Great Yarmouth railway station in 1993 | |||||
| General information | |||||
| Location | Great Yarmouth,Great Yarmouth England | ||||
| Coordinates | 52°36′42″N1°43′15″E / 52.6118°N 1.7207°E /52.6118; 1.7207 | ||||
| Grid reference | TG519080 | ||||
| Managed by | Greater Anglia | ||||
| Platforms | 3 (numbered 2, 3 and 4) | ||||
| Other information | |||||
| Station code | GYM | ||||
| Classification | DfT category C2 | ||||
| History | |||||
| Original company | Yarmouth and Norwich Railway | ||||
| Pre-grouping | Great Eastern Railway | ||||
| Post-grouping | London and North Eastern Railway | ||||
| Key dates | |||||
| 1 May 1844 (1844-05-01) | Opened asYarmouth Vauxhall | ||||
| Unknown | RenamedYarmouth | ||||
| 16 May 1989 | RenamedGreat Yarmouth | ||||
| Passengers | |||||
| 2019/20 | |||||
| 2020/21 | |||||
| 2021/22 | |||||
| 2022/23 | |||||
| Interchange | 185 | ||||
| 2023/24 | |||||
| Interchange | | ||||
| |||||
| |||||
Great Yarmouth railway station (originallyYarmouth Vauxhall) is one of two eastern termini of theWherry Lines in theEast of England, serving the seaside town ofGreat Yarmouth,Norfolk. The other terminus at the eastern end of the lines isLowestoft and the western terminus, to which all trains run, isNorwich.
Trains from Great Yarmouth run to Norwich via one of two routes: either viaAcle, the more regularly used line, or viaReedham. Great Yarmouth is 18 miles 29 chains (29.6 km) down the line from Norwich via Acle and it is 20 miles 45 chains (33.1 km) via Reedham.
The station is managed currently byGreater Anglia, which also operates all of the trains that call. There is one train per hour to Norwich off-peak, with the service increasing in frequency during peak times.
The Bill for theYarmouth and Norwich Railway (Y&NR) received Royal Assent on 18 June 1842. Work started on the line in April 1843 and the line and its stations were opened on 1 May 1844. Great Yarmouth station was originally named Yarmouth Vauxhall.[1] The Y&NR line to Norwich throughReedham was the first railway in the county to open.[2]
On 30 June 1845, a Bill authorising the amalgamation of the Yarmouth & Norwich Railway with theNorwich & Brandon Railway came into effect, and Yarmouth Vauxhall station became a Norfolk Railway asset.[1][3]
TheEastern Counties Railway (ECR) and its rival theEastern Union Railway (EUR) were both sizing up the NR to acquire and expand their railway empire. The ECR trumped the EUR by taking over the NR, including Yarmouth-Vauxhall Station on 8 May 1848.
By the 1860s the railways in East Anglia were in financial trouble, and most were leased to the Eastern Counties Railway, which wished to amalgamate formally but could not obtain government agreement for this until an Act of Parliament on 7 August 1862, when theGreat Eastern Railway (GER) was formed by the amalgamation. Actually, Yarmouth Vauxhall became a GER station on 1 July 1862, when the GER took over the ECR and the EUR, before the Bill received Royal Assent.[4]
Two decades into GER ownership the latter decided to build a shorter route between Yarmouth Vauxhall toNorwich Thorpe. Work started in the early-1880s. The GER started the new line about one mile west of Yarmouth Vauxhall and the junction was named Breydon. The first part of the new line opened on 1 March 1883 as far as the first station west of Yarmouth Vauxhall atAcle.
The system settled down for the next four decades, apart from the disruption of World War I. The difficult economic circumstances that existed after the war led the government to pass the Railways Act 1921, which led to the creation of theBig Four. The GER amalgamated with several other companies to form theLondon and North Eastern Railway (LNER). Yarmouth Vauxhall became an LNER station on 1 January 1923.
In May 1943, the station was badly damaged during anair raid. The upper floor of the station building had to be demolished, but train services continued to operate during this period.[5] The remainder of the original station building was demolished and rebuilt in 1960.[6]
Onnationalisation in 1948, the station and its services became part of theEastern Region of British Railways. The station was renamed Yarmouth by British Railways at some point between 1953 and 1962.[1]
Before rail closures of the 1950s and the laterBeeching Axe, the station was the largest of the three major railway stations in the town.[7] The three stations had been linked together since 1882 by the Yarmouth Union Railway.[8] The station is now the sole surviving station in the town.[9]
The station was renamed Great Yarmouth on 16 May 1989. There used to be large sidings and an engine shed before they were demolished to make way for anAsda superstore and bypass.
Onprivatisation the station and its services were transferred toAnglia Railways, which operated it until April 2004 whenNational Express East Anglia won the replacement franchise, operating under the brand name "one" until February 2008. From February 2012Abellio Greater Anglia took over operating the franchise.
The town was also formerly served by the following stations:
Yarmouth Beach was located on Nelson Road and owned by theM&GN, which ran services along the Norfolk coast toMelton Constable andPeterborough. The station closed in 1959 and the site is now a coach station, although plans exist to turn the area into offices.[10]
Yarmouth South Town was owned by the Great Eastern Railway but also served as the terminus for theNorfolk and Suffolk Joint Railway, which ran services throughGorleston-on-Sea andLowestoft to join with the currentEast Suffolk Line for a mainline service to London. It closed in 1970.[11]
Newtown Halt was located on Salisbury Road and was owned by theM&GN. It opened in 1933 and closed in 1959.[12][13]
With the closure of Yarmouth Beach station in early 1959, Vauxhall became the focus of the summer Saturday traffic for Great Yarmouth. The station had always had a number of summer Saturday trains up to this point but this hike in numbers had led to some re-modelling of the station layout - platform lengthening and changes to carriage stabling - in order to cope with the additional traffic.
A typical summer Saturday saw an additional 24 timetabled passenger trains from locations includingYork,Derby,Sheffield,Manchester,Leicester andSunderland. In addition, on 25 July 1959, there were an extra eight holiday relief workings that ran. Some local workings were cancelled to cope with this influx of trains, but it indicates the significant numbers of UK holidaymakers still travelling by train and still holidaying in Great Yarmouth at this time.[14]
There is one train each hour between Yarmouth and Norwich, with additional services during the morning and evening peaks. Most services run via Acle, although there are still a number that run via Reedham. Sunday services tend to be hourly and, up to 16:00, trains alternate between the two routes. All services are operated by Greater Anglia.[15]
There are proposals to run a wider variety of direct services toLondon Liverpool Street,Stansted Airport and Peterborough from 2025.[16]

New sidings were provided at the western end of the station to cope with the additional services operating into the station, following the closure of the M&GN system. It is a crescent-shaped site between theA47 road andWherryman's Way at the northernmost point of theRiver Yare, about1⁄4 mi (400 m) north-west of the station. It had fallen out of use in the 1980s whenNorwich Crown Point depot was built.[17][18]
In 2010, the unused sidings were purchased byGreat Yarmouth Borough Council; they were intended for use as a freight terminal, despite the lack of rail connection to the town's port. It was hoped that 10,000 tonnes of sugar cane per week would be carried from Yarmouth toCantley. The need to use a lorry shuttle between the docks and the rail yard, along with a £3.2 million quote for replacing the sidings at Cantley, saw the plan dropped.[19]
In May 2020, Eastern Rail Services commenced a lease withNorfolk County Council andNetwork Rail for Yarmouth Vauxhall sidings. Managing director James Steward said the siding "matched ERS's requirement for an East Anglian site to base its rolling stock."[17] Following extensive de-vegetation works,Direct Rail Services37402 became the first locomotive in 19 years to run into the sidings on 26 May 2020, followed the next day by it delivering five former Greater AngliaMark 3 coaches for storage.[17][20] On 6 July 2020, ERS was authorised a licence exemption permitting them to operate trains within the site.[21]
Class 08 08762, owned by Eastern Rail Services' sister companyRMS Locotec, was delivered by road fromHeaton TMD on 16 June 2020 to take up shunting duties on site.[22]
A campaign was launched in 2010 to bring the station up-to-date, called theFix Great Yarmouth Station campaign. The project attracted around 3,000 pledges of support on-line.[23]
During 2012,Great Yarmouth Community Trust, in partnership with Greater Anglia, provided a welcoming and information service at the station for incoming holidaymakers and tourists.[24] This service was operated asWelcome Host and continued in 2013; it was run on a voluntary basis.
In 2017, signalling and track layout changes saw the lifting of the tracks leading into platform 1, reducing the number of operational platforms at the station to three.[25]
In 2018, it was announced that the station would benefit from £710,000 of investment, redeveloping the entrance and surrounding areas, with the work being funded by the New Anglia Local Enterprise Partnership'sGrowth Deal.[26] The project was completed in November 2018.[27]
| Preceding station | Following station | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acle | Greater Anglia Wherry Lines (viaAcle) | Terminus | ||
| Berney Arms | Greater Anglia Wherry Lines (viaReedham) | |||