Pandy | |
---|---|
General information | |
Location | Pandy, Monmouthshire Wales |
Coordinates | 51°54′03″N 2°57′54″W / 51.9008°N 2.9651°W |
Grid reference | SO33702292 |
Platforms | 2 |
Other information | |
Status | Disused |
History | |
Original company | Newport, Abergavenny and Hereford Railway |
Pre-grouping | Great Western Railway |
Post-grouping | Great Western Railway |
Key dates | |
2 January 1854 | Opened |
9 June 1958 | Closed[1] |
Pandy railway station was a railway station which served the Monmouthshire village of Pandy. It was located on the Welsh Marches Line between Hereford and Abergavenny.
On 25 March 1855 shortly after leaving Pandy, a stoker on a train, Evan Jones aged 18 went round the engine to lubricate some of the mechanism when his leg hit an iron girder of a bridge.[2] He fell and the wheels passed over his right arm. He was transported to Hereford Infirmary where his arm was amputated but he died two days later[3]
The station, comprising a booking office, a cloakroom and the station-master's house, was destroyed by fire in 1904.[4]
The station closed in 1958.
The Owen Sheers novel Resistance used Pandy railway station as a location.