Footbridge W of Crediton Railway Station Main Range Crediton, England

Listed Building Data

Footbridge W of Crediton Railway Station Main Range has been designated a Grade II listed building in England with the following information, which has been imported from the National Heritage List for England. Please note that not all available data may be shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.

List Entry ID
1209597
Listing Type
listed building
Grade
II
Date Listed
24 August 1989
Name
FOOTBRIDGE IMMEDIATELY WEST OF CREDITON RAILWAY STATION MAIN RANGE
Location
FOOTBRIDGE IMMEDIATELY WEST OF CREDITON RAILWAY STATION MAIN RANGE, STATION ROAD
Parish
Crediton
District
Mid Devon
County
Devon
Grid Reference
SX 83921 99493
Easting
283921.0000
Northing
99493.0000

Listed Building Description

Text courtesy of Historic England. © Crown Copyright, reprinted under the Open Government License.

CREDITON

SX8399 STATION ROAD 672-1/4/154 Footbridge immediately west of 24/08/89 Crediton Railway Station Main Range

GV II

Footbridge over railway line. 1878 (datestone), built for the LSWR. Rock-faced, grey limestone piers with Bathstone dressings; plate girder iron bridge and stair construction, timber steps. Plan: each pier contains a small store room and supports 2 flights of steps up to the bridge; those on the west side with landings, those on the east lead onto the station platforms. The east side of the bridge is unfloored and railed off with cast iron railings. Exterior: The piers have clasping buttresses and parapets with plain coping. Each storeroom has a chamfered doorway on the west side and crank-arched chamfered window on the outer face with a 4-pane sash window. In the parapet above the south window of the south pier there is a chamfered recessed panel with a Shield inscribed "L. & S.W.R.Y. 1878." The flights of steps on the west side of the bridge are supported on 4 cast iron columns fluted capitals. The bridge was formerly roofed over (information from railway worker). Interior: The storerooms are plain with brick barrel-vaulted roofs. Historical Note: The complicated early history of the line, which began in 1838, led to its being known as the 'Vicar of Bray Railway', but eventually the Exeter and Crediton Railway (Act of 1845) was leased to the Bristol and Exeter Railway who converted to broad guage and opened May 12 1851 until the LSWR took over the lease in 1862 (St John Thomas, pp.92-96). An attractive bridge and part of a group of C19 railway buildings of different dates. (A Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain: St John Thomas, David,: The West Country: PP.92-96).

Listing NGR: SX8392199493