Bexhill railway station


Bexhill railway station serves Bexhill-on-Sea in East Sussex, England. It is on the East Coastway Line, and train services are provided by Southern.

History

'Bexhill' was the original name of Bexhill West railway station which was on a branch from the Hastings Line at. This provided direct services north to London. That station and line closed in 1964.
The station known today as Bexhill was previously known as Bexhill Central. The station had a moment of glory in December 1911, when the platform was especially lengthened to accommodate the funeral train of Nripendra Narayan the Maharaja of Cooch Behar, as a result of which for many years it had the longest platform in England outside London.

Description

The station is a grade II listed building, and a restoration project to the platform canopies and ticket office area was completed in the summer of 2008.
The station is accredited as part of the Department for Transport's Secure Stations scheme, with a digital CCTV system in place. It is staffed during the daytime but not late in the evenings.

Services

Since May 2018, transport links to and from Bexhill by rail have been strengthened with four trains per hour in each direction between Eastbourne and Hastings, all of which call at Bexhill. The typical off-peak service Mondays to Saturdays is:
A local campaign group Bexhill Rail Action Group * was formed in 2005 in response to proposals to end through services to London Victoria. The campaign was successful and BRAG continues to campaign for local rail improvements.
Campaigners are seeking to upgrade and electrify the Marshlink Line to extend Southeastern high speed train services onwards via Rye to Hastings, Bexhill and Eastbourne, and which, if realised could slash journey times between Bexhill and the capital to around 1 hour and 15 minutes, instead of the average 1 hour 52 minutes currently.