Ghost Stations - Disused Railway Stations in Derbyshire, England

submitted by uklmhb on 03/03/16 1

Thanks for watching.... 1. Alsop en le Dale railway station 2. Arkwright Town railway station 3. Ashbourne railway station 4. Ashover Butts railway station 5. Bakewell railway station 6. Barrow Hill railway station 7. Bolsover Castle railway station 8. Bolsover South railway station 9. Borrowash railway station 10. Breadsall railway station 11. Buxton (Midland) railway station 12. Buxworth railway station 13. Chapel-en-le-Frith Central railway station 14. Chee Dale Halt railway station 15. Chesterfield Central railway station 16. Chesterfield Market Place railway station 17. Clay Cross railway station 18. Clifton (Mayfield) railway station 19. Clowne and Barlborough railway station 20. Clowne South railway station 21. Coxbench railway station 22. Creswell and Welbeck railway station 23. Crosshill and Codnor railway station 24. Crowden railway station 25. Denby railway station 26. Dowlow Halt railway station 27. Draycott and Breaston railway station 28. Eastwood and Langley Mill railway station 29. Eckington and Renishaw railway station 30. Egginton Junction railway station 31. Egginton railway station 32. Etwall railway station 33. Glapwell railway station 34. Grassmoor railway station 35. Gresley railway station 36. Hartington railway station 37. Hassop railway station 38. Hayfield railway station 39. Hazelwood railway station 40. Heanor (GNR) railway station 41. Heanor (MR) railway station 42. Heath railway station 43. Higher Buxton railway station 44. Hindlow railway station 45. Hurdlow railway station 46. Ilkeston Junction and Cossall railway station 47. Ilkeston North railway station 48. Kilburn railway station 49. Killamarsh Central railway station 50. Langley Mill (Branch) railway station 51. Langwith railway station 52. Little Eaton railway station 53. Long Eaton (MCR) railway station 54. Great Longstone for Ashford railway station 55. Marlpool railway station 56. Melbourne railway station 57. Millers Dale railway station 58. Monsal Dale railway station 59. Norbury and Ellaston railway station 60. Palterton and Sutton railway station 61. Parsley Hay railway station 62. Peak Forest railway station 63. Pilsley railway station 64. Pleasley East railway station 65. Pleasley West railway station 66. Renishaw Central railway station 67. Ripley railway station 68. Rowsley railway station 69. Rowthorn and Hardwick railway station 70. Rowthorn Tunnel 71. Sawley railway station 72. Scarcliffe railway station 73. Scropton railway station 74. Sheepbridge and Brimington railway station 75. Sheepbridge railway station 76. Shirebrook North railway station 77. Shirebrook South railway station 78. Spinkhill railway station 79. Staveley Central railway station 80. Staveley Town railway station 81. Staveley Works railway station 82. Stretton railway station 83. Thorpe Cloud railway station 84. Tibshelf & Newton railway station 85. Tibshelf Town railway station 86. Tissington railway station 87. Trent railway station 88. Unstone railway station 89. Upperthorpe and Killamarsh railway station 90. West Hallam railway station 91. Wingfield railway station 92. Woodhead railway station Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Disused_railway_stations_in_Derbyshire Music : Orange,Topher Mohr and Alex Elena; YouTube Audio Library Ghost stations is the usual English translation for the German word Geisterbahnhöfe. This term was used to describe certain stations on Berlin's U-Bahn and S-Bahn metro networks that were closed during the period of Berlin's division during the Cold War. Since then, the term has come to be used to describe any disused station on an underground railway line, especially those actively passed through by passenger trains. An abandoned (or disused) railway station is a building or structure which was constructed to serve as a railway station but has fallen into disuse. There are various circumstances when this may occur - a railway company may fall bankrupt, or the station may be closed due to the failure of economic activitiy such as insufficient passenger numbers, operational reasons such as the diversion or replacement of the line. In some instances, the railway line may continue in operation while the station is closed. Additionally, stations may sometimes be resited along the route of the line to new premises - examples of this include opening a replacement station nearer to the centre of population, or building a larger station on a less restricted site to cope with high passenger numbers. Notable cases where railway stations have fallen into disuse include the Beeching Axe, a 1960s programme of mass closures of unprofitable railway lines by the British Government. The London Underground system is also noted for its list of closed stations. During the time of the Berlin Wall, a number of Berlin U-Bahn stations on West Berlin lines became "ghost stations" (Geisterbahnhöfe) because they were on lines which passed through East Berlin territory.

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