| Methil | |
|---|---|
| General information | |
| Location | Methil, Fife Scotland | 
| Platforms | 1 | 
| Other information | |
| Status | Disused | 
| History | |
| Original company | Leven Extension Railway | 
| Pre-grouping | North British Railway | 
| Post-grouping | London and North Eastern Railway | 
| Key dates | |
| 5 May 1887 | Opened | 
| 10 January 1955 | Closed | 
Methil railway station served the village of Methil, Fife, Scotland, from 1887 to 1955 on the Leven Extension Railway.
History
The station was opened on 5 May 1887 by the Leven Extension Railway. To the south was the goods yard, which has a large goods shed, and further to the south was Methil Yard, which had connections to Methil Docks. Initially it had nine sidings and a branch line which served Denbeath Colliery. In 1900, a second dock siding opened as well as eight more pairs of sidings. A third dock siding opened in 1912. The yard had around seventeen sidings at this point which had space for 516 wagons. The station closed to passengers on 10 January 1955[1] but it still remained open as a goods station and occasionally used for football excursions in 1958.[2] Methil Yard closed to general goods in 1980 but remained open for coal until 1985.
References
| Preceding station | Disused railways | Following station | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Buckhaven Line and station closed | Leven Extension Railway | Terminus | 
External links
56°10′59″N 3°00′49″W / 56.18314°N 3.01364°W