Wokingham in Berkshire is near the junction of the North Downs Line to
Redhill and the
Reading-
London Waterloo Line, the junction is about four hundred metres to the South of the station.
Information |
Type: |
National Rail
(North Downs Line &
Reading-London Waterloo Line) |
Station code: |
WKM |
Opened: |
1849 |
Platforms: |
2 |
The station was opened in 1849 by the Reading, Guildford & Reigate Railway. The section including Wokingham was part of the first section of the line (which would eventually be the North Downs Line) to be opened. The line was quickly bought by the South Eastern Railway.
The Staines, Wokingham & Woking Railway reached the town in 1856 and gave Wokingham a direct link to the capital with services through to
London Waterloo. The line was worked by the London & South Western Railway. Both lines became part of the Southern Railway with the line through Wokingham being electrified in 1939 as electrification was extended from
Virginia Water to
Reading.
The original station building was replaced by a modern (and standard design) British Rail one in 1973, the platforms were extended in 1987 to serve eight-car trains [1]. The signal box built by the Southern Railway, which replaced two earlier boxes, in the early 1930s remains in place and controls part of the line and a level crossing at the Southern end of the station [2]. The station is served by South Western Railway (who also manage it) and Great Western Railway.
|
GWR 166 202 arrives at Wokingham |
|
Looking up towards Reading |
|
Also looking up towards Reading but from the other platform |
|
Two GWR services cross |
[1] Vic Mitchell & Keith Smith, Reading to Guildford (Middleton Press, 1988) Fig. 38
[2] Ibid. Fig. 40