The station, known then as "Lidford", was opened on 1 June 1865 with the
Launceston and South Devon Railway, a
broad gauge line that connected with the
South Devon and Tavistock Railway to offer a service to
Plymouth Millbay railway station. This line eventually became a part of the GWR. On 12 October 1874 the
LSWR line was opened from
Okehampton railway station. This was a
standard gauge line that carried trains direct from
London Waterloo station, whereas passengers to the GWR's
London Paddington station had to travel on the branch line to Plymouth and then change onto a main line train. On 17 May 1876 a junction was opened between the two lines and LSWR trains could then reach its new station at
Devonport by running over the GWR's route, which was
mixed gauge. On 1 June 1890 a new line, built by the
Plymouth, Devonport and South Western Junction Railway, gave the LSWR a route to Devonport independent of the GWR. The GWR line was converted to standard gauge on 20 May 1892. The connection between the two lines was removed in 1895 but was replaced in 1943 to give flexibility should the railway lines around Plymouth be damaged by
World War II bombing. Other connections were installed at
Launceston railway station and at
St Budeaux. The station had been renamed "Lydford" on 3 June 1897. Trains were withdrawn from the former GWR branch on 31 December 1962 but continued on the main line until 6 May 1968. Goods traffic ceased on 7 September 1964. ==Description==