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Northampton
Northampton
A Silverlink train at Northampton railway station.
Location
PlaceNorthampton
Local authorityNorthampton
Grid referenceTemplate:Gbmapscaled
Operations
Station codeNMP
Managed byLondon Midland
Platforms in use5
Live arrivals/departures and station information
from National Rail
Annual rail passenger usage
2004/05 *  1.855 million
2005/06 *increase 1.970 million
2006/07 *increase 2.145 million
2007/08 *increase 2.239 million
2008/09 *decrease 2.234 million
History
Original companyLondon and North Western Railway
Post-groupingLondon, Midland and Scottish Railway
London Midland Region of British Railways
16 February 1859Opened as Northampton Castle
1880-1881Rebuilt
1965-66Remodelled
18 April 1966Renamed Northampton
National Rail - UK railway stations
Template:Hide in print
* Annual passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Northampton from Office of Rail Regulation statistics.
Template:Portal frameless

Northampton railway station is a railway station serving the large town of Northampton and other parts of Northamptonshire in England. Other parts of South Northamptonshire are better served by Kings Sutton, Banbury and Milton Keynes Central stations.

The station is served by London Midland local services southbound to London and northbound to Birmingham New Street and Crewe, on the Northampton Loop of the West Coast Main Line. Virgin Trains also run infrequent fast services to and from London and Birmingham only at the extremes of the day.

Services[]

Northampton is served by London Midland services to London Euston, Milton Keynes and Birmingham. London Midland maintain their fleet of Class 350 EMUs at the Siemens depot just to the north of the station, as well as maintaining a Train Crew Depot at the station.

The typical Monday-Saturday off-peak service consists of:

Virgin Trains operate two trains per day from Northampton to London Euston (southbound only); one in the early morning and one in the late evening. These services originate from Birmingham New Street, but no northbound Virgin services are timetabled as serving Northampton. The lack of fast services to Northampton is caused by the fast lines of the West Coast Main Line bypassing the town. Connections to Manchester and other long-distance destinations can be made by changing at Milton Keynes Central.

Preceding station National Rail Following station
Rugby
(Long Buckby on Sundays)
towards Crewe/Birmingham
  London Midland
London - Crewe
  Milton Keynes Central
towards London Euston
Terminus
or
Long Buckby
  London Midland
Northampton Loop (West Coast Main Line)
  Wolverton
towards London Euston
Long Buckby
towards Birmingham
  London Midland
Northampton Loop
  Terminus
or
Wolverton
Rugby
towards Birmingham
  Virgin Trains
Northampton Loop
(West Coast Main Line)
  Milton Keynes Central
towards London Euston
Disused railways
Pitsford and Brampton
Line and station closed
style="background:#Template:LNWR colour; border-top:solid 1px gray; " |   London and North Western Railway
Northampton to Market Harborough line
style="background:#Template:LNWR colour;border-top:solid 1px gray; " |   Northampton Bridge
Street

Line and station closed
Terminus style="background:#Template:LMS colour; border-top:solid 1px gray; " |   London, Midland and Scottish Railway
Bedford to Northampton Line
style="background:#Template:LMS colour;border-top:solid 1px gray; " |   Piddington
Line and station closed
Historical railways
Church Brampton
Line open, station closed
style="background:#Template:LNWR colour; border-top:solid 1px gray; " |   London and North Western Railway
Northampton Loop
style="background:#Template:LNWR colour;border-top:solid 1px gray; " |   Roade
Line open, station closed

History[]

File:Banbury, Blisworth, Cockley Brake, Fenny Compton, Northampton, Ravenstone Wood,Roade, Stratford on Avon, Towcester, & Woodford & Hinton RJD 2.jpg

A 1911 Railway Clearing House map of railways in the vicinity of Northampton

Although projected to be on the first London to Birmingham railway, Northampton was skirted by the final choice of alignment; a loop to remedy this had to wait for several decades. At one time there were three railway stations in Northampton: Northampton (Bridge Street), Northampton (St. John's Street) and Northampton (Castle). The latter was named after Northampton Castle which formerly occupied the site and now survives as the town's only station.

Bridge Street station was the first station in Northampton, opening on 13 May 1845; originally named simply Northampton, it became Northampton Bridge Street in June 1876.Template:Sfnp The first railway line to be built in to Northampton was the Northampton and Peterborough Railway from Blisworth to Peterborough East. Northampton was served on this line by Bridge Street station.

Castle station (as it is still sometimes known to this day)[1] was the second station to be opened. It was opened with the Northampton and Market Harborough Railway on 16 February 1859 by the site of the historic Northampton Castle.Template:Sfnp[2][3][4]Template:Sfnp At the time, it was only a small station and handled only passenger traffic; goods traffic continued to be dealt with at Bridge Street.Template:Sfnp In 1875, the London and North Western Railway obtained powers to quadruple the main line north from Bletchley, with the two new tracks (the "slow lines") diverging at Roade so as to form a new line (the "Northampton Loop") through Northampton.Template:Sfnp Castle station was rebuilt and expanded over the site of Northampton Castle, the remains of which were purchased and demolished in 1880 to make way for the goods shed.Template:Sfnp In response to concerns expressed by local historians, the castle's postern gate was moved to a new site in the boundary wall of the new station where it remains to this day.Template:Sfnp The Loop Line north to Rugby was opened on 1 December 1881, followed by the line south to Roade on 3 April 1882.Template:Sfnp

A third station was opened by the Midland Railway for their services from Wellingborough (via the Northampton and Peterborough Railway) named Northampton on 1 October 1866; it closed on 10 June 1872Template:Sfnp with the opening of the Midland's branch line to Bedford.Template:Sfnp The station's site was subsequently reused for Far Cotton locomotive shed.[5]Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp A replacement station, which served both lines, opened the same day, and was again named Northampton, but was renamed Northampton St. John's Street on 2 June 1924.Template:Sfnp

File:Northampton - Railway Station - geograph.org,uk - 407343.jpg

Station frontage in 2007.

St John's station was an early victim of closure, closing to passengers and freight on 3 July 1939Template:Sfnp, the services being diverted to Northampton Castle.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp Bridge Street station survived until 4 May 1964Template:Sfnp,Template:Sfnp when the Northampton to Peterborough line was closed, leaving only Castle station serving the town.Template:Sfnp As a result, it was renamed Northampton on 18 April 1966.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp The current station is the result of extensive British Rail remodelling in 1965-66Template:Sfnp as part of the electrification of the West Coast Main Line.Template:Sfnp The current was switched on for the first time between Hillmorton Junction to Northampton on 6 June 1965 for insulation tests, with steam locomotives being withdrawn from the area on 27 September 1965.Template:Sfnp

The 2005 film Kinky Boots featured a station named 'Northampton', although the scenes were filmed at nearby Wellingborough on the Midland Main Line.[citation needed] To the north of the station is a five-road Siemens rolling stock maintenance depot which officially opened on 27 June 2006; the depot is responsible for the entire Class 350 Desire fleet which were introduced in June 2005.Template:Sfnp

The Northampton Wait[]

Today, Northampton is the subject of growing frustration among passengers travelling with London Northwestern Railway from London Euston to Coventry and Birmingham. This is due to the fact that the train has to wait at Northampton (seemingly unnecessarily) for approximately 10-15 minutes - a blight that only afflicts commuter services operated by London Northwestern and not faster services provided by Avanti West Coast. This waiting time has been variously dubbed "the Northampton dwelling", "the Northampton wait" and "the Great Northampton ire" by furious customers and impotent train managers.

References[]

Notes[]

  1. Castle Station Development (2005-09-02). Archived from the original on 3 October 2006. Retrieved on 2010-08-30.
  2. Template:Cite news
  3. Template:Cite encyclopedia
  4. Northampton Central Area Design, development and movement framework (Final Report) (PDF) (November 2006). Retrieved on 2010-08-30.
  5. Northampton Far Cotton (London & Birmingham Railway) (2005-09-02). Retrieved on 2010-08-30.

Sources[]

Template:Refbegin

  • Template:Butt-Stations
  • Template:Clinker-Stations
  • [2003] (2006) The Railways of Great Britain: A Historical Atlas 1. Shepperton, Surrey: Ian Allan Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7110-3236-1. 
  • (2008) Lost Railways of Northamptonshire. Newbury, Berkshire: Countryside Books. ISBN 978-1-84674-108-1. 
  • [1976] (1984) A Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain: The East Midlands 9. Newton Abbot, Devon: David St. John Thomas. ISBN 978-0-946537-06-8. 
  • [1991] (2001) British Railways Past and Present: The East Midlands. Kettering, Northants: Past & Present Publishing. No. 10. ISBN 978-1-85895-112-6. 
  • (June 2007) Bletchley to Rugby (including Newport Pagnell and Northampton). Midhurst, West Sussex: Middleton Press. ISBN 978-1-906008-07-9. 
  • Template:Quick-Stations

Template:Refend

Further reading[]

  • (1989) The Last Days of Steam in Northamptonshire. Gloucester: Sutton. ISBN 0-86299-613-9. 

External links[]

Template:Commons category

Coordinates: 52°14′18″N 0°54′26″W / 52.2383°N 0.9071°W / 52.2383; -0.9071 Template:Railway stations in Northamptonshire Template:Northampton Template:Use dmy dates

nl:Station Northampton pl:Northampton (stacja kolejowa)[]

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