Pages: Disused stations...

Brief history

Brief history

Today’s quiet and peaceful Monsal Trail once rang to the noisy sounds of steam engines running on one of the most important railway lines in the country, linking Manchester with London.

Bakewell Station

Bakewell Station

Bakewell Station played a vital part in the town’s prosperity and expansion, but it very nearly didn’t happen when the Duke of Rutland refused permission for it to pass close to Haddon Hall.

Hassop Station

Hassop Station

Hassop Station was built to the highest standards and included a first class waiting room designed to entice the Duke of Devonshire. But it was all to no effect as he preferred Rowsley!

Great Longstone Station

Great Longstone Station

Great Longstone Station was the third stop on Midland Railway’s extension from Bakewell to London and Buxton. It opened in 1863 and closed 99 years later in 1962; a victim of the Beeching cuts.

Monsal Dale Station

Monsal Dale Station

A stretch of platform is all that’s left of Monsal Dale Railway Station which lay on the Buxton side of Headstone Viaduct. It was the last of five stations to be built on this section of the line.

Miller’s Dale Station

Miller’s Dale Station

Set in typically scenic Peak District countryside, Miller’s Dale Station became an unlikely but important intercity hub in the heyday of steam travel on the route between London and Manchester.

Blackwell Mill Halt

Blackwell Mill Halt

Blackwell Mill Halt was built for railway workers living in the cottages close to the start of today’s Monsal Trail. Recent plans for a light railway could mean it emerges once again from the undergrowth.