Dearham railway station


Dearham railway station was on the single track Derwent Branch of the Maryport and Carlisle Railway in the then county of Cumberland, now Cumbria, England.
The station was opened in 1867, situated on the south eastern edge of Dearham village. There appears to have been a passing loop and a siding at the station.

Passenger services

All passenger trains along the branch line called at Dearham station.
The initial service in August 1867 consisted of two trains each way between and calling at Dearham and Papcastle, Monday to Saturday. By November of that year this had been doubled, with all trains reversing at Brigham to run to and from.
By June 1876 this pattern continued, with two trains added each way on Sundays between Cockermouth and Bullgill.
From 1887 to 1914 five trains started from with a sixth from Bullgill, all with balancing services, Monday to Saturday. It is not clear whether passengers had to change at Bullgill or whether a reversal took place there as well as at Brigham. Two trains from Maryport and one Bullgill, with balancing services, ran on Sundays. and were shown as "Signal Stops" where intending passengers had to inform railway staff who would stop the train accordingly.
Much was made locally of the fact that it was quicker to use the through coach from to Cockermouth via the branch than to go via or.
In 1914 Sunday trains were withdrawn.
Sources differ when Papcastle closed. One says it lost even its Signal Stop status in 1914 whilst another gives its closure date as 1921.
The journey time from Cockermouth to Bullgill averaged 25 minutes.
In 1922 six trains called at the station in each direction, Monday to Saturday, with no Sunday service.

Closure

The service through the station survived until 1935.
Unusually for those times the tracks were lifted not long after closure, with a tragic consequence, when a bridge was being demolished a girder fell on two men and killed them.

Afterlife

By 2013 little trace of the station remained.