Glen Falloch Halt Railway Station

About Glen Falloch Halt Railway Station

Glen Falloch Halt railway station or Glenfalloch Platform railway station was a remote rural railway station in Glen Falloch, Stirlingshire, Scotland. Opened in 1946 by the LNER, it was located in Glen Falloch on the Ardlui side of the viaduct, but reported out of use by around 1948. HistoryThe West Highland Railway opened the line to passengers on 7 August 1894; later it was operated by the North British Railway, until in 1923 it became part of the London and North Eastern Railway. In 1948 the line became part of the Scottish Region of British Railways following nationalisation. Glen Falloch Halt or Platform had a single platform and was opened by the LNER in 1946, but it closed around 1948. Records show that it was not opened as a standard railway station for the general public and it was not listed in the 1948 British Railways (Scottish Region) timetable. The RCAHMS refer to the halt as being temporary. A well built concrete construction the curved single platform remnants are still present. It had a name board reading 'Glen Falloch' and a small shed was present as a shelter or store. A footpath ran from the halt to the Drovers Inn at Inverarnan. Loch Sloy scheme and the WWII Prisoner of War campAfter World War II many German and Italian ex-prisoners stayed in Scotland, and it is recorded that a small prisoner of war camp had been located at Glen Falloch, where a lot of forestry work was carried out. German and Italian POWs had been involved in the early stages of the construction of the Sloy /Awe Hydro-Electric facility between Loch Sloy and Inveruglas, on the west bank of Loch Lomond.

Glen Falloch Halt Railway Station Description

Glen Falloch Halt railway station or Glenfalloch Platform railway station was a remote rural railway station in Glen Falloch, Stirlingshire, Scotland. Opened in 1946 by the LNER, it was located in Glen Falloch on the Ardlui side of the viaduct, but reported out of use by around 1948. HistoryThe West Highland Railway opened the line to passengers on 7 August 1894; later it was operated by the North British Railway, until in 1923 it became part of the London and North Eastern Railway. In 1948 the line became part of the Scottish Region of British Railways following nationalisation. Glen Falloch Halt or Platform had a single platform and was opened by the LNER in 1946, but it closed around 1948. Records show that it was not opened as a standard railway station for the general public and it was not listed in the 1948 British Railways (Scottish Region) timetable. The RCAHMS refer to the halt as being temporary. A well built concrete construction the curved single platform remnants are still present. It had a name board reading 'Glen Falloch' and a small shed was present as a shelter or store. A footpath ran from the halt to the Drovers Inn at Inverarnan. Loch Sloy scheme and the WWII Prisoner of War campAfter World War II many German and Italian ex-prisoners stayed in Scotland, and it is recorded that a small prisoner of war camp had been located at Glen Falloch, where a lot of forestry work was carried out. German and Italian POWs had been involved in the early stages of the construction of the Sloy /Awe Hydro-Electric facility between Loch Sloy and Inveruglas, on the west bank of Loch Lomond.

More about Glen Falloch Halt Railway Station

Glen Falloch Halt Railway Station is located at Arrochar, Argyll and Bute