Ballysodare railway station

Former railway station in County Sligo, Ireland

54°12′48″N 8°30′11″W / 54.2132°N 8.503°W / 54.2132; -8.503Platforms2HistoryOpened3 December 1962 (1962-12-03)Closed17 June 1963 (1963-06-17)
Location
Map
  • v
  • t
  • e
Dublin-Sligo main line
Legend
Year
closed
Sligo Quay freight terminal
2000
Ballysodare
1963
Ballisodare River
1957
proposed Western
Railway Corridor
to
Limerick
1963
Collooney
Ballymote
Kilfree Junction
1963
to Ballaghaderreen
1963
Boyle
Carrick-on-Shannon
Drumsna
1963
River Shannon
Dromod
Newtown Forbes
1963
Longford
Edgeworthstown
Street & Rathowen
1963
to Cavan
1959
Inny Junction
1931
Multyfarnham
1963
Clonhugh
1963
1964
Mullingar
Killucan
1963
Hill of Down
1963
Moyvalley
1963
to Edenderry
1931
Enfield
Ferns Lock
1963
Kilcock
Maynooth
Blakestown
Leixlip Louisa Bridge
Dublin Suburban Rail#Western Commuter
Leixlip Confey
Dublin Suburban Rail#Western Commuter
Lucan North
1941
Barberstown
Clonsilla
Dublin Suburban Rail#Western Commuter
Coolmine
Coolmine
Dublin Suburban Rail#Western Commuter
Castleknock
Dublin Suburban Rail#Western Commuter
Blanchardstown
1937
Navan Road Parkway
Dublin Suburban Rail#Western Commuter
Ashtown
Ashtown
Dublin Suburban Rail#Western Commuter
Pelletstown
Dublin Suburban Rail#Western Commuter
Reilly's Bridge
1847
Broombridge
Luas
Liffey Junction
passengers 1937
goods 1977
Dublin Broadstone
1937
Glasnevin
1910
Drumcondra
Dublin Suburban Rail#Western Commuter
Dublin Connolly Luas
Luas Red Line
to Tallaght and Saggart

Dublin Suburban Rail#Western Commuter = Western Commuter

Ballysodare railway station,[a] currently with only the goods shed remaining, was located on the Dublin-Sligo railway line in Ballysadare, County Sligo. The station opened on 3 December 1862. It was closed to passengers on 17 June 1963 and finally closing to goods on 3 November 1975.[1]

The station is believed to have been double tracked since opening, being singled in 1958.[2]

Ballysodare station was on the Midland Great Western Railway which became part of Irish Rail.[3] From 1882 until 1957 it also was served by the last independent railway in the British Isles, the Sligo, Leitrim and Northern Counties Railway from Enniskillen.[3][4] The Burma Road or the Western Rail Corridor line to Claremorris Junction, Tuam and Galway was served from the station as well as Sligo station.

The station had its own small goods shed at the northern end of the west platform.[5] Just beyond that a long siding diverged south westwards to the Flour Mills at Ballysadare; it was removed in the 1960s.[5]

Notes and references

Notes

  1. ^ From references from when the station was open it always seems to have been titled Ballysodare in its lifeltime including timetables from 1920 reprinted in Shepherd (1994) which consistently refers to that name. The settlement was also more previously well known as Ballysodare. Currently an official name of Ballysadare for the settlement seems more generally adopted

References

  1. ^ "Ballysadare station" (PDF). Railscot - Irish Railways. Retrieved 24 November 2007.
  2. ^ "Ballysodare - Sligo - 50th Anniversary of Singling". Irish Railway Record Society (165). 29 March 2008. Archived from the original on 30 November 2017.
  3. ^ a b Shepherd, Ernie (1994). The Midland Great Western Railway of Ireland - An illustrated History. Midland Publishing Limited. pp. 23, 27, 61, 65, 77, 105, 118. ISBN 1-85780-008-7.
  4. ^ Baker, H. C. (1995). Ireland's Railways Past and Present - Ireland - An Introduction (2005 ed.). Past and Present Publishing Ltd. p. 97. ISBN 1858952468.
  5. ^ a b "Ballysadare". Archived from the original on 15 July 2018. Retrieved 29 May 2019.