Butterley Station, Midland Railway Centre January 26, 2009
Posted by shortfinals in Derbyshire, England, Museums, railways.Tags: 'Black Five', 'old pence', Ambergate, Belle Vue Station, Belleview Zoological and Pleasure Gardens, Butterley Reservoir, Butterley Station, cast iron, Codnor, Derby, Derbyshire, Eastwood, embankment, Erewash Valley Line, fire bucket, Golden Valley, Langley Mill, LMS, London, London Midland Scottish Railway, Manchester, Midland Railway, Midland Railway charter, Midland Railway Trust, milk churns, Museums, Narrow-guage railway, Pye Bridge, railway enthusiasts, Ripley, Sheffield, steam locomotives, Sun Inn, Swanwick, The Sun Inn, Thomas the Tank Engine, Whitwell
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Butterley Station, Midland Railway Centre
I have always been interested in railways, especially steam locomotives. I remember as a boy taking a 4d (four ‘old pence’) bus ride the 4 miles to Langley Mill Station, on the Erewash Valley Line close to the Nottinghamshire border, in order to watch the main line trains thunder through on their way to Sheffield from London.
Here is a shot of Butterley Railway Station (on the old Pye Bridge to Ambergate line which closed in 1968), in the Derbyshire town of Ripley. When I was about 8, I was taken on a ’special’ from here to Manchester Belle Vue station, drawn behind an LMS ‘Black Five’ locomotive, northward across the embankment which splits Butterley Reservoir, and returned late at night having had a wonderful time at the old Belle Vue Zoological and Pleasure Gardens. The last ‘bus had LONG gone, and that meant a long walk home to Codnor!
The Midland Railway Trust has transformed this derelict site, and despite the fact that it looks almost exactly as I remember it, the original building is no longer there. An identical station building was found at Whitwell in north Derbyshire and erected on the site of the old one. Note the period wood and cast iron benches, the milk churns and even the period fire buckets! The Midland Railway (one of the main constituent companies of the London Midland and Scottish Railway) was formed at the Sun Inn in Eastwood, and had its main works at nearby Derby, so it was natural that the Trust would have chosen this site, along with the 3.5 mile length of track, as its headquarters. Now trains run from here to the new station and museum at Swanwick and beyond, and there is a fine narrow-guage extension to the hamlet of Golden Valley (where my mother was born!).
When I was here, the station was decked out for a visit from ‘Thomas the Tank Engine’, and the place was heaving with ’small railway enthusiasts’ .


