Mortimer railway station


Mortimer railway station serves the village of Stratfield Mortimer, in Berkshire, England. It lies from. The station is notable for its well-preserved Brunel-designed Great Western Railway station buildings, which are still in use. The station is served by local services operated by Great Western Railway.
The station is on the double-tracked Reading to Basingstoke Line and comprises two side platforms linked by a footbridge. Road access is to the north of the station, next to the up platform.
The brick-built single-storey main building has a ticket office and waiting room and is on the up platform. The down platform has a matching waiting shelter. Both buildings are Italianate, designed by Brunel for the GWR. They are the only substantially intact survivors of this once-common design, although a much modified example exists at. The buildings are Grade II* listed.

History

The station was opened in 1848, along with the Reading to Basingstoke railway line; both it and the station buildings have been in continuous use ever since. The line was promoted by the nominally independent Berks and Hants Railway, but this company was absorbed into the GWR two years before Mortimer station opened. The approval of the Duke of Wellington, who lived nearby at Stratfield Saye House was required for the station's construction.
After railway nationalisation in 1948, operation of the Reading to Basingstoke line, and management of the station, was passed to the Southern Region of British Railways. British Rail undertook major renovations of the station buildings in time for the celebrations of the 150th anniversary of the GWR, including removing the 1920s slates and replacing them with orange pantiles in the original style.
Following the privatisation of British Rail, the station is again served by trains running under the Great Western Railway name.

Services

All services at Mortimer are operated by Great Western Railway using and diesel multiple units.
The typical off-peak service is two trains per hour in each direction between and. On Sundays, the service is reduced to hourly in each direction.

In popular culture

The station appears briefly in the 1974 BBC Doctor Who serial Planet of the Spiders.