Dalton railway station


Dalton is a railway station on the Furness Line, which serves the town of Dalton-in-Furness in Cumbria, England. It is owned by Network Rail and managed by Northern Trains.

History

Construction of the Furness Railway was authorised in May 1844. It was opened in stages: the line between Dalton and Barrow was in use by 3 June 1846, as was the line between Salthouse Junction and. A line between Dalton and Kirkby was opened on 12 August 1846, when the earlier sections were officially opened. Dalton station was opened to passengers on 24 August 1846. An eastward extension from Dalton to was authorised on 27 July 1846; it did not open until April 1854.
The station once had three platforms; however, only two are in use today. The disused one is adjacent to the Barrow-bound platform, from which it is separated by a wooden fence. The area is now very overgrown and inaccessible to the public.

Facilities

The station is unstaffed, with a card-only ticket machine on the southbound side; passengers have to obtain a promise-to-pay notice to pay by cash on board the train. Digital signs and timetable posters are provided on each platform for train running information purposes. The station buildings are no longer in rail use, though shelters are located on each side. Access to the platforms is either via steps from the over bridge at the south end or via paths from adjacent public roads.

Services

It receives a roughly hourly service to via and to. Most trains continue to and southbound and some continue to via northbound. On Sundays, there is also an hourly service each way, with a few through trains and from Carlisle since the summer 2018 timetable change.

Freight diversionary line

Freight trains for the Cumbrian Coast Line leave the line about a kilometre west of Dalton and take the direct line northwards to Askam. This route avoids having to go through Barrow station.