Bradfield railway station
Bradfield | |
|---|---|
Bradfield station in June 1963 | |
| General information | |
| Location | Bradfield, Tendring England |
| Platforms | 2 |
| Other information | |
| Status | Disused |
| History | |
| Original company | Eastern Union Railway Eastern Counties Railway |
| Pre-grouping | Great Eastern Railway |
| Post-grouping | London and North Eastern Railway |
| Key dates | |
| 15 August 1854 | Opened |
| 2 July 1956 | Closed |
Bradfield railway station served the village of Bradfield in Essex. It was on the Manningtree to Harwich branch line, which is today known as The Mayflower Line. It closed in 1956. Consisting of just two through platforms it had no sidings for working local goods traffic, which was the normal scenario in rural East Anglia. The station buildings on the up platform were particularly splendid for a very small station and were captured by the well known and popular transport artist Malcolm Root FGRA. The facilities on the down platform were very modest by comparison. The station had a very restricted catchment area and with a local population of just 730 in 1901 and 811 in 1961, passenger numbers were always very limited. A level crossing at the west end of the station was controlled by a signal box on the up side with just 12 levers.
| Preceding station | Historical railways | Following station | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mistley Line and station open |
Eastern Region of British Railways Mayflower line |
Priory Halt Line open, station closed | ||