Bonnybridge Railway Station

About Bonnybridge Railway Station

Bonnybridge railway station was a railway station serving the village of Bonnybridge in central Scotland. The station was located on a short branch off the Caledonian Railway line from Coatbridge to Larbert. (There were two other "Bonnybridge" stations, on the Edinburgh and Glasgow main line and the Kilsyth line respectively. )HistoryBonnybridge was a small town located west of Falkirk in central Scotland. The Forth and Clyde Canal was opened in 1790, and the access to transportation encouraged the development of industry locally. The town was located on the north side of the canal. By the second half of the nineteenth century there were a tile works with a short tramway to the canal, a sawmill, a dyeworks, a smithy and three flour mills. Potash extraction developed later. When the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway opened on 1842, this initiated a major change in transport systems, and towns that were connected to the line found that their prosperity rose considerably, and those that were not suffered accordingly. The E& GR line passed a mile or so to the south of the canal. The Scottish Central Railway (SCR) opened its main line in 1848, connecting at junctions at Greenhill with the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway (E& GR) and the Caledonian Railway. In the vicinity of Bonnybridge, the SCR route passed between the E& GR main line and the canal. A station was provided at Greenhill Junction, but this was not convenient for Bonnybridge. The North British Railway took over the E& GR in 1865, and in May 1870 it opened a Bonnybridge station on the E& GR main line. This was of course somewhat remote from the town, and on the other side of the canal; access to cross the canal was by the so-called Radical Pend, and constricted tunnel under the canal which carried a watercourse to the Bonny Water. Fireclay and brick works developed in the area of the station itself.

Bonnybridge Railway Station Description

Bonnybridge railway station was a railway station serving the village of Bonnybridge in central Scotland. The station was located on a short branch off the Caledonian Railway line from Coatbridge to Larbert. (There were two other "Bonnybridge" stations, on the Edinburgh and Glasgow main line and the Kilsyth line respectively. )HistoryBonnybridge was a small town located west of Falkirk in central Scotland. The Forth and Clyde Canal was opened in 1790, and the access to transportation encouraged the development of industry locally. The town was located on the north side of the canal. By the second half of the nineteenth century there were a tile works with a short tramway to the canal, a sawmill, a dyeworks, a smithy and three flour mills. Potash extraction developed later. When the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway opened on 1842, this initiated a major change in transport systems, and towns that were connected to the line found that their prosperity rose considerably, and those that were not suffered accordingly. The E& GR line passed a mile or so to the south of the canal. The Scottish Central Railway (SCR) opened its main line in 1848, connecting at junctions at Greenhill with the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway (E& GR) and the Caledonian Railway. In the vicinity of Bonnybridge, the SCR route passed between the E& GR main line and the canal. A station was provided at Greenhill Junction, but this was not convenient for Bonnybridge. The North British Railway took over the E& GR in 1865, and in May 1870 it opened a Bonnybridge station on the E& GR main line. This was of course somewhat remote from the town, and on the other side of the canal; access to cross the canal was by the so-called Radical Pend, and constricted tunnel under the canal which carried a watercourse to the Bonny Water. Fireclay and brick works developed in the area of the station itself.

More about Bonnybridge Railway Station

Bonnybridge Railway Station is located at Falkirk
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonnybridge_railway_station