The station was built by the
Wakefield, Pontefract and Goole Railway, a constituent company of the
Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway; the route through here opening to traffic on 1 April 1848. Later in its history the station was absorbed into the LMSR
London Midland and Scottish Railway before it became part of the
British Railways network in 1948. Today the station is operated by
Northern. The station was until 2014 home to one of the last sets of electrical wheel boom level crossing gates in the world; Castleford Cutsyke Junction, Urlay Nook (near Darlington) and Hensall were the final serving gates after the removal of the gates at Brough and Redcar Central. Hensall Signal box (located adjacent the south platform) has recently been awarded grade II listing status along with 25 other historical signal boxes. The list, announced by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport, includes signal boxes dating from late-Victorian times. Despite its listed status, it was taken out of operational use in May 2014, when control of signalling in the area passed to the signalling centre at Ferrybridge. The boom gates were also replaced by standard automatic lifting barriers as part of the project. Hensall station was also the site of a small collision in 1949 between a British Railways freight engine and a lorry after failure of a crossing keeper to acknowledge the train and brake van approaching, however it was argued that the signal man never gave the crossing the approaching train signal. It is unknown who caused the incident. The station featured on an episode of the
BBC documentary series
Great British Railway Journeys in 2015 (series six, episode 12), which saw presenter
Michael Portillo travel on the daily
parliamentary train from Knottingley to Goole and alight there. ==Facilities==