Wood Street railway station

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Wood Street London Overground
Wood Street stn entrance.JPG
Wood Street is located in Greater London
Wood Street
Wood Street
Location of Wood Street in Greater London
Location Walthamstow
Local authority London Borough of Waltham Forest
Managed by London Overground
Station code WST
DfT category D
Number of platforms 2
Fare zone 4
National Rail annual entry and exit
2004–05 Increase 0.418 million[1]
2005–06 Increase 0.339 million[1]
2006–07 Increase 0.654 million[1]
2007–08 Decrease 0.653 million[1]
2008–09 Decrease 0.641 million[1]
2009–10 Decrease 0.590 million[1]
2010–11 Increase 0.675 million[1]
2011–12 Increase 0.750 million[1]
2012–13 Increase 0.786 million[1]
Key dates
1873 Opened
Other information
Lists of stations
External links
London Transport portal
UK Railways portalLua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

Wood Street railway station is in Walthamstow, now part of the London Borough of Waltham Forest in north east London. It is in Travelcard Zone 4, and the station and all trains are operated by London Overground. It is also occasionally known as Walthamstow Wood Street. The station is located on the Chingford Branch Line and is part of the Lea Valley Lines network.

History

The station was opened in 1873 by the Great Eastern Railway.[2]

On 13 February 1919 there was an accident at Wood Street when a passenger train ran into an empty stock train. Five people were injured – none seriously. The cause was a signal failure.[3]

In 1923 the Great Eastern Railway became part of the London and North Eastern Railway.

In 1948 British Railways Eastern Region took over operation of the line following nationalisation.

There was an engine shed located just north of Wood Street which was a sub-shed of Stratford TMD and was built in 1878.[4] The engine shed was a two road affair with space for 6 tank locomotives – there was also a short siding for coal wagons. An additional siding was added c1934.[5] By the 1950s the staff complement was 36 drivers, 36 Firemen and 6 Passed Cleaners although recruitment for what was a hard dirty job became more difficult during that decade.[6] The main allocation of the shed was tank engines for working suburban services to and from London Liverpool Street. From the 1920s the allocation was exclusively the LNE N7 0-6-2T locomotives.

The shed was closed in 1960 when the line was electrified. Electric services commenced on 12 November 1960. Early services were formed of Class 305 EMUs but initial technical problems with these saw replacements by Class 302 and Class 304 EMUs.[7]

To the north of these there were a number of carriage sidings located either side of the tracks.

Until a last minute decision was made in 1961, it had been intended to build the Victoria line past Walthamstow Central station to Wood Street, where the line would surface to terminate next to the British Railways station, on land previously used as a coal depot. The goods depot closed on 6 May 1968.[8]

In April 1994 Railtrack took over responsibility for the operation of the infrastructure. Train services have been operated since then by West Anglia Great Northern, One railway, National Express East Anglia, Abellio Greater Anglia and currently in 2015 by London Overground.

Typical journey times are according to the December 2012 public timetable 7 minutes to Chingford and 19 minutes to London Liverpool Street.

There were previously bike racks but they were removed at some point. David Beckham is known to have used the station in his youth, he is reported to have visited the nearby Hollow Ponds often to play football.

Connections

London Buses routes 230 and W16 serve the station.

Service

The typical off-peak service is:

Preceding station National Rail National Rail Following station
Walthamstow Central
towards Liverpool Street
  Lea Valley Lines   Highams Park
towards Chingford

Layout

Side Platform Platform 1
London Overground towards Liverpool Street via Hackney
London Overground towards Chingford
Side Platform Platform 2

References

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External links

Gallery