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Watnall railway station

Coordinates: 53°00′12″N 1°14′50″W / 53.0033°N 1.2472°W / 53.0033; -1.2472
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The overgrown entrance to No. 12 Group RAF Fighter Command's Second World War operations bunker.

Watnall railway station was a station serving the village of Watnall in Nottinghamshire, England. The station opened in 1882 and closed in 1917.[1] It was sited at the eastern end of the railway cutting used to provide the Midland Railway with a route through to Kimberley.

The cutting still exists although it is heavily overgrown. Remnants of the platform can be found beneath the undergrowth, but the buildings are no longer in existence. A bunker was built on this site for RAF Watnall during the Second World War and used as an operations centre for No. 12 Group RAF. The headquarters moved to RAF Newton in 1946, but the bunker remained in use for the duration of the ROTOR program and was mothballed in 1961. The bunker was used as a rifle range by the Awsworth - Kimberley and District Rifle Club.[2]

In May 2010, local police discovered a large cannabis factory inside the bunker.[3]

Former services
Preceding station   Disused railways   Following station
Kimberley West
Line and station closed
  Midland Railway
Bennerley and Bulwell Railway
  Basford Vernon
Line and station closed

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Bennerley & Bulwell Railway".
  2. ^ Lee, J.M. A Brief History of Watnall.
  3. ^ "Cannabis farm in Watnall WWII bunker". Eastwood & Kimberley Advertiser. 6 May 2010. Retrieved 22 August 2011.

Further reading

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  • Henshaw, Alfred (2000). The Great Northern Railway in the East Midlands. RCTS. ISBN 0-901115-88-6.
  • Kingscott, Geoffrey (2004). Lost Railways of Nottinghamshire. Countryside Books. ISBN 1-85306-884-5.
  • Lee, John.M. (2001). A Brief History of Kimberley (First ed.).
  • Lee, John.M. (2002). A Brief History of Watnall (First ed.).
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53°00′12″N 1°14′50″W / 53.0033°N 1.2472°W / 53.0033; -1.2472