Kingsley Halt railway station

Kingsley Halt
General information
LocationKingsley, East Hampshire, Hampshire
England
Grid referenceSU788391
Platforms1
Other information
StatusDisused
History
Pre-groupingLondon and South Western Railway
Post-groupingSouthern Railway
Southern Region of British Railways
Key dates
7 March 1906Opened
16 September 1957Closed to passenger traffic
4 April 1966Line closed entirely

Kingsley Halt was a railway station on the Bordon Light Railway which served the village of Kingsley, Hampshire, England. The station had been constructed by the London and South Western Railway (LSWR) in the hope that the area would attract residential development, but this did not happen. The LSWR had purchased an area of land far larger than that what was actually used, as they hoped to construct a large station and goods yard. A primitive halt with a single platform opened some months after the line's opening, consisting merely of a nameboard, noticeboard, lamp and seat.[1]

Declining passenger traffic and reduced military activities at Bordon after the Second World War saw the line's closure to regular services in 1957.[2] Kingsley Halt was demolished soon after closure, and nothing now remains except the shape of the trackbed, now used as a farm track.[1]


Preceding station   Disused railways   Following station
Bentley   British Rail
Southern Region

Bordon Light Railway
  Bordon
  1. ^ a b Harding, Peter A. (1987). The Bordon Light Railway. Woking, Surrey: Peter A. Harding. ISBN 0-9509414-3-3.
  2. ^ Quick, M E (2002). Railway passenger stations in England, Scotland and Wales – a chronology. Richmond: Railway and Canal Historical Society. p. 250. OCLC 931112387.