Yorkshire Post

Station house in return to 1920s

Building in Dales station has been restored, now volunteers aim to recreate how it looked 100 years ago

- DAVID BEHRENS COUNTY CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: david.behrens@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

BYGONES: The volunteers had not known what to expect when the empty shell of the Victorian station house at Leeming Bar was handed over to them by the builders after a lottery-funded restoratio­n.

It will be those volunteers who will finish the job, restoring the interior to the state it was in during the 1920s.

LIKE A scene from a Will

Hay movie, the ghosts of stationmas­ters past floated through the walls of the old house in the Dales that had been their home.

In the ladies’ waiting room, the hole above the fireplace that once held the gas lamp reappeared. Around it, the fossilised remains of the encrusted, dark wallpaper were still glued to the plaster.

The volunteers had not known what to expect when the empty shell of the Victorian station house at Leeming Bar was handed over to them by the builders after a lottery-funded restoratio­n. They found that even with the floor, roof and windows replaced, history clung to every crevice.

“The artefacts exposed by the works represente­d not the end of the transforma­tion but a new beginning,” said Helen Ashworth, who leads the team of community workers at the Wensleydal­e Railway.

It will be the volunteers who will finish the job, restoring the interior to the state it was in during the 1920s when it formed part of the London and North Eastern Railway.

“We’re going to have a stationmas­ter’s parlour, kitchen, scullery, washroom and a wash yard. And it will all be available for community groups to visit,” Ms Ashworth said.

Leeming Bar, just off the A1, is the hub of the Wensleydal­e line, which runs through Bedale and Leyburn to Redmire.

The engine shed is there, as well as the staff offices, and most passengers use it to start or end their journeys.

The Grade II listed station house – which was the stationmas­ters’ home as well as a rest stop and ticket office – had been largely out of use after decades of neglect, when a £368,000 grant was secured to make it structural­ly sound.

Now that the builders have left, railway workers have begun restoring leatherett­e, horsehairs­tuffed waiting room seats, replica wall units and clocks, all in the once-familiar LNER colour scheme of buff and red. They are also hacking back the 2ft high weeds that have grown around the track since the last train passed through. The next one is unlikely to arrive before the autumn.

“It’s not exactly a jungle but it is starting to look more like a railway again,” Ms Ashworth said.

The line has survived its enforced summer closure thanks to a separate emergency lottery grant of £50,000, which was agreed in May. But the restoratio­n of the station house continued throughout, and a call has gone out for decorators to finish the job.

The restoratio­n follows an earlier project at Scruton station, the next stop up the line. It had been lost under brambles after closing its doors in 1954 but was reopened 60 years later.

At Leeming, the old ladies’ waiting room will not revert to its original use, however. “Gentlemen were originally expected to wait outside,” Ms Ashworth said. “That’s not a policy we will be enforcing.”

We’re going to have a stationmas­ter’s parlour. Helen Ashworth, who leads the team of community workers at the railway.

 ?? PICTURES: JONATHAN GAWTHORPE ?? ON TRACK: Left, Volunteer co-ordinator Helen Ashworth; above, volunteers David Walker and Julia Gregson restore benches; below, volunteers Joan and Keith Walker with items that will go on display; inset, the staircase.
PICTURES: JONATHAN GAWTHORPE ON TRACK: Left, Volunteer co-ordinator Helen Ashworth; above, volunteers David Walker and Julia Gregson restore benches; below, volunteers Joan and Keith Walker with items that will go on display; inset, the staircase.
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