Hatfield railway station
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Distinguish". Template:Use British English Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Template:First Capital Connect services Hatfield railway station serves the town of Hatfield in Hertfordshire, England. The station is managed by Great Northern. It is Script error: No such module "convert". measured from Template:Rws on the East Coast Main Line.[1]
History
Hatfield was formerly the junction of a branch to St Albans. The Hatfield and St Albans Railway closed to passenger traffic in 1951 as part of postwar economies brought in by the British Transport Commission.[2] The route of the line is now a public footpath, the Alban Way.
Station masters
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- Mr. Unwin ca. 1850 (acting)
- Edmund Cooter 1856 - 1866[3] (formerly station master at Hornsey)
- Mr. Bellamy ???? - 1878
- Robert Vodden 1878 - 1906[4]
- Thomas Christopher 1910 - 1915[5] (afterwards station master at Doncaster)
- John Thomas Cross 1917 - 1923
- Frederick B. Martin 1932 - 1939
- Arthur W. Bellamy 1940 - 1949
- T.J. Piggott 1951[6] - ???? (formerly station master at Sandy)
- A.G. Dixon ca. 1960
Facilities
Hatfield has waiting rooms on all platforms, with extra shelters provided at various points along the platforms, as well as a canopy on Platform 1. There is a small café-shop style business, "Chuggs" on Platform 1, and three new retail units which opened in the new station building. There are three platform faces in total - platform 1 is a side platform facing the Up Slow line & used by London-bound trains (there is no platform on the Up Fast line), whilst platforms 2 & 3 face the Down Fast and Down Slow lines respectively; the latter is used by the majority of northbound trains.
The station has a "Fast-Ticket" machine, as well as a standard touchscreen machine on either side of the building. Hatfield also has many vending machines throughout the station and a photo booth inside the booking hall, which also contains male/female toilets and a separate disabled toilet. Ticket barriers are in operation.
Services
Off-peak, all services at Hatfield are operated by Great Northern using Template:Brc and Template:Brc EMUs.
The typical off-peak service in trains per hour is:[7]
- 2 tph to London King's Cross (semi-fast)
- 2 tph to Template:Stn (all stations)
- 2 tph to Welwyn Garden City
- 2 tph to Letchworth Garden City of which 1 continues to Cambridge
Additional services, including a number of Thameslink operated services to and from Sevenoaks via Catford call at the station during the peak hours.
| Preceding station | National Rail National Rail | Following station | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Great Northern | ||||
| Great Northern | ||||
| Thameslink | ||||
| Disused railways | ||||
| London and North Eastern Railway | Terminus | |||
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Redevelopment
Hatfield Station was redeveloped in 2013—15 to include a new bus interchange and taxi rank, multi-storey car park, refurbished ticket office, three new retail units and step-free access to all platforms.[8]
Work on the project, which was to cost £9 million,[9] began in 2013 and was completed by the end of 2015.
The new multi-storey car park opened on 17 November 2014.[10]
Accidents
Three fatal rail crashes have occurred near Hatfield:
- December 1870 accident, when a disintegrated wheel resulted in the deaths of six passengers and two bystanders.
- Two accidents occurred on 26 January 1939. In the first, an empty fish train was involved in a rear-end collision with a passenger train. The second involved a passenger train which ran into the rear of another. Two people were killed and seven were injured.[11]
- October 2000 accident, when a GNER InterCity 225 train de-railed, killing four people and injuring 70.
Gallery
-
Hatfield railway station viewed from the public footbridge.
-
A Grand Central train speeds through Hatfield en route from Sunderland.
References
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External links
Template:Great Northern Route Template:Hertfordshire railway stations Template:TSGN and SE Stations
- Pages with script errors
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- London stations without latest usage statistics 1415
- London stations without latest usage statistics 1516
- London stations without latest usage statistics 1617
- London stations without latest usage statistics 1718
- London stations without latest usage statistics 1819
- DfT Category C2 stations
- Railway stations in Hertfordshire
- Former Great Northern Railway stations
- Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1850
- Railway stations served by Govia Thameslink Railway