005/06 * | 1.906 million |
| 2006/07 * | 2.014 million |
| 2007/08 * | 2.099 million |
| National Rail - UK railway stations | |
| A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z | |
| * Annual passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Darlington from Office of Rail Regulation statistics. | |
Darlington railway station, also known as Darlington Bank Top, is the main railway station for the town of Darlington, in the ceremonial county of County Durham, England. The station is located on the East Coast Main Line. 232½ miles (374 km) north of London Kings Cross.
The town is the location of the first commercial steam railway: The Stockton and Darlington Railway. The station itself is a Victorian structure, and winner of the Large Station of the Year award in 2005.[1] It has a full range of passenger facilities, including a buffet, newsagent, First Class Lounge and travel centre.
Contents |
History
The first railway to pass through the area now occupied by the station was built by the Stockton and Darlington Railway, who opened their mineral branch from Albert Hill Junction on their main line to Croft-on-Tees on 27 October 1829. This branch line was subsequently purchased by the Great North of England Railway a decade later to incorporate into their new main line from York which reached the town on 30 March 1841. A separate company, the Newcastle & Darlington Junction Railway continued the new main line northwards towards Ferryhill and Newcastle, opening its route three years later on 19 June 1844.[2] This crossed the S&D at Parkgate Junction by means of a flat crossing which would in future years become something of an operational headache for the North Eastern Railway and LNER. The original Bank Top station where the two routes met was a modest affair, which was rebuilt in 1860 to accommodate the expanding levels of traffic on the main line. By the mid 1880s even this replacement structure was deemed inadequate and so the NER embarked on a major upgrade to facilities in the area. This included an ornate new station with an impressive three-span overall roof on the Bank Top site, new sidings and goods lines alongside it and a new connecting line from the south end of the station (Polam Junction) to meet the original S&D line towards Middlesbrough at Oak Tree Junction near Dinsdale. These improvements were completed on 1 July 1887, when the old route west of Oak Tree closed to passengers (although it remained in use for freight until 1967).
The new station, with its broad island platform cost some £81,000 to construct[3] and soon became a busy interchange on the main East Coast route, thanks to its rail links to Richmond (opened in 1846), Barnard Castle and Penrith (1862/5) and the Tees Valley Line to Bishop Auckland (1842) and Saltburn (1861).
In 1928 it was the site of a rail crash in which two trains collided, killing 25 people.
The lines to Penrith (closed in 1962), Barnard Castle (1964)[4] and Richmond (1969) have now gone (along with the bays at the northern end of the station, now used for car parking), but the main line (electrified in 1991) and the Tees Valley route remain busy. It is also still possible to travel to Catterick Garrison and Richmond from here, by means of the Arriva North East-operated X26 and X27 buses (which have through National Rail ticketing arrangements). The same company also operated the Sky Express bus service to Durham Tees Valley Airport from the station, but this was withdrawn in January 2009 due to declining demand.[5]
Back in the 1980s a replica set of Darlington Railway Station was built for an episode of Noel's Saturday Roadshow for the BBC.
On Saturday 3 October 2009, a Northern Rail train hit the rear end of a departing National Express East Coast service. Three passengers from the Northern Rail train were taken to hospital with minor injuries.[6]
Services
Darlington is well served by trains on the East Coast Main Line, with regular trains to London King's Cross via York, Newcastle, Glasgow and Edinburgh operated by East Coast. Two trains per hour run towards London and Newcastle for much of the day, with hourly services to Edinburgh and Glasgow served on a two-hourly basis. There are also daily services to Dundee and Aberdeen.
CrossCountry services between Edinburgh/Newcastle and Birmingham New Street and beyond (to Oxford and Reading and to Bristol Temple Meads, Plymouth and Penzance) also call here twice each hour, along with hourly First TransPennine Express trains between Newcastle and Manchester Airport via Leeds, Huddersfield and Manchester Piccadilly.
Northern Rail run their Tees Valley line trains twice hourly to Middlesbrough, Redcar and Saltburn (hourly on Sundays), whilst the Bishop Auckland branch has a service every two hours for most of the day, increasing to hourly during the morning and evening peaks. The company also operates Sundays-only trains to Hartlepool and Whitby, although the latter only run during the summer months.
Notes
- ^ "It's a hat-trick for award-winning GNER". Great North Eastern Railway. 2005-09-02. http://www.gner.co.uk/GNER/PressCentre/PressReleases05/IT%E2%80%99S+A+HAT-TRICK+FOR+AWARD-WINNING+GNER.htm.
- ^ Body, p.56
- ^ Body, p.60
- ^ Body, p.58
- ^ Tees Valley Airport - Airport Bus Service Comes to An End Tees Valley Airport Media Centre; Retrieved 2009-01-30
- ^ Trains collide at rail platform; BBC News website Retrieved 2009-10-09
References
- Body, G. (1988), PSL Field Guides - Railways of the Eastern Region Volume 2, Patrick Stephens Ltd, Wellingborough, ISBN 1-85260-072-1
External links
- Images of England — details from listed building database (110731)
- Buses from the station
- Buses to the station
| Preceding station | National Rail | Following station | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CrossCountry | ||||
| First TransPennine Express | ||||
| East Coast (train operating company)
East Coast Main Line
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| Northern Rail | ||||
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