Avon Street: Difference between revisions

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Image:Avon Street15.jpg|Looking in the opposite direction along Avon Street. ''© [[:Category:Dunstable Dasher|Dunstable Dasher]]''
Image:Avon Street15.jpg|Looking in the opposite direction along Avon Street. ''© [[:Category:Dunstable Dasher|Dunstable Dasher]]''
Image:Avon Street16.jpg|[[03382]] crosses the road again. The sign behind shows that other sidings along Avon Street where operated by Habgood & Co Ltd. Scrap Iron & Metal Merchants, Weighbridge & Railway Sidings. ''© [[:Category:Dunstable Dasher|Dunstable Dasher]]''
Image:Avon Street16.jpg|[[03382]] crosses the road again. The sign behind shows that other sidings along Avon Street where operated by Habgood & Co Ltd. Scrap Iron & Metal Merchants, Weighbridge & Railway Sidings. ''© [[:Category:Dunstable Dasher|Dunstable Dasher]]''
Image:Avon Street36.jpg|A view of the cement plant at Avon Street from the [[Bristol Powerbox]]. ''© [[:Category:Mike Radford|Mike Radford]]''
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== 1980s ==
== 1980s ==
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[[Category:Level Crossings]]
[[Category:Level Crossings]]
[[Category:Clive Moore]]
[[Category:Clive Moore]]
[[Category:Mike Radford]]

Revision as of 16:10, 29 April 2009

<googlemap lat="51.452456" lon="-2.578354"> 51.451627, -2.579019, Avon Street </googlemap>

To Temple Meads (GWR): River Avon
Mainline out of Bristol (GWR): Oxford Street
To Lawrence Hill Junction (MR): Barton Road

History

This was the terminus of the Bristol & Gloucestershire Railway, a line built to bring coal from the coalfields north of Bristol to the heart of the city. It's a shame that nothing stands here to inform the casual observer of the historical importance of the area. In modern times the line became a branch from Lawrence Hill to a cement terminal and was worked by Class 03 locomotives from Bath Road Depot.

Track Plan

1950s & 1960s

1970s

1980s

1990s

2003

2004

8.8.04