My new home town, Chard in Somerset, once had three stations.
Chard Junction (formerly Chard Road) on the Salisbury-Exeter line, opened by the London & South Western Railway in 1860. This station was over 3.5 miles from Chard town centre. So...
...three years later the
LSWR▸ opened a branch from Chard Road to site close to the town centre, opening Chard Town station in May 1863.
In September 1866 another railway reached the town. The Bristol & Exeter Railway built a broad gauge branch off their main line, southward from Creech St Michael near Taunton, to a terminus in Chard, 600 yards from the LSWR's Chard Town. This B&ER station was initially called just Chard. Two months later, in November 1866, a line was laid connecting Chard to the LSWR branch. Chard was renamed Chard Joint. The connecting line left the LSWR's Chard Town station on a stub. LSWR services from Chard Junction called at Chard Town then reversed out and proceeded to Chard Joint. There were no through services between Chard Junction and Taunton due to the gauge difference. Chard Joint maintained separate B&ER (later
GWR▸ ) and LSWR staff and booking offices, with each company having a separate signal box at their respective ends of the station.
In 1871 Chard Town gained a platform on the connecting line, with the station on the stub seeing few passenger services from that date. Chard Town eventually closed completely to passengers in 1917, the site being converted to a goods station. The B&ER branch was converted to standard gauge in 1891.
In 1917 the Great Western Railway (successor to the B&ER) took over operations on the LSWR branch and began services from Taunton through to Chard Junction. Chard Joint reverted to its (brief) original name, plain Chard, in 1928. It was renamed again in 1949, by British Railways, to Chard Central.
Chard Central closed in September 1962. Chard Junction closed in March 1966.
A fascinating and complicated railway history for a fairly small town. Largely the result of competing interests in the early days, but quickly showing the benefits of cooperation between railway companies.
A picture of Chard (1866), Chard Joint (1866-1928), Chard (1928-1949), Chard Central (1949-1962) as it is today.