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Bracknell station in 1961 A 1909 Railway Clearing House map of lines around Reading. Bracknell railway station serves the Berkshire town of Bracknell. It is 32 miles 24 chains (52.0 km) down the line from London Waterloo. The station, and all trains serving it, are operated by South Western Railway. It is on the Waterloo to Reading line.
English: Bracknell railway station, Berkshire Opened in 1856 by the London & South Western Railway on the line from Staines to Reading, View east towards martins Heron and Staines. The apparent rural station depicted in Ben Brooksbank's 1961 photograph SU8668 : Bracknell Station has changed almost out of all recognition.
The town of Bracknell has two railway stations, Bracknell and Martins Heron, both of which are on the Waterloo to Reading Line, built by the London and South Western Railway and now operated by South Western Railway. Bracknell is a commuter centre with its residents travelling in both directions (westwards to Reading and eastwards to London ...
Martins Heron railway station serves Martins Heron, a suburb on the eastern edge of Bracknell, Berkshire, England. It is 31 miles 9 chains (50.1 km) down the line from London Waterloo, between Ascot and Bracknell on the Waterloo to Reading line. The station, and all trains serving it, are operated by South Western Railway.
Bracknell railway station with steam train. Independent promoters put forward a Staines, Wokingham & Woking Junction Railway, and they obtained their authorising Act on 8 July 1853. Share capital was to be £300,000, for a double track line 18 miles long from Staines to Wokingham, with a branch five miles long through Chobham to Woking.
Bracknell railway station; Burnham railway station; C. ... Wraysbury railway station This page was last edited on 13 February 2017, at 22:22 (UTC). ...
The Cut flows along the northern edge of the new town of Bracknell, which was established on 17 June 1949. [4] Prior to this, Bracknell had been a small village near Bracknell railway station, and the area which it now occupies was largely rural. The river had three tributaries, Downmill Stream, which ran along the western edge of the ...
It is also located 10 miles (16 km) from the M4, via the Crowthorne bypass (A3095) to Bracknell and the A329(M) towards Reading. Sandhurst railway station is a stop on the North Downs Line; trains are operated by Great Western Railway. Services run between Gatwick, Guildford and Reading. [7]