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Foxrock railway station

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Former railway station in County Dublin, Ireland
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Foxrock
Carraig an tSionnaighIarnród Éireann
Double-headed Sea Breeze special passing Foxrock in 1953
General information
LocationBrighton Road
Foxrock, County Dublin
Ireland
Coordinates53°16′01″N 6°11′06″W / 53.267°N 6.185°W / 53.267; -6.185
Platforms3
Construction
Structure typeAt-grade
History
Original companyDublin, Wicklow and Wexford Railway
Pre-groupingDublin and South Eastern Railway
Post-groupingGreat Southern Railways
Key dates
1859Temporary platform built and briefly opened
1 August 1861Station officially opens
1888Third platform and sidings added
31 December 1958Station closed

Foxrock railway station was a station in on the Harcourt Street railway line. It served the suburb of Foxrock, in County Dublin, Ireland.

History

Harcourt Street Line
Legend
Year
closed
Harcourt Street 1958
Harcourt Road 1859
Grand Canal
Rathmines & Ranelagh 1958
Milltown 1958
Nine Arches Viaduct
over River Dodder
Dundrum 1958
80m
Stillorgan 1958
Stillorgan Rd.
Foxrock 1958
Carrickmines 1958
Lehaunstown Ln.
Bride's Glen Viaduct
over Loughlinstown River
Shankill 1958
Shanganagh
Junct.
Dublin-Rosslare line
to Amiens Street
Woodbrook 1960
Bray River
Quinnsborough Rd.
Bray
Dublin-Rosslare railway line
to Wexford and Waterford

Foxrock station was opened by the Dublin, Wicklow and Wexford Railway (DW&WR) on 1 August 1861, as part of the Harcourt Street line. A temporary platform had been provided there in 1859, before the complete station was finished in 1861. The station opened as "Foxrock and Leopardstown" and retained that name until 1921, when it was shortened to Foxrock.

The station served as a connection to Leopardstown Racecourse and was very busy on race days, with many special trains running there. Renamed "Boghill", it was a major setting for Samuel Beckett's 1957 radio play All That Fall.

Closure

Use of the Harcourt Street line had declined during the early 20th century and it had become run down in the 1940s and 1950s. The station was closed by Córas Iompair Éireann on 31 December 1958, along with the whole Harcourt Street line, despite opposition from the community.

The disused station building remained until the 1990s, when it was demolished to make way for a housing development. A small, disused ticket office remains in the grounds of Leopardstown Racecourse, directly adjacent to the site of the old station house. The office was operated not by the railway but by the racecourse, to cater for patrons travelling by train on race days.

The Luas green line has reused most of the route of the Harcourt Street line, but it bypasses Foxrock in favour of the busier suburbs of Stepaside, Leopardstown and Ballyogan, rejoining the former track bed at Carrickmines, which is the nearest Luas stop to Foxrock. Most of the alignment has not been built on however, making an extension possible, although that is not currently planned.

Layout

Foxrock was quite a large station, boasting three platforms. The third platform was nicknamed the "racecourse" platform, as it was adjacent to Leopardstown Racecourse and connected to it by a pathway. The platforms were all linked by a typical, but long, DWWR/DSER footbridge. The station building, was also a typical DWR structure, and was located on the down platform, along with the DSER brick signal cabin. There were additional sidings to both the north and south of the station.


Preceding station   Disused railways   Following station
Stillorgan
Line and station closed
  Dublin and South Eastern Railway
Harcourt Street line
  Carrickmines
Line and station closed

See also

References

  1. "Foxrock". Eiretrains. Archived from the original on 23 February 2020. Retrieved 10 July 2023.
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