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Preservation name changes for stations

Discussion in 'Heritage Railways & Centres in the UK' started by chrishallam, Oct 20, 2017.

  1. chrishallam

    chrishallam Member

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    As part of the ongoing work to improve what was Ferry Meadows Station on the Nene Valley, it was decided to rename the station back to its original name of Overton.

    See http://www.nvr.org.uk/ferry-meadows-re-named-overton-40th-anniversary

    We felt it gave the station more historical standing and set it apart from the country park and the Ferry Meadows Railway which is a miniature railway within the park itself.

    This got me thinking, have any other stations changed name during their preservation lives?

    I can think of Belgrave and Birstall reopening as Leicester North and Bodmin Road reopening for the BWR as Bodmin Parkway. Neither of these have changed again during preservation merely reopening with new names.
     
  2. Mark Thompson

    Mark Thompson Well-Known Member

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    Strictly speaking, Leicester North is not a renaming, it's a new station on a different site slightly further south of Belgrave's original island platform.
    Bodmin Parkway is a national network station which was renamed about 7 years before the BWR started their operations, so not sure they really qualify.
    I thought of Robertsbridge Junction, but that's effectively a new station too...
     
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  3. Martin Perry

    Martin Perry Nat Pres stalwart Staff Member Moderator Friend

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    Tywyn on the Talyllyn Railway was renamed from Towyn during the preservation era. Minor change.
     
  4. Selsig

    Selsig Member

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    Porthmadog from Portmadoc, Crowcombe gaining its Heathfield are the two that spring to mind.

    Isn't Overton nee Ferry Meadows not *quite* on the site of the erstwhile Orton Waterville station (which in turn was Overton before 1913).

    John
     
  5. I. Cooper

    I. Cooper Member

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    "Arley" > "Hatley" > "Arley" (on more than one occasion)


    ....ok, I'll get my coat.
     
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  6. Ploughman

    Ploughman Part of the furniture

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    Goathland - Aidensfield.
    Grosmont - Ashfordley;)
     
  7. ikcdab

    ikcdab Member Friend

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    Crowcombe Heathfield was so named from the opening of the WSR in 1862. This was shortened to Crowcombe in 1889 to avoid confusion with Heathfield in Devon. So the renaming by the modern WSR is merely going back to the original 1862 name.
    Porthmadog is interesting as the town was originally named Portmadoc on its founding in the early 19th century - being a contraction of "Port Maddock". The more recent 'welshification" is a relatively modern invention, not a reversion to an earlier name as some would like us to believe.
     
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  8. Reading General

    Reading General Part of the furniture

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    i'm not keen on making up Welsh names any more than I am with the Irish equivalent. The one that always grates with me here is "Diosal" offered as the Irish for "Diesel"fuel. It's someones name and there should not be an Irish equivalent. Rather similar was my kids school trying to tell them my name in Irish is O'Naughton , my kids rebelled at that somewhat , as I'm not Irish, that isn't my name!
     
  9. chrishallam

    chrishallam Member

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    You are correct. The new station was built slightly further east of the old one to give better visibility of the crossing into the newly built country park.

    Without consulting the old maps I believe the old platform finished about where the station building is now.

    When we first built the miniature railway by the level crossing about 5 years ago we erected an 'Overton' sign at it's station (which would have been about on the old up platform). This was before the idea of renaming the main station really took off!
     
  10. burnham-t

    burnham-t New Member

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    Robertsbridge Junction was always named as such in the pre-1948 company timetables - in those days K&ESR trains used the back of the main-line down platform, so they didn't put up their own nameboard. At the other end of the line the K&ESR side of Headcorn station was similarly Headcorn Junction.
     
  11. 30854

    30854 Resident of Nat Pres

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    Patience!
     
  12. 5944

    5944 Resident of Nat Pres

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    But enough to cause a delay on a railtour, when the guard for the return working was taken in a taxi to Towyn, rather than Tywyn...!
     
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  13. Daddsie71b

    Daddsie71b Member Friend

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    Just like the Americans calling a Metre a meter. For cripes sake, the French invented and named it, who are they (americans) to bastardise the word to cover up for their countrymans lower educational standards !
     
  14. Spamcan81

    Spamcan81 Nat Pres stalwart

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    Oh dear. Only the small matter of 68 miles in the wrong direction. :)
     
  15. John Devon

    John Devon New Member

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    When South Devon Railway first opened their Totnes Station, it was christened Totnes (Riverside). It was later changed to Totnes (Littlehempston) to reflect it was in that parish. It has reverted to its original name from January 2017 as it cannot be accessed from that village without trespassing.
     
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  16. Martin Perry

    Martin Perry Nat Pres stalwart Staff Member Moderator Friend

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    I knew someone who mistook Kristiansund for Kristiansand in Norway .... Only 890km apart :)
     
  17. 30854

    30854 Resident of Nat Pres

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    Is this where someone mentions Concord(e)?:)
     
  18. Forestpines

    Forestpines Well-Known Member

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    I noted - following a trip there the other day - that the OS labels it "Totnes (Littlehempston Riverside) Station" on their maps, thereby covering all the bases!
     
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  19. malc

    malc Part of the furniture

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    Lydney Lakeside -> St Mary's Halt
    Jefferstone Lane -> St Mary's Bay
     
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  20. I think a number of stations have been renamed North Pole in the preservation era. For a few weeks of the year, anyway...
     

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