Frizinghall station was opened by the
Midland Railway on 1 February 1875. It remained in operation until it was closed on 22 March 1965, a casualty of the
Beeching Axe. However, the line on which it stood remained open, and 22 years later, the
West Yorkshire Passenger Transport Executive and
British Rail reopened the station. The original station had two platforms opposite each other on the north side of Frizinghall Road, but the current station, opened on 7 September 1987, has its two platforms separated: the northbound platform is approximately where it was before, and the southbound is to the south of Frizinghall Road.
Bradford Grammar School was relocated to Frizinghall in the late 1940s. From then until closure, and again after reopening, pupils have constituted one of the main sources of traffic at the station. Indeed, it was an English teacher at Bradford Grammar School, Dr Robin Sisson, who actively fought for the Frizinghall station to reopen. Sisson was killed in a car accident in Sheffield on 24 June 2008. Frizinghall signal box, which was removed in 1971, is preserved in working order at Damems Junction, on the
Keighley and Worth Valley Railway.
Stationmasters • Joseph Mawby 1876 - 1891 • J.W. Smales 1891 • Robert Little 1926 - 1933 (also station master at Manningham, afterwards station master at Tutbury) • Thomas Hagley 1933 - 1939 (formerly station master at Menston, also station master at Manningham) • John Fell 1939 - 1945 • F.W. Garnett 1945 - (also station master at Manningham) ==Facilities==