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Eridge railway station

Coordinates: 51°05′20″N 0°12′04″E / 51.089°N 0.201°E / 51.089; 0.201
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Eridge
National Rail
General information
LocationEridge, Wealden
England
Grid referenceTQ542345
Managed bySouthern
Platforms3
Other information
Station codeERI
ClassificationDfT category E
History
Opened3 August 1868
Original companyBrighton, Uckfield and Tunbridge Wells Railway
Pre-groupingLondon, Brighton and South Coast Railway
Post-groupingSouthern Railway
Southern Region of British Railways
Network SouthEast
Passengers
2019/20Increase 0.130 million
2020/21Decrease 15,882
2021/22Increase 50,554
2022/23Increase 70,820
2023/24Increase 73,124
Notes
Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road

Eridge railway station is on the Uckfield branch of the Oxted line in southern England and serves a rural district around Eridge in East Sussex. It is 35 miles 53 chains (35.66 miles, 57.39 km) from ‹See TfM›London Bridge. The station is managed by Southern.

Train services from the station are provided by Southern. Also, heritage services connecting to Groombridge, High Rocks and Tunbridge Wells West are run by the Spa Valley Railway. The station has a small car park and there is a pub next to the station called the Huntsman.

Services

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National Rail services at Eridge are operated by Southern using Class 171 DMUs.

The typical off-peak service in trains per hour is:[1]

Services increase to 2 tph in each direction during the peak hours.

On Sundays, the northbound service runs as far as Oxted only.

Spa Valley Railway services operate between Eridge and Tunbridge Wells West on selected days to connect to Oxted Line services.[2]

Preceding station National Rail National Rail Following station
Southern
Uckfield Branch
Heritage Railways  Heritage railways
Groombridge   Spa Valley Railway   Terminus
Disused railways
Groombridge   British Rail Southern Region
  Rotherfield and Mark Cross

History

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The station was opened by the Brighton, Uckfield and Tunbridge Wells Railway on 3 August 1868.

At the time the station was opened, the village of Eridge Green was owned by the nearby Eridge Park, seat of the Earls of Abergavenny.

The station used to be a junction for services running towards Tonbridge via Tunbridge Wells West (closed 1985) and Cuckoo Line to Eastbourne (via Heathfield and Hailsham) closed 1965.

When the Uckfield line was singled in January 1990 all trains used the former up line and only the former up island platform was used by British Rail. The former down island platform was then abandoned but was restored by the Spa Valley Railway, a preserved railway company, who reopened the railway between Eridge and Tunbridge Wells West on 25 March 2011, with trains using the former down line for about 1 mile (1.6 km) north to Birchden Junction where the parallel single lines diverge.

In June 2021, work began to provide step-free access to both the National Rail platform and the Spa Valley Railway platforms at the station.[3] The work was formally completed on 16 February 2022.

The Wealden Line Campaign are attempting to re-open the railway between Uckfield and Lewes and Eridge to Tunbridge Wells lines as a part of the National Rail network.

References

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  1. ^ Table 182 National Rail timetable, May 2022
  2. ^ Spa Valley Railway
  3. ^ White, Cameron (12 June 2021). "Eridge Station in East Sussex to get step-free platform access to improve accessibility for passengers". RailAdvent. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
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51°05′20″N 0°12′04″E / 51.089°N 0.201°E / 51.089; 0.201