The station was opened by the
LD&ECR on its main line from
Chesterfield Market Place to
Lincoln. The LD&ECR was taken over by the
GCR in 1907 and subsequently became part of the
LNER in 1923 then
British Railways on nationalisation in 1948. The station buildings were in the company's standard modular architecture, very similar to
Edwinstowe and
Bolsover South. Of the LD&ECR stations only Tuxford Central and Dukeries Junction were recorded as being electrically lit, the others being lit by gas or oil. The line crossed a series of ridges between river valleys. From it climbed at around 1 in 150 to Boughton after which it descended through Tuxford Central heading towards the
River Trent. A mile to the east at Dukeries Junction the LD&ECR line crossed the
GNR's main line, now known as the
ECML. On 16 November 1896 a substantial, double-track, West-North connection ("chord") was built between the two lines east of Tuxford Central, effectively forming a triangle, as shown on the 1947 map linked below. The northern point of the triangle was Tuxford North Junction, a short distance south of Tuxford North station. The station opened in March 1897 and closed in 1955. The station building has since been razed to the ground. ==Former Services==