Ashton Gate: Difference between revisions

From The Bristol Railway Archive
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
Line 1: Line 1:
'''To Parson Street Junction''': [[A370]]<br>
'''To Parson Street Junction''': [[A370]]<br>
'''To Portishead''': [[Access Bridge]]
'''To Portishead''': [[Purells Overbridge]]
== History ==
== History ==
The station was opened as''' Ashton Gate Platform''' on the 15th September [[1906]], for football traffic only, with a regular service starting on 1st October [[1906]]. Closed on 1st November [[1917]] as a wartime economy measure. Rebuilt and reopened on 23rd May [[1926]]. The use of the word 'Platform' was dropped in August [[1928]] and the station was last staffed on 29th October [[1962]]. It officially closed on 7th September [[1964]] but opened temporarily between [[1970]]-[[1977]] for football specials, and again between 12th-19th May [[1984]] for '''Mission England''', a serious of preachings by Billy Graham, which took place at the nearby Ashton Gate football ground.  
The station was opened as''' Ashton Gate Platform''' on the 15th September [[1906]], for football traffic only, with a regular service starting on 1st October [[1906]]. Closed on 1st November [[1917]] as a wartime economy measure. Rebuilt and reopened on 23rd May [[1926]]. The use of the word 'Platform' was dropped in August [[1928]] and the station was last staffed on 29th October [[1962]]. It officially closed on 7th September [[1964]] but opened temporarily between [[1970]]-[[1977]] for football specials, and again between 12th-19th May [[1984]] for '''Mission England''', a serious of preachings by Billy Graham, which took place at the nearby Ashton Gate football ground.  

Latest revision as of 16:42, 2 August 2022

To Parson Street Junction: A370
To Portishead: Purells Overbridge

History

The station was opened as Ashton Gate Platform on the 15th September 1906, for football traffic only, with a regular service starting on 1st October 1906. Closed on 1st November 1917 as a wartime economy measure. Rebuilt and reopened on 23rd May 1926. The use of the word 'Platform' was dropped in August 1928 and the station was last staffed on 29th October 1962. It officially closed on 7th September 1964 but opened temporarily between 1970-1977 for football specials, and again between 12th-19th May 1984 for Mission England, a serious of preachings by Billy Graham, which took place at the nearby Ashton Gate football ground.

1980s

2002

2003