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Hebden Bridge railway station

Coordinates: 53°44′16″N 2°00′32″W / 53.7377°N 2.0088°W / 53.7377; -2.0088
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Hebden Bridge
National Rail
A view of platform 2 in 2015
General information
LocationHebden Bridge, Calderdale
England
Coordinates53°44′16″N 2°00′32″W / 53.7377°N 2.0088°W / 53.7377; -2.0088
Grid referenceSD994268
Managed byNorthern
Transit authorityWest Yorkshire (Metro)
Platforms2
Other information
Station codeHBD
Fare zone5
ClassificationDfT category E
History
Original companyManchester and Leeds Railway
Pre-groupingLancashire and Yorkshire Railway
Post-groupingLondon, Midland and Scottish Railway
Key dates
5 October 1840Opened
1893Current station buildings opened
1997Refurbished
Passengers
2018/19Decrease 0.792 million
 Interchange  23,906
2019/20Increase 0.813 million
 Interchange Increase 42,107
2020/21Decrease 0.164 million
 Interchange Decrease 7,730
2021/22Increase 0.570 million
 Interchange Increase 26,139
2022/23Increase 0.680 million
 Interchange Increase 33,481
Notes
Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road

Hebden Bridge railway station serves the town of Hebden Bridge in West Yorkshire, England. The station is on the Calder Valley Line, operated by Northern since April 2016, from York and Leeds towards Manchester Victoria and Preston. The station is 8.5 miles (14 km) west of Halifax and 26 miles (42 km) west of Leeds.

History

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Some of the L&YR-style signs

The Manchester and Leeds Railway, authorised in 1836 for a line from Manchester to Normanton,[1] was opened in stages; the second section, between Normanton and Hebden Bridge, opened on 5 October 1840.[2] Trains arrived at Hebden Bridge from Normanton and passengers would then continue to Littleborough by road.[3] The section between Hebden Bridge and Summit Tunnel opened on 31 December 1840, allowing trains to reach Todmorden; after Summit Tunnel opened on 1 March 1841, trains continued to Littleborough and Manchester.[3][4] An 1841 timetable shows five Manchester to Leeds trains per day calling at Hebden Bridge (two on Sundays), all but one of which called at all stations; a similar service ran in the opposite direction.[5] Trains began operating to Halifax and Bradford in 1852, and could run through to Leeds via this route from 1854.[3]

The current buildings date from 1893, construction having started in 1891.[3] By this point there was a goods yard alongside the station. This closed in 1966 and the site is now the station car park.[3] In 1997 the station was renovated, and signage in the original Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway style was installed.[3]

On 21 June 1912 a train derailed nearby, killing four people and injuring many others. The official inquiry found that the train was running too fast on the Charlestown Curve, a tight curve near the station.[6]

Facilities

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The station has a staffed ticket office, waiting rooms, toilets and a cafe.[7][8] New lifts have been installed to make both platforms fully accessible (commissioned in March 2019),[9] and Information screens were installed in 2012 as part of a programme to provide screens at 18 stations on the Calder Valley Line and elsewhere in West Yorkshire.[10] Previously, passengers had to rely on automated public-address system announcements.

Services

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Northern Class 150s with a service to Leeds

The station is the only station on the Calder Valley Line where every service calls. On Monday to Saturday during daytime there are four trains per hour to Leeds - one via Brighouse and Dewsbury and the other three via Bradford Interchange (one serving all stations to Bradford and two calling at Halifax only). Of the latter, one runs through to York. In the late evening, the service drops to half-hourly, all via Bradford.

Westbound there are three trains per hour to Manchester Victoria (hourly evenings and Sundays), and an hourly service to Blackpool North via Burnley Manchester Road and Blackburn (direct weekday services there were temporarily stopped in November 2017 but have resumed from the May 2019 timetable change). One of the Manchester trains is a limited-stop service, calling at Todmorden and Rochdale only, whilst the service via Dewsbury continues to Wigan Wallgate.[11] The other Manchester service now extends through to Warrington Bank Quay and Chester.

From November 2013 to late March 2014 the line to Burnley was closed for major repair work on Holme Tunnel. A replacement bus service ran, and trains from York terminated/started at Hebden Bridge.

Future improvements

[edit]
Hebden Bridge signal box is Grade II listed[12]

The station will see a variety of improvements to facilities and train services from March 2017 onwards, as part of an investment package for the Calder Valley line as a whole. Track and signalling upgrades have helped reduce journey times in both directions and allow more trains to run to/from Bradford. This has resulted in the closure of the listed signal box here in October 2018, with control passing over to the Rail Operating Centre at York. New rolling stock and timetable improvements will follow, with regular through trains to Liverpool Lime Street, Manchester Airport and Chester by late 2019 (the latter service began at the May 2019 timetable change).[13] The remaining improvements have since been indefinitely postponed because of capacity problems in central Manchester, though new rolling stock (in the form of Class 195 Civity DMUs) has started to appear on some routes.[14]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Marshall, John (1969). The Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway, volume 1. Newton Abbot: David & Charles. p. 39. ISBN 0-7153-4352-1.
  2. ^ Marshall 1969, p. 48
  3. ^ a b c d e f "Station History". Friends of Hebden Bridge Station. Archived from the original on 20 April 2013. Retrieved 30 September 2010.
  4. ^ Marshall 1969, p. 49
  5. ^ Marshall 1969, pp. 50–51
  6. ^ "Accident at Hebden Bridge on 21st June 1912". Railways Archive. Retrieved 4 January 2023.
  7. ^ "Station details: Hebden Bridge". National Rail Enquiries. Retrieved 30 September 2010.
  8. ^ "Facilities". Friends of Hebden Bridge Station. Archived from the original on 16 July 2012. Retrieved 30 September 2010.
  9. ^ "Passenger Lifts open". Retrieved 21 July 2020. Making our station accessible by installing lifts has been an aim of the Friends of Hebden Bridge Station since our formation in 2007. After much hard work and dogged persistence, we have finally achieved this aim because on 18 March 2019 at 11:38 am the lifts took their first passengers.
  10. ^ "Customer Information Enhancements at Rail Stations". Archived from the original on 12 May 2013. Retrieved 11 July 2012.
  11. ^ Table 41 National Rail timetable, December 2019
  12. ^ Historic England. "Hebden Bridge Signal Box, Hebden Royd (1412056)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 21 July 2020.
  13. ^ "Track and signalling works target journey time and capacity" Halifax and District Rail Action Group; Retrieved 10 August 2017
  14. ^ "What do we want the Calder Valley Line service to do?" Waring, J.S HADRAG news article; Retrieved 5 December 2019
[edit]
Preceding station National Rail National Rail Following station
Todmorden   Northern
Caldervale Line
  Mytholmroyd
Burnley Manchester Road     Halifax
Disused railways
Eastwood   L&YR
Caldervale Valley Line
  Mytholmroyd