Beverley railway station

Beverley
National Rail
Beverley Station.jpg
Beverley railway station, signal box and Chantry lane crossing (2005)
General information
LocationBeverley, East Riding of Yorkshire
England
Coordinates53°50′31″N 0°25′16″W / 53.842000°N 0.421000°W / 53.842000; -0.421000
Grid referenceTA038396
Managed byNorthern Trains
Platforms2
Other information
Station codeBEV
ClassificationDfT category E
Passengers
2017/18Increase 0.693 million
InterchangeIncrease 14
2018/19Decrease 0.659 million
InterchangeIncrease 35
2019/20Increase 0.682 million
InterchangeDecrease 6
2020/21Decrease 0.125 million
InterchangeDecrease 1
2021/22Increase 0.518 million
InterchangeIncrease 4
Notes
Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road

Beverley railway station serves the town of Beverley in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England. It is located on the Hull to Scarborough Line and is operated by Northern who provide most passenger services from the station.

History and description

The station c. 1910 when there was a canopy in front of the entrance

Beverley station was opened in October 1846 by the York and North Midland Railway leased Bridlington branch of the Hull and Selby Railway. The original station was designed by G.T. Andrews.

Beverley gained junction status nineteen years later in 1865 when the North Eastern Railway completed the Market Weighton to Beverley section of the York to Beverley Line.

The station was also planned to be the junction for the North Holderness Light Railway. This intended railway was given an Act in Parliament for 'transferring to the company the North Holderness Light Railway Company; and for other purposes, North Eastern Railway Bill [Lords].' The act was passed on 8 June 1899, but the NER never built the line.

The York to Beverley Line closed as a result of the Beeching Axe on 29 November 1965. The station received listed building status in 1985.

The station has a staffed ticket office, which is open Mondays to Fridays from 07:00 until 17:00 and until 13:30 on Saturdays (closed Sundays). A ticket machine is also provided. There is a waiting room and cafe in the main building next to the ticket hall and a shelter on the opposite platform. Step-free access is available to both platforms, though the southbound one is reached via a staffed barrier level crossing. Train running details are offered via digital display screens and timetable posters.

Future

The station may have more services introduced as part of the reopening of the York to Beverley Line via Market Weighton as part of the government's Restore Your Railway's plans.

Services

A Class 158 at Beverley on a Scarborough to Hull service

The station has a two trains per hour service to Hull and Bridlington, with an hourly service to Scarborough on weekdays. At peak times, a number of extra trains from Hull terminate/start here. Most services to Hull continue to Doncaster and Sheffield or Selby & York. Trains run hourly in each direction on Sundays, with most southbound trains running to Sheffield & hourly extensions northbound to Scarborough all year since the December 2009 timetable change (this service level previously only ran in summer).

On 4 February 2015 Hull Trains commenced operating one service per weekday between Beverley and London King's Cross with British Rail Class 802. Since May 2019, this has been increased to two trains per day.

Preceding station   National Rail National Rail   Following station
Northern
Yorkshire Coast Line
Cottingham   Hull Trains
London-Beverley
  Terminus
Disused railways
Y&NMRTerminus
TerminusNorth Holderness Light Railway
Proposed line, never built

This page was last updated at 2023-06-18 19:59 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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