CALLING AT ALL STATIONS...
This is a brief guide to the stations past and present along the route - a
mixture of history and the obscure.
If you have any stories about your station that you would like added to this
guide please email us using the address on the home page.
NORWICH THORPE
 - The present station is not
     the original terminus. The first station was opened by the Yarmouth & Norwich
     Railway on 30th April 1844 and enlarged when trains from the Ely direction
     began on 15th December 1845.
 
 - Formerly called Norwich
     Thorpe, the current station was opened in 1886. Built by John Youngs & Son at a cost of £60,000 it was
     constructed with red brick and Bath stone facings with a zinc dome. It has
     six platforms including a bay added in the 1950s.
 
 - The station is the last
     survivor of the city's three terminus stations. Victoria station, the
     original departure point of trains to London closed to passengers in 1916
     and to freight in 1966 although the coal depot was still served for
     another 20 years. Many years ago passengers bound for Peterborough and the
     Midlands would have used City station which closed to passengers in 1959
     with most of the Midland & Great Northern Joint Railway. Freight
     traffic was to linger for another 10 years.
 
 - Electrification of the
     Norwich-London Liverpool Street service saw a simplification of the track
     layout and all signalling at the station is now controlled from Colchester.
 
 - In 1987 a revamp included
     resurfacing the concourse with Italian terrazzo tiles. Since the 1990s
     this impressive station has had its roof and canopies repaired and shop
     units installed. A 1945 City of Norwich Plan was not impressed describing
     the station as 'a rather pompous over decorated building reminiscent of
     mediocre French railway stations of the period'.
 
 - Just outside the station
     area is the Crown Point maintenance depot opened by BR in 1982 at a cost
     of £10m and occupying a 12 acre site.
 
TROWSE
 - The present swingbridge over the River Wensum dates from 1986.
     Trowse station south of the swingbridge was
     noted for its cattle traffic and the extensive private sidings of
     Coleman's mustard.
 
 - The 89 foot station building
     at Trowse was of white bricks and flints worked by men from Brandon. A Mr
     Farrow of Diss took charge of the stonework.
 
 - In 1892 the Great Eastern
     Railway reported that in a recent year 95,000 beasts, 137,000 sheep and
     14,000 pigs were received at the station.
 
 - The station closed in 1939
     but came back to life in 1986 as a temporary terminus during major
     engineering work at Norwich Thorpe. Most of the platforms were later
     demolished.
 
HETHERSETT
 - The former Hethersett
     station was 6¼ miles from Norwich. Remote from the village it served and
     the wrong side of the All, Hethersett was still served by 10 to 12 trains
     each way in the early 1960s, mostly Norwich-King's Lynn/Wells-next-the-Sea
     services.
 
 - Closure came in 1966 and
     although the platforms were removed the derelict 1845 single storey
     station building and awning survive. Private sidings to a Ministry of
     Defence oil depot were opened during the Second World War but had fallen
     into disuse by 1980 and are now disconnected.
 
WYMONDHAM
 - Just over 10 miles from
     Norwich, Wymondham is now the first station on our route with its original
     Norfolk Railway buildings now lovingly restored by a local businessman and
     formally reopened after years of dereliction by Dad's Army actor
     Bill Pertwee in 1989.
 
 - When the railway opened in
     1845 Wymondham had a second station, at Spinks
     Lane, but this lasted only a few months.
 
 - The town became a junction
     in 1847 with the opening of a branch to Dereham, later extended to King's Lynn
     and Wells-next-the-Sea. These services were the first in the region to
     benefit from the first generation of diesel units in 1955 but passenger
     trains were withdrawn by 1969 with freight continuing until 1989. Since
     then the Mid-Norfolk Railway has restored and reopened the line to
     Dereham, and there is a second station in the town once more with the
     opening of a halt at Wymondham Abbey. For more information visit www.mnr.org.uk
 
 - From our line it is possible
     to make out the course of the branch to Forncett on the Norwich-London
     line, opened in 1881 and closed upon the outbreak of war in 1939. The
     Wymondham end was used for breaking up condemned rolling stock until the
     1970s and the mail van at the centre of the Great Train Robbery of 1963
     was reported to have been discreetly destroyed at this site.
 
SPOONER ROW
 - Two and a half miles from
     Wymondham, Spooner Row is the smallest remaining station on our line, the
     village deriving its name from the manufacture of wooden spoons. The
     station closed twice in the 19th century but reopened on each occasion.
 
 - The station building was
     damaged by fire in the 1970s and demolished. Today a former signal box and
     three former railway cottages remain. There are two commuter trains into
     Norwich and one late afternoon return journey.
 
ATTLEBOROUGH
 - Attleborough is five and a
     half miles from Wymondham with platforms either side of a level crossing,
     a signal box on the Norwich-bound platform and restored gardens.
 
 - The ivy clad brick goods
     shed is a clue to the once extensive freight traffic handled here
     including Gaymer's cider which was served in the
     refreshment rooms of the Great Eastern railway. The cider works moved
     alongside the railway in 1896, had extensive sidings and stood on the site
     of the present Banham Poultry plant.
 
 - Part of the former goods
     yard became a bowling green in the 1980s. At Ranelagh
     Gardens in Norwich 140 years earlier the reverse happened: a bowling green
     became a goods yard for the new Norwich Victoria station.
 
ECCLES ROAD
 - Nearly four miles on is
     Eccles Road which was advertised in timetables as the station for
     Kenninghall, three miles away. Modern housing has developed near to the
     station since the 1970s.
 
 - In 1985 a long siding was
     laid to a grain store at Snetterton supported by
     a government grant of £348,000 but by the early 1990s grain had
     disappeared from the rail network and the facility fell into disuse. In
     more recent times there has been occasional aggregates traffic to Snetterton and the exchange sidings were extended in
     2007.
 
HARLING ROAD
 - Eight miles east of Thetford
     and a mile and a half from East Harling, the station still has its 1845
     building (minus platform) on the east side of the crossing while its
     successor is located on the Ely bound platform.
 
 - In the 1940s the War
     Department constructed a long siding south of the station to a military
     stores depot. It remained in use for more than 20 years and its course is
     still evident. Freight here ceased in 1964 but some sidings were
     reinstated until 1983.
 
 - The Norwich to London mail
     train called at Harling Road on Saturday nights until 1981. Cuts in
     weekday stops were greeted with fury in 1994 and now there are two trains
     each way for Norwich commuters. A former signal box survives but the
     Railway pub has pulled its last pint.
 
ROUDHAM JUNCTION
 - The station here opened in
     1869 at the same time as the branch to Watton, later extended to Swaffham.
     Remote and with no road access, it became an exchange point only in 1902
     and after that there were 60 years of gradual decline.
 
 - The post of station master
     had been downgraded to porter in charge by 1916, main line trains ceased
     to call in 1920 and official closure came in 1932. Thetford-Swaffham
     trains continued to call unadvertised until 1964, the Beeching
     Report making special mention of the loss making route with an average of
     nine passengers a train. Today the railway cottages and a few platform
     railings can be glimpsed from the passing train.
 
 - On the south side of the
     line are the ruins of Roudham church. Disaster struck in the 18th century
     when ash from a workman's pipe set fire to the thatched roof.
 
THETFORD
 - An 1847 guide described Thetford
     station as 'a handsome building of flints edged with grey stone and
     bricks' similar in design to Trowse. It was extended in 1889, the year
     shown in the stone work above the entrance.
 
 - Having a station at Thetford
     on the Norwich-Ely line was an afterthought, the original intention being
     for the line to pass to the north with the town served by a short branch.
     An Act of Parliament dated 31st July 1845 authorised a deviation
     southwards causing some abandonment of construction work.
 
 - Mundford Road obliterates all trace
     of the branch to Bury St Edmunds, the first stop being Thetford Bridge.
     Passenger trains ceased in 1953 with freight ending seven years later.
 
 - The goods yard was cleared
     of sidings in 1983 and the site is now occupied by housing although there
     was some MOD traffic on the one remaining engineer's siding into the
     1980s.
 
 - West of Thetford there were
     sidings to Fison's manure works at Two Mile
     Bottom.
 
BRANDON
 - Grimes Graves (3½ miles from
     Brandon station) is a Neolithic flint mine underneath the grassy Breckland landscape and the only one open to the
     public. Flints from Brandon were used in the construction of all stations
     on the Norwich and Brandon Railway right through to Trowse.
 
 - There were still wagons in
     the sidings when Dad's Army filmed in the station yard in 1970 but
     after a long period of disuse the yard came back to life in the mid-1980s
     with short term flows of timber and roof tiles with bricks and also
     limestone for the Wissington sugar beet factory
     being handled in the late 1990s/early 2000s. Up to a train a day of
     aggregates for a new runway is at present using the station.
 
LAKENHEATH
 - Lakenheath station
     originally appeared in timetables as The Hiss, after the name of a nearby
     farm.
 
 - Unstaffed since 1967, the
     station house is in private occupation and the Norwich bound platform
     still has a postbox.
 
 - In 1917-19 the Ministry of
     War used a 2ft gauge line alongside the road to deliver construction
     materials to Feltwell Aerodrome.
 
 - A chicory factory was based
     at the station but freight traffic ceased to be handled here in 1966.
 
 - Since June 2007 the basic train
     service has focused on weekend stops for those visiting the RSPB reserve
     at Lakenheath which is adjacent to the railway. For more information see
     http://www.rspb.org.uk/reserves/guide/l/lakenheathfen/directions.asp
 
SHIPPEA HILL
 - The station was called Burnt
     Fen until 1885 and then Mildenhall Road until 1905.
 
 - A network of horse drawn
     tramways ran across farmland to the south of the station serving in
     particular the Frederick Hiam estate. Another
     long siding served Chivers factory, a mile east
     of the station. To the north there was a branch to Shrubhill
     Farm from the 1860s to 1880s.
 
 - Following the closure of the
     Mildenhall branch in 1962 Shippea Hill became
     the railhead for servicemen at the airbase there. Up to the 1980s around
     11 trains a day called in each direction with taxis often waiting in the
     yard. Extra trains and connecting buses were laid on for the Mildenhall
     air fete well into the 1980s but usage later declined and the station now
     clings to the timetable with one train each way on a Saturday. The
     isolated Railway tavern has closed.
 
ELY
 - Ely is a significant
     interchange station served by Norwich-Liverpool, Norwich-Cambridge,
     Stansted Airport-Birmingham, King's Cross-King's Lynn and Peterborough-Ipswich
     services, all combining to provide nine departures an hour.
 
 - The only route not to
     survive was the branch to St Ives which lost its passenger services as
     long ago as 1931 although two trains a week to a coal depot at the village
     of Sutton continued until 1964.
 
 - The 1845 building, extended
     in 1898 connects to the island platform by way of a subway although a
     footbridge once existed here. As part of the £12m electrification scheme
     in the early 1990s platform 1 was widened and increased in height and all
     three platforms were lengthened to accommodate 12 coach trains.
 
 - The sidings to the goods
     depot to the west of the station were lifted in 1990 and the site is now
     occupied by a Tesco store. Today's freight traffic is focused on a railfreight terminal north of the station which
     occupies the site of the sugar beet factory which closed in 1981.
 
CHETTISHAM
 - Formerly the first stop west
     of Ely, this village station closed to passengers in 1960 although a
     nearby grain terminal, visible for miles around, remained rail served
     until the 1980s.
 
 - Remarkably Chettisham sprang back into life again in 1991/92 when
     Ely station was closed due to engineering work connected with the
     electrification of the Cambridge-King's Lynn line. Thousands of passengers
     were ferried by bus to and from temporary platforms at Chettisham
     although it appeared in timetables as 'Ely Temporary Station'. For many
     the name on the signal box was the only clue where they were!
 
 - The station house is a
     private home but everything else has now disappeared.
 
BLACK BANK
 - This was the second station
     on the section from Ely to Peterborough.
 
 - Subsidence and only five
     regular passengers sealed the station's fate with closure in 1963.
 
 - The signal box has gone but
     the name board can be seen on a modern house facing the railway.
 
MANEA
 - Manea is 9¾ miles west of Ely
     and the only survivor of the four stations that once served fenland
     communities between Ely and March,. It is served
     by ten trains in each direction on Mondays to Saturdays. Historically the
     main significance of the station was its agricultural traffic.
 
STONEA
 - Situated 11¾ miles west of
     Ely Stonea was another fenland village station noted for its agriculture
     produce. By 1961 three daily trains for Ely called and four for Peterborough
     but closure came on bonfire night in 1966.
 
MARCH
 - These days the name might be
     associated with a prison but Whitemoor, to the
     north of March station, was the location of the largest marshalling yards
     in the country and the second largest in Europe. They were constructed in
     the late 1920s/early 1930s but after years of gradual decline only a
     wasteland remained by the start of the 21st century.
 
 - In 2004 Network Rail
     reinstated part of the site to railway use with the opening of a new depot
     and at the end of 2007 GB Rail Freight opened a diesel depot to the east
     of the station.
 
 - March station shows every
     sign of a more illustrious past. Only two platforms are in use but three
     abandoned bay platforms and two trackless through platforms remain. The
     latter formed the start of the line to Spalding which closed in 1982. BR
     hoped to save £4m over the next 10 years. The line's significance was as a
     diversionary route, village stations with distinctive names such as Guyhirne, French Drove & Gedney
     Hill and Cowbit having long since been
     abandoned.
 
 - March was served by a second
     branch from Cambridge via St Ives and Chatteris
     which succumbed in 1967.
 
WHITTLESEA
 - It may be spelt Whittlesey
     on maps but to the railway it has always been Whittlesea! It is served by
     ten trains in each direction on Mondays to Saturdays, five on Sundays.
 
 - The station building on the
     Ely bound platform has long gone leaving bare platforms. The extensive
     sidings once served a brick works but only two remain and they have been
     disused since the early 1990s.
 
 - Three and a half miles east
     of Whittlesea is a signal box and disused goods shed at Three Horse Shoes,
     the only clue to the existence of a freight only branch from here to the
     village of Benwick which carried agricultural
     produce until 1964.
 
PETERBOROUGH
 - Peterborough is a major
     interchange station with seven platforms.
 
 - In April 2007 Network Rail
     announced that £1.3m was to be invested in improvements at the station to
     include new and extended platforms.
 
 - Look out for the Nene Valley
     Railway's 7½ mile line westwards towards Wansford
     and Yardwell Junction closed by British Rail in
     1972. For more information visit www.nvr.org.uk