Looking north from the footbridge at Craven Arms station in rural Shropshire. The large amount of unused land behind platform 1 on the left leads me to think this is the former location of a goods yeard. A smaller one may also have existed on land now occupied by the station car park and buildings that look to be no later than 1980s by the style of the architecture.

The small town in Shropshire owes its existence and unusual name to the railway. The rail junction with the Heart of Wales Line immediately south of the station (this photograph is looking north) was named after a nearby inn the Craven Arms, which was named after Lord Craven, who held the marno house of Stokesay Castle about a mile to the south. The station itself was named for the rail junction. The railway brought trade and population to what had been a tiny village called Newton, and expanded it so much that it eventually took the name of the station.

Photo by Chris McKenna 17/12/2005.
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