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London North Western
Railway:
Midland
Railway:
Stratford
Midland Junction Railway
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Handsworth Wood Station
Handsworth station was opened by the LNWR on 1st January
1896 some eight years after they had built the short loop line between the New
Street to Wolverhampton High Level route and the Grand Junction route. This
route had been opened on 1st April 1889 with the intention of aiding the moving
of traffic through and around Birmingham by avoiding New Street station. It was
primarily envisaged for goods traffic, especially for servicing the coal mines
around Perry Barr and Great Barr (Hamstead). Both passenger stations on the
line, Handsworth Wood and Soho Road, (the latter opened with the line in 1889)
were in competition with the GWR's more direct route between Wolverhampton and
Birmingham. Consequently with the commencement of the Second World War, which
required the railways to be efficient with scarce resources and labour, the two
stations were closed in 1941 never to re-open although the route remains open
to this day.
Handsworth station consisted of two wooden platforms with
each having four lightweight timber structures in order to provide a booking
office; ladies waiting room, general waiting room and gentlemen's urinal. They
were mirror images of each with the booking offices for both platforms being at
the Soho Road end of the four structures, alongside a short set of steps which
led up to the pathway which ran on both embankments to Hamstead Road. At one
end of the station was a short tunnel which ran beneath Church Hill House
whilst at the other end was a footbridge provided to maintain a right of way
across Handsworth Park.
Gates were fitted to the paths at Hamstead Road allowing the
railway to close the pathway for one day of the year to prevent a public right
of way being established. Initially the station was, for its type, well staffed
with a station master and two junior porters. Staff levels were reduced and
finally removed by the 1920s because of the need for the railway to make
economies in the face of competition from the city's bus and tram routes. The
station only provided a passenger service with freight traffic being serviced
by Soho Pool Wharf a short distance away. The photographs below show that
initially a ranch style of fencing was used at the rear of the platforms, the
steps and pathways to Hamstead Road. However within a few years the section of
fencing between the tunnel portal and the station buildings, together with the
fencing up the steps, were replaced with iron 'spearhead' railings, in the
latter case the railings continued beyond the steps to the top of the
embankment.
Locomotives seen at or near Handsworth Station
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