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Report - Lydd train station

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28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
The Lydd Railway Company (LRC) obtained authorisation to construct a standard gauge single track line from Appledore to Dungeness with intermediate stops at Lydd and Brookland. Having opened the line to traffic on 7 December 1881, the railway company subsequently decided on 16 February 1882 that the line would be worked and maintained by the South Eastern Railway, whose chairman, Edward Watkin, was the father of Alfred Mellor Watkin, chairman of the LRC. On 24 July, the company was authorised to extend the line by building a branch from Lydd to New Romney which opened on 19 June 1884. The LRC was taken into the South Eastern in January 1895, itself becoming part of the South Eastern and Chatham Railway four years later
Lydd, situated 7 miles from Appledore, was the principal station on the line with a considerable goods yard and a long siding to nearby army ranges via the 6 mile Lydd Military Railway, The approach to Lydd from Brookland saw the line travel over nine level crossings before passing under the line's sole overbridge carrying the B2075 Station Road, before reaching a final level crossing just before the station. The station had two platforms as well as a passing loop and a signal box on the down side
Following the opening of the Romney, Hythe and Dymchurch Railway in 1927, the extra holiday traffic generated persuaded the Southern Railway (who had taken over the line upon the railway grouping) to realign its branch to New Romney by moving it nearer to the sea and opening two new halts - Lydd-on-Sea and Greatstone-on-Sea - in 1937. The opening of Lydd-on-Sea Halt led to the renaming of Lydd station as "Lydd Town" to avoid any confusion. The station closed on 6 March 1967
Close-up of the station building
The main station building and goods yard remain in an empty and derelict state, having been used as a vehicle repair workshop until the mid-1980s which saw some internal walls removed. The up platform has also survived, but the down platform and signal box was demolished in the early 1970s and the passing loop was lifted after 1983. The station has suffered from vandalism, with a recent fire destroying a modern shed on the site and lightly damaging the southern end of the main building In May 2006, British Rail put the site on the market for redevelopment In March 2008, planning permission was granted to Kent County Council to use the goods yard for the temporary storage of refuse collection vehicles

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the126

Reckless & irresponsible
28DL Full Member
On my only visit here a few years ago we were met by a dude from Network rail, 'uh-oh' we thought!
He wasnt bothered by us going in the buildings as they are privately owned but warned us that the line itself is very much still live and that there was a waste train heading through that day
 
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