Appleby railway station
Appleby is a railway station on the [Settle–Carlisle line|Settle and Carlisle railway station|Carlisle Line], which runs between and via. The station, situated south-east of Carlisle, serves the market town of Appleby-in-Westmorland in Cumbria, England. It is owned by Network Rail and managed by Northern Trains.
The station was formerly known as Appleby West, with the older Appleby East station located nearby on the Eden Valley Railway. The buildings of Appleby East still survive.
History
The station was designed by the Midland Railway company architect John Holloway Sanders. Opened by the Midland Railway at the same time as the line itself in May 1876, it became part of the London, Midland and Scottish Railway during the Grouping of 1923. The station then passed to the London Midland Region of British Railways upon nationalisation in 1948. Following the withdrawal of local stopping trains in May 1970 it was one of only two stations on the Settle-Carlisle line to remain open, Settle being the other,When sectorisation was introduced in the 1980s, the station was served by Regional Railways until the privatisation of British Rail.
The line through the station is often used as a diversionary route for the West Coast Main Line for both passenger and freight trains. A pre-nationalisation milepost on the southbound platform marks the station's location miles from London on the Midland Railway route via,, and.
Facilities
The main brick-built station building with booking office and waiting room is located on the northbound platform; this is the original building of 1876. A smaller brick-built waiting room, also of 1876, is located on the southbound platform. A period wrought iron lattice footbridge links the two platforms. Step-free access to both is also available, via the road underbridge & ramps to the southbound platform, direct from the station entrance for northbound travellers. The booking office is open for nine hours per day, six days per week ; tickets can be purchased from a ticket vending machine when the office is closed. Train running times are available via telephone and timetable posters, with customer information screens on both platforms and public address to announce trains.To the north are a number of engineers sidings, which once formed the connection to the Eden Valley branch to Warcop, Kirkby Stephen East and ; an active signal box was repaired and refurbished in the autumn of 2019 to fix issues with rotten timbers and box foundations.
The main station building is Grade II listed; the waiting room on the northbound platform and the station's footbridge are separately Grade II listed. The footbridge was moved to Appleby West from in 1901.
Services
There is generally a service every two hours daily northbound to Carlisle and southbound to Leeds. Six services each way call on Sundays, including one to.Accidents and incidents
- Well-known railway photographer and enthusiast Bishop Eric Treacy died at Appleby railway station on 13 May 1978 after suffering a heart attack whilst waiting to photograph Evening Star, which was due to pass through the station on a rail tour. A plaque located on the down platform commemorates the spot.
- Services had been disrupted from 28 January 2016, due to a landslip at Eden Brows which destabilised the embankment on the eastern side of the railway, where it passes through the Eden Gorge. An emergency timetable was put into operation, with trains from the south terminating or starting at Appleby, and buses running between Appleby and Carlisle. Since 27 June 2016 some rail services were restored further north to Armathwaite, with bus links to and from,, Appleby and Armathwaite continuing to supplement the train service. Repair works were due to continue until the end of March 2017. These were completed on schedule, with the line reopening through to Carlisle on 31 March 2017.