Constructed by the
Great Western Railway, the short and steeply inclined branch originally carried both passenger traffic from nearby to the terminus at and freight to the Amblecote Goods Depot at
Stourbridge Basin. The branch opened for passenger traffic on 1 October 1879 and for goods traffic on 1 January 1880. It briefly closed between April 1915 and February 1919 due to the
First World War, but has otherwise remained open since. Although the branch line was originally double-tracked, after 1935 the two tracks were worked as two parallel single lines, with the non-passenger track used for freight workings beyond the station over a bridge across Foster Street (a bridge rebuilt in 1957 then subsequently demolished in 1967 after the goods branch closed) towards the Stourbridge Basin. (Until the redevelopment of the bus station in 2012, the bridge abutment remained visible in Foster Street.) The station and branch were listed for closure under the
Beeching Axe, but were later delisted in 1965. The goods branch closed in 1965. The 1879 Stourbridge Town station survived mostly intact until February 1979 when it was demolished and the branch cut back by , leaving room for a
bus station. The line was controlled by traditional
semaphore signals until at least 1990, later than the adjacent main line. However, the line is currently worked by the "One Train Working" system with a
train staff as authority to occupy the line, and there are no working signals. In 2021 the whole of the branch received new rail, sleepers and ballast, the first upgrade of the track since 1902. == Rail traffic on the line ==