Cobh railway station

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Cobh
An Cóbh
Iarnród Éireann
Cobh Station August 2011.JPG
Location Cobh
Republic of Ireland
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Owned by Iarnród Éireann
Operated by Iarnród Éireann
Platforms 1
Construction
Structure type At-grade
File:Heritage centre, An Cobh - geograph.org.uk - 249726.jpg
Cobh Heritage Centre, once the lobby of the town's railway station
Mallow to Youghal/Cóbh
Dublin to Cork mainline
Mallow-Waterford line (closed)
Mallow
Mallow–Tralee line
Mourne Abbey (closed)
Rathduff (closed)
Blarney(future)
Monard(future)
Kilbarry(future)
Cork Kent
Tivoli (closed)
Dunkettle(future)
Little Island
Glounthaune
Carrigtwohill West(future)
Carrigtwohill
Midleton
Mogeely (closed)
Killeagh (closed)
Youghal (closed)
Fota
Carrigaloe
Ballynoe(future)
Rushbrooke
Cobh

Cobh railway station serves the town of Cobh, County Cork. It is located in a red brick building adjacent to the town's Cobh Heritage Centre.

It is the terminus of the on Cork-Cobh section of the Cork Suburban Rail line. Travel to Glounthaune station to transfer to Midleton.[1]

Description

The station is staffed part-time and has a single platform. The station is accessible only via a steep ramp.[2]

History

The station opened 10 March 1862 and was closed for goods traffic on 3 November 1975.[3]

It began life as the terminus of the Cobh (then Queenstown) section of the Cork, Youghal & Queenstown Railway.[4]

The present station occupies only a small part of the old station building. The original station was expanded greatly during the latter part of the 19th century as it served what was then Ireland's largest emigration port which was also an important way-point as the last port between Western Europe and North America. The station was also the main receiving centre for mails for Ireland and Britain from the United States and Canada. Mail would be brought by ship to Cobh, processed and forwarded by mail express trains to Kingstown (now Dún Laoghaire) on the outskirts of Dublin and on to Holyhead. This was faster than conveying by ship directly to Liverpool.[5]

It is famous for being the station where hundreds of survivors of the RMS Lusitania disaster left the town of Cobh after surviving the sinking.

With the development and growth of transatlantic air traffic Cobh lost its importance as a mail and passenger centre. A significant part of the train station remained largely unused until the opening of the Cobh Heritage Centre in the front part of the station in the 1980s. At that time the station was also reduced to a single platform. The freight yard of the station has now become a public carpark while another part of the station has become a covered carpark for Cobh Garda Station.

See also

References

  1. http://www.irishrail.ie/index.jsp?p=119&n=147 Irish Rail Printable Timetables
  2. http://www.irishrail.ie/index.jsp?p=120&n=151 Irish Rail Accessiblity Guide
  3. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  4. http://corkheritage.ie/?page_id=388
  5. http://www.irishrail.ie/blog_post.jsp?blogID=1&a=279

External links

Preceding station Iarnród Éireann Iarnród Éireann Following station
Rushbrooke   Commuter
Cork-Cobh
  Terminus


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