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- Q7800541 subject Q8384653.
- Q7800541 subject Q8466365.
- Q7800541 subject Q8627970.
- Q7800541 subject Q8631552.
- Q7800541 abstract "Tibshelf Town railway station is a disused station in the village of Tibshelf in Derbyshire.The station was opened on 2 January 1893 by the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway (later part of the Great Central Railway and subsequently the LNER), on its line from Beighton in the outskirts of Sheffield to Annesley in Nottinghamshire, which later became part of the Great Central main line to London. The station was optimistically designated Tibshelf Town, reflecting Tibshelf's aspirations to obtain official town status. Tibshelf never did become a town but the station kept this name throughout its operating life.The line ran through a mainly industrial landscape dominated by mining. To the north of the station was a deep cutting where a tunnel was originally intended; fears of damage through mining subsidence forced the change in the plans. Tibshelf High Street crossed a bridge over this cutting.To the south, the line crossed over the Midland Railway's branch line from Westhouses & Blackwell (on the Erewash Valley Line), to Mansfield Woodhouse, just to the east of their own Tibshelf & Newton station. This line closed to passengers on 28 July 1930 but remained in use for freight and coal trains long afterwards; the route is now a footpath but Tibshelf & Newton station still stands. Tibshelf Town station closed on 4 March 1963, the line itself on 5 September 1966. The collieries also closed around this time, although coal mining continued to be a major source of employment for the village, with around 2,000 of Tibshelf's inhabitants still working at local pits as late as the 1980s.The route of the Great Central line was redeveloped by Derbyshire County Council in the late 1960s and early 1970s, and now forms part of the Five Pits Trail network. These efforts received a Countryside Award in 1970, as indicated by a plaque at nearby Pilsley where the next station northwards was sited. The trail runs approximately 12 miles, from Tibshelf to Grassmoor Country Park, though with the filling in of cuttings and removal of embankments it is virtually unrecognisable as a former railway line. Similarly the collieries that had once been such conspicuous features of the landscape have vanished without trace. The area is now once again mostly rural in character.".
- Q7800541 wikiPageExternalLink 443,360,1.
- Q7800541 wikiPageWikiLink Q1092839.
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- Q7800541 wikiPageWikiLink Q688684.
- Q7800541 wikiPageWikiLink Q690602.
- Q7800541 wikiPageWikiLink Q7194522.
- Q7800541 wikiPageWikiLink Q8384653.
- Q7800541 wikiPageWikiLink Q84.
- Q7800541 wikiPageWikiLink Q8466365.
- Q7800541 wikiPageWikiLink Q8627970.
- Q7800541 wikiPageWikiLink Q8631552.
- Q7800541 point "53.1405 -1.344".
- Q7800541 type SpatialThing.
- Q7800541 comment "Tibshelf Town railway station is a disused station in the village of Tibshelf in Derbyshire.The station was opened on 2 January 1893 by the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway (later part of the Great Central Railway and subsequently the LNER), on its line from Beighton in the outskirts of Sheffield to Annesley in Nottinghamshire, which later became part of the Great Central main line to London.".
- Q7800541 label "Tibshelf Town railway station".
- Q7800541 lat "53.1405".
- Q7800541 long "-1.344".