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Margate
Margate
Location
PlaceMargate
Local authorityDistrict of Thanet
Grid referenceTemplate:Gbmapscaled
Operations
Station codeMAR
Managed bySoutheastern
Platforms in use4
Live arrivals/departures and station information
from National Rail
History
Opened 5 October 1863 (5 October 1863)
National Rail - UK railway stations
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File:Margate station geograph-3782224-by-Ben-Brooksbank.jpg

Platform view

File:Margate BR Standard 2-6-2T geograph-2673191-by-Ben-Brooksbank.jpg

BR Standard 2-6-2T at Margate in 1958

Margate railway station serves the town of Margate in Thanet in Kent, England. Train services are provided by Southeastern.

Trains from the station generally run to London Victoria via Chatham, or to London St Pancras via Ramsgate, Canterbury West and Ashford International. Peak hour trains run to St Pancras via Chatham and Gravesend and to London Cannon Street.

History[]

Template:Ramsgate and Margate RDT Trains first reached Ramsgate in April 1846 when the South Eastern Railway (SER) opened a line from Canterbury. It terminated at Ramsgate SER, later to be called Ramsgate Town. Later the same year the line opened across Thanet to Margate, to Margate SER, (later Margate Sands). Trains from Canterbury for Margate had to reverse at Ramsgate Town; a chord was built bypassing the station, but not often used. St Lawrence station was opened in 1864 just before this chord but closed in 1916.

The London Chatham and Dover Railway (LCDR) reached Margate from Herne Bay in 1863. This called at Margate LC&DR (later Margate West), East Margate (later Margate East), Broadstairs and via a Template:Convert/yd tunnel terminated at Ramsgate LC&DR (later Ramsgate Harbour), located near the harbour and beach.

This arrangement was inherited by Southern Railway on grouping in 1923. To simplify the arrangement in 1926 a new line was opened connecting the SER line from the site of St Lawrence for Pegwell Bay to the LCDR line just south of Broadstairs. The current Ramsgate station and a new station at Dumpton Park were built on this new line. The Ramsgate Harbour station, line through the tunnel, and the Ramsgate Town station and old SER line across to Margate Sands were all closed in July 1926. Margate West station was renamed Margate in 1926. Margate East closed in 1953.

Until 1967 a service operated between Margate and Birkenhead Woodside via Ashford, Redhill, Reading, Oxford, Birmingham Snow Hill and Shrewsbury. The stock was provided on alternate days by successors to the Southern Railway and the Great Western being the Southern Region and the Western Region under British Rail. At Ashford a portion from Sandwich, Deal and Dover was attached/detached, likewise a Brighton portion at Redhill.

Architecture[]

Margate railway station is a grade II listed building,[1] designed by Edwin Maxwell Fry and opened in 1926.[2]

In the media[]

The station was featured in Only Fools and Horses, in the 1989 episode The Jolly Boys' Outing.

Services[]

Preceding station National Rail logo.svg National Rail Following station
Westgate-on-Sea   Southeastern
Chatham Main Line - Ramsgate Branch
  Broadstairs
Broadstairs   Southeastern
Ashford to Ramsgate (via Canterbury West) line
  Terminus
Birchington-on-Sea   Southeastern
High Speed 1
St Pancras International to St Pancras International Circular
  Broadstairs
Broadstairs   Southeastern
High Speed 1
London-Margate via Ashford
  Terminus

References[]

  1. Margate Railway Station. Images of England. Retrieved on 2007-12-28.
  2. Ramsgate Railway Station, Kent
  3. Template:NRtimes

Coordinates: 51°23′7.04″N 1°22′19.85″E / Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character "[". Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character "[". / Template:Coord/dms2dec; Template:Coord/dms2dec

External links[]

Template:Kent railway stations

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