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Sanderstead railway station

Coordinates: 51°20′54″N 0°05′38″W / 51.3484°N 0.094°W / 51.3484; -0.094
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Sanderstead National Rail
Sanderstead Station
Sanderstead is located in Greater London
Sanderstead
Sanderstead
Location of Sanderstead in Greater London
LocationSanderstead
Local authorityLondon Borough of Croydon
Managed bySouthern
Station code(s)SNR
DfT categoryD
Number of platforms2
Fare zone6
National Rail annual entry and exit
2018–19Increase 1.123 million[1]
2019–20Decrease 1.098 million[1]
2020–21Decrease 0.212 million[1]
2021–22Increase 0.508 million[1]
2022–23Increase 0.624 million[1]
Key dates
10 March 1884Opened
Other information
External links
Coordinates51°20′54″N 0°05′38″W / 51.3484°N 0.094°W / 51.3484; -0.094
London transport portal

Sanderstead railway station is on the Oxted Line in the London Borough of Croydon, 1 mile (1.6 km) from Sanderstead village. It is in Travelcard Zone 6, 12 miles 23 chains (12.29 miles, 19.77 km) from London Bridge. The station is managed by Southern.

On the up (London-bound) platform is a ticket office, staffed for most of the day, and a self-service ticket machine is outside the station on the up side: there is no PERTIS (Permit to travel) machine. Purley Oaks, also in Travelcard Zone 6, is nearby.

History

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Sanderstead station looking north from the bridge carrying Sanderstead Road over the line.

The station was opened on 10 March 1884 by the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway and the South Eastern Railway with their line between South Croydon and East Grinstead. The population was around 300, rising to 534 by 1901.[2]

In 1913 the station was set alight in an act of arson. The suffragette Elsie Duval was the main suspect.[3] The replacement building was weather-boarded, cheap to construct but requiring regular maintenance. An extensive bookstall was on the up platform, and a signal box on the down platform.

In 1928 the Southern Heights Light Railway was approved, which would have left the Oxted line south east of the station and finished at Orpington.[4] On it would have run a loop service from Charing Cross to Lewisham and then Woodside-Sanderstead-Orpington and back, or vice versa. However, the scheme could not attract investment and was moribund even before electrification of the Woodside and South Croydon Joint Railway as its first stage. This was from Woodside to Selsdon and over a short section of the Oxted Line to Sanderstead, and was completed in 1935.[5] This route terminating at Sanderstead involved the only electric train service at the station until 1984.

These electric trains, on the Woodside and South Croydon Railway via Selsdon to Elmers End, ran from 1935 until the line closed in 1983; at that time, fewer than 150 people were using the service per day, which operated only on weekdays at peak hours to Elmers End.[6]

Electrification of the South Croydon-Selsdon and Sanderstead-East Grinstead sections of the Oxted Line was approved by BR in the early 1980s: South Croydon-Selsdon was electrified in 1984 using some redundant materials from the closed Woodside-Selsdon line, and a London Bridge to Sanderstead electric train service begun.[7]

The station building was destroyed by fire again in June 1986, and a new brick building opened in September 1987.[8] The signal box closed on 2 November 1985, and was demolished in August 1987.[9]

Electrification to East Grinstead was completed in October 1987.

Services

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Off-peak, all services at Sanderstead are operated by Southern using Class 377 EMUs.

The typical off-peak service in trains per hour is:[10]

During the peak hours and on weekends, the service is increased to 2 tph in each direction.

During the peak hours, there are also Thameslink operated services between East Grinstead, London Bridge and Bedford. These services are operated using Class 700 EMUs.

Preceding station National Rail National Rail Following station
East Croydon
or
South Croydon
  Southern
  Riddlesdown
  Thameslink
 
Disused railways
Selsdon   British Rail
Southern Region

  Terminus

Connections

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London Buses route 403 serves the station.[11]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e "Estimates of station usage". Rail statistics. Office of Rail Regulation. Please note: Some methodology may vary year on year.
  2. ^ Mitchell, Vic; Smith, Keith (March 1995). Croydon (Woodside) to East Grinstead (Country Railway Routes). Midhurst, West Sussex: Middleton Press. p. Plate 30. ISBN 1-873793-48-0.
  3. ^ "chertsey museum". chertseymuseum.org. Retrieved 17 March 2019.
  4. ^ "Southern Heights Railway". The Times. No. 45098. London. 11 January 1929. col D, p. 9.
  5. ^ "The Colonel periodical No. 60, Winter 2002 p. 9" (PDF). Retrieved 7 October 2020.
  6. ^ Mitchell, V. and Smith, K., plate 38.
  7. ^ Mitchell, V. and Smith, K., plate 55
  8. ^ Mitchell, V. and Smith, K., plate 39.
  9. ^ Mitchell, V. and Smith, K., plate 35.
  10. ^ Table 181, 182 National Rail timetable, May 2022
  11. ^ "Buses from Purley Oaks and Sanderstead" (PDF). TfL. January 2015. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
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