Everything about Torre Railway Station totally explained
Torre station is a suburban station on the
Riviera Line in
Torquay,
Devon,
England. The station is operated by
First Great Western but isn't staffed; except for one evening train it's only served by local services.
History
A
broad gauge branch was opened by the
South Devon Railway from Newton Abbot on
18 December 1848, this station being the terminus and known as
Torquay. This line was extended by the
Dartmouth and Torbay Railway on
2 August 1859, which opened the present
Torquay railway station at Livermead so the original station was renamed "Torre".
The station had a small extension to the single
platform and a
train shed built in
1855 but with the opening of the Dartmouth and Torbay Railway, a new platform had to be provided. The original station can still be seen standing alongside the track just north of the platform.
Goods traffic was handled from October 1849. The goods yard was originally at the west end of the station. The original
goods shed was destroyed by fire in 1857 and eventually replaced in 1865 by a stone building alongside the railway on the Newton Abbot side of the station. A coal yard was built on the west side of the station.
The South Devon Railway
amalgamated with the
Great Western Railway on
1 February 1876. The railway had originally been just a single track, but on
26 March 1882 the line to the north was doubled and a second platform opened. On
20 May 1892 the line was converted to
standard gauge.
The Great Western Railway was
nationalised into
British Railways on
1 January 1948. The buildings on the second platform were demolished in the 1960s and replaced by a simple brick-built shelter. Goods traffic was withdrawn on
4 December 1967.
Accidents
On the afternoon of
17 June 1946 a passenger train from
London Paddington station to
Paignton collided with the rear of a freight train that was stationary north of Torre station. The signalman had made an error in setting the line as clear and so the passenger train had been allowed to leave Kingskwerswell thinking the line was clear. Both lines were blocked and over 3,000 passengers had to be carried by bus between Newton Abbot and Torre.
Another collision happened on
26 April 1958 when a passenger train approaching from Newton Abbot passed through two danger signals and collided with a freight train that was hunting in the station. There is also a single
South West Trains service from
London Waterloo station that calls in the evening.
Torquay engine house
The South Devon Railway was designed to be worked as an
atmospheric railway, the trains propelled by
stationary engines that created a vacuum in a pipe laid between the rails. An engine house was built a short distance to the north of the Torquay terminus that would have powered trains up the 1 in 75 (13%) gradient from the station, but it was never brought into use and conventional locomotives worked the trains instead.
[
The building still stands in Torquay Road near the Lidl supermarket(at). It was used for many years by the Longpark Pottery but is currently a fruit and vegetable warehouse. It can be glimpsed above the cutting on the right of trains approaching Torre from Newton Abbot.]
Further Information
Get more info on 'Torre Railway Station'.
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