Mansfield's extensive railway system
Mansfield Station today
Quarry Lane viaduct
The wharf on the Cromford Canal
Coal was unloaded from the Mansfield rail line and transferred to barges
Remarkable early rail can be seen in Mansfield Museum
Lucky ponies getting a lift back to Mansfield once the trucks had been unloaded
Mansfield Station in the 1990s
It was briefly a pub called 'Brunels'
By Tony Clement
MANSFIELD’S EXTENSIVE RAILWAY SYSTEM
Once thought of as the largest town in England without a railway station, Mansfield was brought back onto the passenger railway system in the 1990s after a thirty year break.
The Mansfield railway system of today is a pale shadow of what it once was in the early 1900s, some of this can still be seen today if you know where to look.
A story in the 1920s was that you could stand in Mansfield Marketplace, take any road out of the town, and within 5 miles you would have to pass under a railway bridge.
Some people may remember the railway bridges, firstly on the A60 to Nottingham you had to pass under three, up Albert Street was the 1875 Midand railway viaduct, still in use, and two long gone bridges on Nottingham Road, one where Pizza Hutt now stands, carrying the former Mansfield Railway then Great Central Railway over Nottingham Road, the remains of this line can be seen in Titchfield Park as it is ran on an embankment behind the trees on the south side of the park, the stone wall is still there behind the trees.
The second bridge fifty yards up the road now where Halfords stands was a brick arch bridge carrying the Mansfield to Southwell line, you can still walk on the old track bed.
Most of the roads out of town were crossed by a railway bridge, most of them long demolished, Ratcliffe Gate adjacent to the Brown Cow pub had a railway bridge, look in the car park, and what remains of the abutments can be seen.
To go up Chesterfield Road on the A617 you would have to get to Pleasley before going under two railway bridges, roughly where the roundabout near Pleasley Colliery is now.
Sutton Road is probably the only road out of town that does not or never had a bridge of a railway crossing over it.
Mansfield’s superb viaduct that crosses the town is the structure most visitors remember, but the town once had three and if you include one of the oldest viaducts in the country at Sutton Reservoir, four.
Quarry Lane was crossed twice by two early stone viaducts, one still exists and can be walked over as part of a very pleasant walk in Quarry Lane nature reserve, well worth a visit. It has five arches and was refurbished in the 1980s to make a footpath, and is a listed structure.
The other viaduct was blown up in the 1970s, part of the Mansfield Southwell line, nothing exists now, this was further up Quarry Lane, towards Nottingham Road.
Also go and look at one of the oldest viaducts in the country, Kings Mill viaduct, in the top corner of Sutton Reservoir, dated 1817, built for the Mansfield to Pinxton railway, you can still walk across it today.
Other large railway bridges were on Littleworth, Windsor Road, Woodhouse Road, Toothill Lane, Bath Lane to list a few.
In the 1920s Mansfield railway station and goods facilities were extensive, all of Portland Retail Park and what is now Burger King would have been railway sidings. Passenger facilities were quite large with three platforms covered by a roof, long gone, but the station buildings are more or less intact, as they were built.
The whole set up would have had 10 to 15 sidings for goods and coal plus engine sheds, private sidings, a cattle dock, turntable and carriage sidings, controlling all this were five signal boxes.
The other station in Mansfield was on Great Central Road just about where the police station is now, and was demolished in the 1970s
Bridges from this line spanned Pelham Street, Sandy Lane, a massive blue brick affair, and a very deep cutting under Sherwood Hall Road which was filled in with most of the spoil from the Mansfield ring road in the 1970s.
These are just a few of the remnants of a once extensive railway system in the town, all part of Nottinghamshire’s coal-carrying rail system, to get coal from the pit network, some companies duplicated lines, which made the system very complicated, but as part of our social history of Nottinghamshire, well worth a study.