Old Photograph Steam Locomotive Gleneagles Scotland


Old photograph of a steam locomotive at the railway station at Gleneagles in Perthshire, Scotland. The station was opened by the Scottish Central Railway on 14 March 1856 and was originally named Crieff Junction. There was another station with the name of Crieff Junction to the north of this station which was only short lived. The branch northwestward to Crieff was opened, by the Crieff Junction Railway company, on the same day. On 1 April 1912 it was renamed Gleneagles. The station was rebuilt and the junction remodelled by the Caledonian Railway in 1919 following their takeover of the Scottish Central Railway. The Caledonian Railway built the nearby Gleneagles Hotel, which opened in 1925. On weekdays and Saturdays there are 14 services to Glasgow Queen Street and two to Edinburgh Waverley southbound and 15 to Perth northbound; most of these continue to either Dundee or Aberdeen, though there are also a limited number of trains to and from Inverness via the Highland Main Line. Gleneagles is also served by the daily Highland Chieftain through service between Inverness and London King's Cross and the Caledonian Sleeper to London Euston in Englandm each evening except Saturdays.



All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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