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GWR Route: North Warwickshire Line
Shirley Station: shirley-signal-diag
A low resolution version of the Signalling Diagram for
Shirley Signal Box dated 1948 produced courtesy of the Signalling Record
Society (S.R.S.). Details of how to purchase their full resolution content is
available
here. Shirley Signal Box opened on 9th December
1907 and was located on the down platform. The Signal Box was a standard Great
Western Railway brick built design with a hipped roof and stovepipe chimney
(type 7D). The operating floor was 29 feet long and 12 feet wide with the
characteristic three up two down window panes. It housed thirty-one levers in a
horizontal tappet, three bar locking frame. Shirley Signal Box weekday opening
hours for a selection of years were:
Service Time
Table |
Signal Box
Opened |
Signal Box
Closed |
Summer
1916 |
6:00
a.m. |
2:00
a.m. |
Summer
1929 |
5:30
a.m. |
12:15
a.m. |
Winter
1930 |
5:30
a.m. |
12:45
a.m. |
Summer
1939 |
5:30
a.m. |
2:00
a.m. |
Winter
1945 |
5:15
a.m. |
2:00
a.m. |
The Signal Box here controlled the block sections on the
main double line. The Signalman sent messages to the preceding Signal Box to
give permission for trains to enter the block section on their line and used
signals to indicate to train drivers when they were allowed to proceed. Distant
Signals, distinguished by their forked tails and yellow colour (post September
1927) gave train drivers advance warning of the status of the next
Stop Signal. The Signal Box also controlled train movements
associated with the station yard and sidings.
The Signalman could set a route with the point switch
levers. These were interlocked with various types of signals (including ground
signals and route indicators), operation of which informed the locomotive
driver of the selected route and when to proceed. This interlocking with
signals ensured that these indicated to other trains, when they could no longer
proceed safely and had to stop. Visibility was important in the days before
track circuits and the Signal Box was positioned where it could oversee the
most complex trackwork.
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