- Source: Walworth Road railway station
Walworth Road railway station was a railway station in Walworth Road, Southwark, south London, England, on the London Chatham & Dover Railway, which opened on 1 May 1863 on the City Branch to Blackfriars as part of the company's ambitious plan to extend into the City of London. It was originally known as Camberwell Gate before changing its name in 1865.
Along with many other London stations, World War I wartime restraints forced it to close on 3 April 1916. At the time, the closure was considered temporary, but the station never reopened and was subsequently demolished. Today there are virtually no traces that this was once a station. It was planned in the 1950s to open a tube station in Walworth on the Bakerloo line, but the plans were abandoned.
British Rail did consider reopening the station as part of Thameslink in the 1980s but never materialised.
History
In 1879 the LCDR was running the following services that stopped at Walworth Road:
Frequent trains between Moorgate and Victoria, calling at all stations
Half-hourly trains between Moorgate and Clapham Junction, calling at all stations
Through trains from Kentish Town to Victoria, calling at all stations
Notes
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Walworth Road railway station
- A215 road
- Walworth
- Elephant & Castle railway station
- Camberwell railway station (England)
- Loughborough Junction railway station
- Wandsworth Road railway station
- Bow Road railway station
- New Kent Road
- Spa Road railway station