Hatfield railway station
Hatfield railway station serves the town of Hatfield in Hertfordshire, England. The station is managed by Great Northern. It is measured from on the East Coast Main Line.
History
Hatfield was formerly the junction of a branch to St Albans. The Hatfield and St Albans Railway closed to passenger traffic in 1951 as part of postwar economies brought in by the British Transport Commission. The route of the line is now a public footpath, the Alban Way.Station masters
- Mr. Unwin ca. 1850
- Edmund Cooter 1856 - 1866
- Mr. Bellamy ???? - 1878
- Robert Vodden 1878 - 1906
- Thomas Christopher 1910 - 1915
- John Thomas Cross 1917 - 1923
- Frederick B. Martin 1932 - 1939
- Arthur W. Bellamy 1940 - 1949
- T.J. Piggott 1951 - ????
- A.G. Dixon ca. 1960
Facilities
Hatfield has waiting rooms on all platforms, with extra shelters provided at various points along the platforms, as well as a canopy on Platform 1. There is a small café-shop style business, "Chuggs" on Platform 1, and three new retail units which opened in the new station building. There are three platform faces in total - platform 1 is a side platform facing the Up Slow line & used by London-bound trains, whilst platforms 2 & 3 face the Down Fast and Down Slow lines respectively; the latter is used by the majority of northbound trains.The station has a "Fast-Ticket" machine, as well as a standard touchscreen machine on either side of the building. Hatfield also has many vending machines throughout the station and a photo booth inside the booking hall, which also contains male/female toilets and a separate disabled toilet. Ticket barriers are in operation.
Services
Off-peak, all services at Hatfield are operated by Great Northern using and EMUs.The typical off-peak service in trains per hour is:
- 2 tph to
- 2 tph to
- 2 tph to only
- 2 tph to of which 1 continues to
Redevelopment
Hatfield Station was redeveloped in 2013—15 to include a new bus interchange and taxi rank, multi-storey car park, refurbished ticket office, three new retail units and step-free access to all platforms.Work on the project, which was to cost £9 million, began in 2013 and was completed by the end of 2015.
The new multi-storey car park opened on 17 November 2014.
Accidents
Three fatal rail crashes have occurred near Hatfield:- December 1870 accident, when a disintegrated wheel resulted in the deaths of six passengers and two bystanders.
- Two accidents occurred on 26 January 1939. In the first, an empty fish train was involved in a rear-end collision with a passenger train. The second involved a passenger train which ran into the rear of another. Two people were killed and seven were injured.
- October 2000 accident, when a GNER InterCity 225 train de-railed, killing four people and injuring 70.