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Southwell Trail

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The Southwell Trail is a 7.5-mile (12.1 km) long multi-user trail, for use on foot, cycle and horseback, that links Bilsthorpe and Southwell in the English county of Nottinghamshire . It uses parts of the track bed of two former railway lines. It has been designated as a Local Nature Reserve .

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7-641: The trail starts at Forest Link in Billsthorpe, from where a quiet on-road route is signed to the Bilsthorpe Line Multi-User Route . From Billsthorpe the trail heads south to the site of Farnsfield station . An access path heads west from here to the A614 , whilst the trail proper heads east to the site of Kirklington station . From here the trail turns south-east past the historic mill and hamlet of Maythorne to reach its terminus at

14-657: A bridleway. In 2005–6, the trail was resurfaced and converted into a multi-user route. Farnsfield railway station Farnsfield railway station was a railway station serving the village of Farnsfield , Nottinghamshire , England. It was on the Midland Railway 's Rolleston Junction to Mansfield line . The station opened in 1871 when the Midland Railway extended the existing Rollesdon Junction to Southwell line from Southwell to Mansfield . The station closed to passengers on 12 August 1929 when

21-651: Is used by the Bilsthorpe to Farnsfield section of the trail. However, by 1968 all the lines used by the trail had closed completely. In the early 1970s, Nottinghamshire County Council purchased the section of the line from Southwell to Farnsfield and beyond to the crossing of the A614, together with the section of the Ollerton branch as far as Bilsthorpe. This was converted into the Southwell Trail, initially as

28-473: The Rolleston Junction to Mansfield railway line , which carried both freight and passenger traffic. The line between Mansfield and Southwell closed to passengers in 1929, but continued to be heavily used by freight trains, especially to and from the collieries near Mansfield. In 1931 a new freight line was opened from Farnsfield to Ollerton via Bilsthorpe, and it is this route of this line that

35-464: The Mansfield to Southwell section, which passed through a mining area, closed to passengers. The railway replaced it with a road motor omnibus service provided in conjunction with Mansfield and District Tramways Limited connecting with the railway stations between Mansfield and Newark. Freight services continued until 25 June 1964. The station and goods shed remain as private residences. A branch of

42-524: The Southwell Trail shares its route with the Robin Hood Way , a waymarked long-distance footpath that links many places with connections to Robin Hood . The section of the trail from Farnsfield to Southwell was opened as a railway in 1871, when the Midland Railway built a line connecting Southwell to Mansfield . This line, together with a pre-existing line between Southwell and Rolleston , formed

49-478: The site of Southwell station . There are car parks at Forest Link in Billsthorpe, and at the three former station sites of Farnsfield, Kirklington and Southwell. At Southwell, there is a public house, the Final Whistle , next to the end of the trail, which is about 0.5 miles (0.80 km) from the centre of Southwell town and its famous Minster and Cathedral . Between Kirklington station and Maythorne,

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