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Par railway station - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Par railway station

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Par
Par railway station seen from the adjacent road bridge. The main line to Penzance lies straight ahead. An excursion train is entering the station from the Newquay line.
Location
Place Par
Local authority Restormel, Cornwall
Operations
Station code PAR
Managed by First Great Western
Platforms in use 3
Live departures and station information from National Rail
Annual Rail Passenger Usage
2004/05 * 0.095 million
2005/06 * 0.112 million
History
4 May 1859
1 January 1879
1 July 1968
Station opened
Line to Newquay opened
Line to Fowey closed
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 Par from Office of Rail Regulation statistics.
Portal:Par railway station
UK Railways Portal
Looking towards London from the station platforms. The Royal Inn stands adjacent to the road bridge over the railway.
Looking towards London from the station platforms. The Royal Inn stands adjacent to the road bridge over the railway.
The platforms and station buildings, looking towards Penzance. Beyond the station the Penzance line climbs to reach the Par Viaduct. The train in the far platform is a Class 153 to Newquay.
The platforms and station buildings, looking towards Penzance. Beyond the station the Penzance line climbs to reach the Par Viaduct. The train in the far platform is a Class 153 to Newquay.
Par Viaduct. The line of the former Cornwall Minerals Railway from Par Docks to Newquay passes under the viaduct, and is still used to provide rail access to the docks.
Par Viaduct. The line of the former Cornwall Minerals Railway from Par Docks to Newquay passes under the viaduct, and is still used to provide rail access to the docks.

Par Station is a railway station serving the village and port of Par, Cornwall, England in the United Kingdom. It is the junction for the Atlantic Coast Line to Newquay. The station is operated by First Great Western, and served by trains operated by both First Great Western and CrossCountry.

Contents

[edit] History

The station opened with the Cornwall Railway on 4 May 1859. A newspaper reported at the time that it "is situated on the western side of Par bay, about a mile from the pier head, close to the road to Fowey and Tywardreath, the traffic of which places as well as St Blazey and the neighbourhoods intended to receive here. The departure and arrival stations are spacious edifices, both having verandahs projecting over the platforms, with convenient waiting rooms, ticket office, porter and lamp rooms, and other necessary conveniences. A goods station has not yet been erected, but considering the amount of business likely to be transacted here it is more than probable that a goods shed will be required before long." [1]

The goods shed was approved by the directors on 10 February 1860 and was built of stone.

The station was too small to warrant a station master, but the "booking constable" was paid an additional 22 pounds each year by the Post Office to also act as a post master. Two cottages were built just outside the station to house railway staff.

A connection from Par to the Cornwall Minerals Railway line to Newquay was opened on 1 January 1879. This was standard gauge and so traffic between this and the broad gauge Cornwall Railway had to be transferred between trains at Par until the broad gauge was converted over the weekend of 21 May 1892. New station buildings were erected in 1884.

The Cornwall Railway was amalgamated into the Great Western Railway on 1 July 1889. The Great Western Railway was nationalised into British Railways from 1 January 1948 which was in privatised in the 1990s.

On 19 May 1968 an experimental Freightliner terminal was opened on the site of the now demolished goods shed. Containers were switched between rail and road vehicles; mainly china clay traffic was handled but this did not preclude other goods. It only lasted for a couple of years.

[edit] Description

The line approaching Par from London and Plymouth descends an incline from Treverrin Tunnel, before passing under a road overbridge adjacent to the Royal Inn, which at one time was the Station Hotel. Between the bridge and the station approach are two cottages that were originally built as accommodation for railway workers.[2]

The station has three platforms:

  • Platform 1 is directly accessed from the station entrance and car park, and the main station buildings are on this platform. Trains arrive here from London Paddington, Exeter and Plymouth before continuing to St Austell, Truro and Penzance.
  • Platform 2 is located across the main line tracks from platform 1, and is accessed via a footbridge from that platform. Trains arrive here from Penzance, Truro and St Austell before continuing to Plymouth, Exeter and London Paddington.
  • Platform 3 forms the other side of an island platform with platform 2, and is accessed by the same footbridge. Trains arrive and depart here to and from Newquay.

The main line climbs up as it leaves the station towards St Austell, passing over Par Viaduct and Par Harbour. Trains on the Newquay branch traverse a sharp curve of almost 180 degrees where the line then passes St Blazey Freight Yard and the old platforms of St Blazey railway station, which also has a signal box which is still open. The line then joins the route of the former Cornwall Minerals Railway north to their destination. A freight spur follows the line of the old minerals railway south into Par Harbour, passing under Par Viaduct and the main line as it does so.[2]

[edit] Signal box

Status: Open, Signal Box Code: PR
It is located at the southern end of Platform 2 and opened in 1879. When the box was first built it was less than half its current length, the original box only contained 26 levers, but the frame was replaced in 1913 when 57 more levers were added. A panel has also been added to control the section beyond Burngullow. The Signal Box is still open today. This signal box controls signals at St Austell and as far west as the now closed Probus & Ladock station.

[edit] Services

Par is served by most of the First Great Western trains on the Cornish Main Line between Penzance and Plymouth. Some trains run through to or from London Paddington station, including the Night Riviera overnight sleeping car service. Typical journey times by a through daytime train are around 50 minutes to Plymouth, 70 minutes to Penzance, and about 4 hours to Paddington.[3]

There are a limited number of CrossCountry trains providing a service to North England and Scotland in the morning and returning in the evening, and one of the local services to Penzance each weekend runs from and to London Waterloo station and is operated by South West Trains.

The branch line to Newquay sees a mixture of self-contained services and ones that run through to Plymouth. On summer weekends most of the usual local services are withdrawn and replaced by a mixture of First Great Western trains from London Paddington, and CrossCountry trains from the North of England, although most of the latter do not call at Par, running non-stop from Bodmin Parkway instead. There is no Sunday service on the branch in the winter.

  Preceding station     National Rail     Following station  
Lostwithiel   First Great Western
Cornish Main Line including Night Riviera
  St Austell
  First Great Western
Atlantic Coast Line
  Luxulyan
Bodmin Parkway   CrossCountry
Scotland to Penzance
  St Austell
  CrossCountry
North of England to Newquay
  Newquay
Lostwithiel   South West Trains
Limited Service
  St Austell

[edit] Community rail

The trains between Par and Newquay are designated as a community rail service and is supported by marketing provided by the Devon and Cornwall Rail Partnership. The line is promoted under the Atlantic Coast Line name.

Six pubs near Par station take part in the Atlantic Coast Line rail ale trail, including some in neighbouring Tywardreath and St Blazey.

[edit] References

Specific:

  1. ^ West Briton and Cornwall Advertiser, Railway Special Edition, 1859.
  2. ^ a b Ordnance Survey (2005). OS Explorer Map 107 - Fowey, Looe & Lostwithiel. ISBN 0-319-23708-3.
  3. ^ Train Times. First Great Western. Retrieved on May 18, 2007.

General:

  1. The records of the Cornwall Railway can be consulted at The National Archives at Kew.
  2. The Great Western Railway in Mid Cornwall, Alan Bennett, Kingfisher Railway Publications, Southampton 1988. ISBN 0-946184-53-4

[edit] External links

This station offers access to the South West Coast Path
Distance to path ½ mile
Next station anticlockwise Looe 18 miles (29 km)
Next station clockwise Falmouth Town 38 miles



Coordinates: 50°21′18.00″N, 4°42′16.74″W


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