Early proposals The
Sleaford Navigation, which canalised a stretch of the
River Slea from its junction with the
River Witham to
Sleaford, opened in 1794. It facilitated the export of agricultural produce to the
midlands and the import of coal and oil. Mills sprang up along the river's course and the Navigation Company's wharves were built near its office on Carre Street in Sleaford. In 1827, the River Witham Navigation committee investigated the possibility of a railway allowing
Ancaster stone to be transported to the Sleaford Navigation. The cost of doing so and competition from other quarries meant that their plans came to nothing. An 1836 scheme envisaged a railway between
Nottingham and
Boston which would have stopped at Sleaford, but the plans never left the drawing board. Another attempt, the
Eastern Counties scheme, unsuccessfully tried to build a railway between
Lincoln and
Cambridge, with a branch to Boston via
Heckington and an extension to Sleaford. After protests from the Sleaford Navigation company, the necessary
Bill never passed. In 1845, the
Ambergate Company designed a railway from
Ambergate to Nottingham, with branches to Boston,
Spalding,
Grantham and Sleaford. A Bill to that effect passed through the
Houses of Parliament in 1846, but the railway only reached Grantham. In the meantime, the more ambitious
Great Northern Railway from
London to
York was also endorsed by an
Act of Parliament; it passed through Grantham and a loop line from Boston to Lincoln was operating by 1848, yet its planned extension between Boston and Sleaford was not sanctioned.
The railways arrive A new plan emerged in 1852 and was presented before Parliament the following year. The Sleaford, Boston and Midland Counties Railway would pass through Boston, Sleaford and Grantham. The proposals met with considerable support from businessmen in Sleaford, including a number of Navigation officials; they envisaged it as a mode of transporting coal and stone. The Bill passed in August 1853. Constructed by Smith, Knight & Co. under the supervision of the engineers W. H. Brydone and Edward Harrison, the line between
Barkston, near Grantham, and Sleaford opened on 15 June 1857. An elaborate set of celebrations were organised for the opening day of the new Sleaford railway station, which saw all of the town's businesses close to allow their employees chance take part in the festivities; over 700 men from the area were invited to a free lunch on the cricket fields. The Grantham–Sleaford line cost £130,000 to construct, averaging at £11,850 per mile; the extension to Boston opened on 12 April 1859, at a cost of £6,500 per mile, considerably cheaper thanks to the flat terrain (the hillier
Ancaster area, by contrast, required cuttings). From the outset, the
rolling stock was owned by the Great Northern Railway Company (GNR), who took over ownership of the line on 1 July 1864.
New connections The
Great Eastern Railway wanted to build a line from Cambridge to York, which would have passed through Sleaford and
Bourne, but Parliament would not allow it. The GNR submitted a proposal for a line between Bourne and Sleaford, which, after amendments to the route, was approved in 1865 and opened in 1872. Next came the
Great Northern and Great Eastern Joint Railway which opened from
Spalding through Sleaford to
Ruskington and from there to
Lincoln Central in 1882. Kirk and Parry, Sleaford-based building contractors, built the line, while the Ruskington-based builders Pattinson's constructed the new stations along the route. Sleaford station was also extended. The last new line through Sleaford ran
to RAF Cranwell and opened in 1916.
Operations and later history The Cranwell branch ran at a loss: in response to a
Parliamentary Question, it was revealed that, allowing for a credit in respect of the c.15,000 tons of Government stores that were transported along it during 1924, the line made a loss of some £3,570, although it was reported that "any alternative means ... would involve considerably greater expenditure". Having ceased to carry passenger traffic in 1927, it closed completely in 1956. (as part of the plan to route more freight trains onto the latter and away from the busy
East Coast Main Line).
Sleaford is still one of only a few places still to have signal boxes named 'North', 'South', 'West' and 'East' around the area. With the North and South boxes on the
Peterborough–Lincoln line, and then the West and East boxes are at each end of the station on the Grantham to Boston Line. So if travelling from Lincoln Central to Peterborough on the train you would pass all four boxes. The North and South boxes are however due to be decommissioned as part of the upgrade work mentioned above at the end of 2013. == Services ==